Avoiding repetitions in #IELTS Writing Task 1 - elegantly so 📊
One of my missions in my IELTS Writing classes is to teach students out of the "synonyms" mindset.
There are very few good synonyms for key words in IELTS writing task 1. And we all intuitively understand that repetitions are only fine if there aren’t too many of them.
Solution? As shown in the image above, you can simply not say the key word.
Instead of saying "The rest of the Americans don't celebrate... " you can say "The rest don't celebrate Thanksgiving."
Or instead of "A quarter of the respondents expect to ... " you can say "A quarter expect ... ."
And you have saved yourself a bunch of repetitions of "Americans" and "respondents," which you can comfortably use elsewhere in the answer instead of looking for synonyms.
📊 Screenshot from: Pew Research link.
#ieltswritingtask1
One of my missions in my IELTS Writing classes is to teach students out of the "synonyms" mindset.
There are very few good synonyms for key words in IELTS writing task 1. And we all intuitively understand that repetitions are only fine if there aren’t too many of them.
Solution? As shown in the image above, you can simply not say the key word.
Instead of saying "The rest of the Americans don't celebrate... " you can say "The rest don't celebrate Thanksgiving."
Or instead of "A quarter of the respondents expect to ... " you can say "A quarter expect ... ."
And you have saved yourself a bunch of repetitions of "Americans" and "respondents," which you can comfortably use elsewhere in the answer instead of looking for synonyms.
📊 Screenshot from: Pew Research link.
#ieltswritingtask1
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Missing word? 🧶
"By 10am on Black Friday, more than one-quarter of New England shoppers have already visited a store. The rest of the country [_?_] behind by about an hour." (Source: Visual Capitalist)
"By 10am on Black Friday, more than one-quarter of New England shoppers have already visited a store. The rest of the country [_?_] behind by about an hour." (Source: Visual Capitalist)
Anonymous Quiz
5%
Dogs
14%
Hangs
58%
Lags
15%
Stalks
8%
Trends
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To praise or not to praise?
A lot has been said about AI, but I am facing one dilemma no one else is talking about.
Praise.
With the advent of AI, I've been getting more and more impeccable or near-impeccable #IELTS essays. I understand they might not be AI-generated. They might be AI-enhanced. But they are still not original student's work.
So how do I praise the student or the essay?
In the past, I might have said something like, "You really did a great job this time. I like the way you ... ."
I can no longer say that. I cannot say, "You did a great job." Who is that "you" that did a great job?
At present,I refrain from praising any writing that has a distinct AI smell.
Talk to me.❤️
A lot has been said about AI, but I am facing one dilemma no one else is talking about.
Praise.
With the advent of AI, I've been getting more and more impeccable or near-impeccable #IELTS essays. I understand they might not be AI-generated. They might be AI-enhanced. But they are still not original student's work.
So how do I praise the student or the essay?
In the past, I might have said something like, "You really did a great job this time. I like the way you ... ."
I can no longer say that. I cannot say, "You did a great job." Who is that "you" that did a great job?
At present,
Talk to me.
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IELTS Writing Task 1: articles with category nouns 📊
In #IELTS writing Task 1 pictures, you see ordinary nouns without any articles. This is because these nouns are just diagram labels, not parts of full, grammatical sentences.
When you write your answer in full sentences, you must treat these diagram label nouns as usual nouns and use articles accordingly.
❌ This is wrong: "Only 10% of water was used in garden," or "Less water was used by industrial sector."
A singular countable noun must have an article - or be turned into a plural noun.
✅ Fixes: "Only 10% of water was used in gardens," or "Less water was used by the industrial sector."
I know this sounds very basic, but even high level students make this mistake. Make sure to proofread your answer for missing articles.
In #IELTS writing Task 1 pictures, you see ordinary nouns without any articles. This is because these nouns are just diagram labels, not parts of full, grammatical sentences.
When you write your answer in full sentences, you must treat these diagram label nouns as usual nouns and use articles accordingly.
A singular countable noun must have an article - or be turned into a plural noun.
I know this sounds very basic, but even high level students make this mistake. Make sure to proofread your answer for missing articles.
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#IELTS Writing Task 2: boosting your lexical resource for a "work hard" topic
Topic: "In education and employment, some people work harder than others. Why do some people work harder than others? Is it always a good thing to work hard?"
Sometimes you might have great ideas, but you get stuck at the key word and produce a paragraph repeating "hard work" 100 times, like:
1️⃣
I personally believe it is usually good to work harder than others. First and foremost, in the overwhelming majority of cases, it is only hard work that results in outstanding achievements, giving the person a competitive advantage. In education, for example, hard-working students are more likely to get admitted to prestigious universities, while in the workplace, it is hard-working employees that usually get promotions and performance bonuses. Admittedly, there are situations when hard work does not lead to the desired success, whether it be due to blatant injustice or unfortunate circumstances. Even so, the person still benefits by acquiring valuable skills, building resilience, or earning a good reputation.
Let's try to boost the lexis in this essay now. Here is my original paragraph. Pay attention to how I substituted "hard work."
2️⃣
I personally believe it is usually good to expend effort and work more diligently than others. First and foremost, in the overwhelming majority of cases, it is only sustained effort that results in outstanding achievements, giving the person a competitive advantage. In education, for example, industrious students are more likely to get admitted to prestigious universities, while in the workplace, it is industrious employees that usually get promotions and performance bonuses. Admittedly, there are situations when a strong work ethic does not lead to the desired success, whether it be due to blatant injustice or unfortunate circumstances. Even so, the person still benefits by acquiring valuable skills, building resilience, or earning a good reputation.
❤️ Finally, here is my list of lexical items that will help you boost your lexical resource on the topic of hard work:
- industrious, industriousness, industry
- work ethic, demonstrate a strong work ethic
- they exert considerable effort
- they expend effort
- sustained effort
- work tirelessly
- diligence, diligent, those who apply themselves diligently
- persevere / perseverance
- effortful, arduous activity
And two essays on this topic by me (as well as many other IELTS answers) are available behind the paywall.
#ieltswritingtask2 #Irina_writes_IELTS
Topic: "In education and employment, some people work harder than others. Why do some people work harder than others? Is it always a good thing to work hard?"
Sometimes you might have great ideas, but you get stuck at the key word and produce a paragraph repeating "hard work" 100 times, like:
I personally believe it is usually good to work harder than others. First and foremost, in the overwhelming majority of cases, it is only hard work that results in outstanding achievements, giving the person a competitive advantage. In education, for example, hard-working students are more likely to get admitted to prestigious universities, while in the workplace, it is hard-working employees that usually get promotions and performance bonuses. Admittedly, there are situations when hard work does not lead to the desired success, whether it be due to blatant injustice or unfortunate circumstances. Even so, the person still benefits by acquiring valuable skills, building resilience, or earning a good reputation.
Let's try to boost the lexis in this essay now. Here is my original paragraph. Pay attention to how I substituted "hard work."
I personally believe it is usually good to expend effort and work more diligently than others. First and foremost, in the overwhelming majority of cases, it is only sustained effort that results in outstanding achievements, giving the person a competitive advantage. In education, for example, industrious students are more likely to get admitted to prestigious universities, while in the workplace, it is industrious employees that usually get promotions and performance bonuses. Admittedly, there are situations when a strong work ethic does not lead to the desired success, whether it be due to blatant injustice or unfortunate circumstances. Even so, the person still benefits by acquiring valuable skills, building resilience, or earning a good reputation.
- industrious, industriousness, industry
- work ethic, demonstrate a strong work ethic
- they exert considerable effort
- they expend effort
- sustained effort
- work tirelessly
- diligence, diligent, those who apply themselves diligently
- persevere / perseverance
- effortful, arduous activity
And two essays on this topic by me (as well as many other IELTS answers) are available behind the paywall.
#ieltswritingtask2 #Irina_writes_IELTS
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#IELTS Writing Task 1: "Other"
If you've seen enough IELTS tasks, you'll know the pesky "other" category is very common. Why pesky? Because sometimes it's hard to weave it into the sentence smoothly.
Sentences like "The category "other" showed no change" might be correct, but they don't show much skill.
Different solutions are possible, but here are two important things to do:
1️⃣ See if you can use a shell noun: other what? Other regions, other purposes, other uses, other reasons etc. This will probably allow you to have a better sentence structure.
2️⃣ It must be clear that you mean "other than the listed categories." Typically, "other" is the smallest and the last category - but not always!
Here is my sentence for the task in the picture.
"The government was responsible for 6% of water used, while the remaining purposes (unspecified and grouped together under “other”) accounted for a mere 3% of water consumption."
And here are some sentences from other answers:
1️⃣ "Finally, when it comes to smallest volumes, Africa’s use makes up 3.35%, and that in the other regions around 2.5%." (Here, "other" can be smoothly woven into the sentence as the last region in the task.)
2️⃣ "The remaining shares are significantly smaller: 18% come from unspecified regions and a further 10% from Asia." (Here, "other" wouldn't work because it's not the last category. So I resorted to "unspecified.')
Any other ways? Share in the comments.⬇️
This post is an answer to a question from a subscriber. I like good questions. ❤️
If you've seen enough IELTS tasks, you'll know the pesky "other" category is very common. Why pesky? Because sometimes it's hard to weave it into the sentence smoothly.
Sentences like "The category "other" showed no change" might be correct, but they don't show much skill.
Different solutions are possible, but here are two important things to do:
Here is my sentence for the task in the picture.
"The government was responsible for 6% of water used, while the remaining purposes (unspecified and grouped together under “other”) accounted for a mere 3% of water consumption."
And here are some sentences from other answers:
Any other ways? Share in the comments.
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#Duolingo English Test
🦋 Please welcome our fifth and last Writing Incubator workshop of the season: "Writing for Duolingo English Test" by Maria Botina (Duolingo 160 out of 160!!!)
What can possibly you do in terms of writing in a 60 minute exam where writing takes 1, 3, 5 minutes? How does one get ready for that? If the whole exam is online, can you even take notes, make a plan?
This is what we’re going to go over in our workshop. We’re going to discuss:
- Types of writing at the Duolingo English test
- How to work with unfamiliar tasks with a huge time crunch
- Best practices and criteria for each question type
And … actually practice! We will write some tasks from Duolingo right there in the workshop!
📅 14 December, Sunday, 11:00 am Moscow time, on Zoom
💌 The workshop is free. To join, message me @iraluts with a meaningful ending to this comment, "Wow, I can't miss this one! I'd love to join because ... ."
❗️ Please note that this is a workshop, not a webinar or a lecture. If you join, you have to write. "Ghosts" will be kicked out. We don't record our workshops, so this is a safe space to participate.
🦋 Writing Incubator - where writing skills hatch 🦋
🦋 Please welcome our fifth and last Writing Incubator workshop of the season: "Writing for Duolingo English Test" by Maria Botina (Duolingo 160 out of 160!!!)
What can possibly you do in terms of writing in a 60 minute exam where writing takes 1, 3, 5 minutes? How does one get ready for that? If the whole exam is online, can you even take notes, make a plan?
This is what we’re going to go over in our workshop. We’re going to discuss:
- Types of writing at the Duolingo English test
- How to work with unfamiliar tasks with a huge time crunch
- Best practices and criteria for each question type
And … actually practice! We will write some tasks from Duolingo right there in the workshop!
📅 14 December, Sunday, 11:00 am Moscow time, on Zoom
🦋 Writing Incubator - where writing skills hatch 🦋
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I tried my hand at #Duolingo writing
This test might seem like a joke compared to #IELTS, but the time constraints are no joke at all.
⛸ The prompt:
"Writing is a tool for many, used for self-expression, interpersonal communication, or professional achievements. When do individuals choose to write, and what motivates them? Explore what aspects of writing they might enjoy, and identify the challenges they often encounter during the process."
⛸ Timing: 5 minutes (for crying out loud! )
⛸ My answer (as is, with typos):
"People might choose to write in a variety of situation, with the most common one, probably, being the urgent need to share or to discuss whatever is bothering or inspiring them. Writing might be a better choice for this as it allows the person to take time to analyze and explore the issue, which is in stark contrast to the spontaneous nature of speaking. In my opinion, the time to think is ecatly the reason people find writing a more appropriate – and more enjoyable – activity. There is less pressure to rush or to finish. This, however, brings with it a hidden challenge: the danger of never finalizing the piece. Interestingly, on the opposite side of this danger is another probelm writers often face: the fear of the blank page."
129 words
Judging by this, I would be able to write a 387-word IELTS essay in15 minutes ... But would I? Besides, what I wrote for Duolingo wouldn't cut it in IELTS. But then again, I would have time to edit...
Anyways, it was fun to try something new. Have you taken Duolingo English Test? How was it? Do you think it can replace IELTS or TOEFL?
This test might seem like a joke compared to #IELTS, but the time constraints are no joke at all.
"Writing is a tool for many, used for self-expression, interpersonal communication, or professional achievements. When do individuals choose to write, and what motivates them? Explore what aspects of writing they might enjoy, and identify the challenges they often encounter during the process."
"People might choose to write in a variety of situation, with the most common one, probably, being the urgent need to share or to discuss whatever is bothering or inspiring them. Writing might be a better choice for this as it allows the person to take time to analyze and explore the issue, which is in stark contrast to the spontaneous nature of speaking. In my opinion, the time to think is ecatly the reason people find writing a more appropriate – and more enjoyable – activity. There is less pressure to rush or to finish. This, however, brings with it a hidden challenge: the danger of never finalizing the piece. Interestingly, on the opposite side of this danger is another probelm writers often face: the fear of the blank page."
129 words
Judging by this, I would be able to write a 387-word IELTS essay in
Anyways, it was fun to try something new. Have you taken Duolingo English Test? How was it? Do you think it can replace IELTS or TOEFL?
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Missing word?
"I think it should be [_?_]" = restricted for users under a certain age, e.g. "Social media should be [_?_]."
"I think it should be [_?_]" = restricted for users under a certain age, e.g. "Social media should be [_?_]."
Anonymous Quiz
32%
Age-banned
26%
Age-capped
18%
Age-fenced
17%
Age-gated
6%
Age-tapped
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This might be the most challenging #IELTS essay topic ever:
Throughout history, people have dreamed of living in a perfect society, but they have not agreed on what an ideal society would be like. What do you think is the most important element of a perfect society in the modern world? How can people work towards achieving an ideal society?
What would you write? Do the quiz below to see the element I wrote about. Vote for what you would write, and the "correct" answer is my answer.
In fact, topics like this are only hard when you see them for the first time. If you see them in advance, you can prepare: work with your teacher, read other people's answers, talk to chatgpt, memorize some lexis. I've written my essay, so I'm ready. ✅
#ieltswritingtask2
Throughout history, people have dreamed of living in a perfect society, but they have not agreed on what an ideal society would be like. What do you think is the most important element of a perfect society in the modern world? How can people work towards achieving an ideal society?
What would you write? Do the quiz below to see the element I wrote about. Vote for what you would write, and the "correct" answer is my answer.
#ieltswritingtask2
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What do you think is the most important element of a perfect society in the modern world?
Anonymous Quiz
28%
Education
24%
Equality of opportunity
11%
Equity
16%
Law and order
21%
Respect
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I don't often write for the C2 Proficiency test (aka CPE), but I wrote an essay recently. Would you like me to post it on the channel? 🐸
Anonymous Poll
86%
Yes please! 🤩
10%
Not really. I prefer IELTS.
4%
I would like to read your students' CPE writing.
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My C2 Proficiency (aka #CPE) essay 🐸
I don't often write for C2 Proficiency, but this topic is interesting to me on a personal level. Besides, I wrote an IELTS essay on a similar topic, so I was curious to write a CPE one too and compare.
(I am not sharing the input texts because there would be too much text for a Telegram post.)
"It is often said that laziness is the driver of progress. Yet, laziness is not encouraged, while hard work, industriousness, and perseverance are. Why do we value effort? Is it always a good idea to reinforce industry and diligence?
Contrary to popular belief, humans are not intrinsically lazy creatures seeking to avoid expending effort when possible. In fact, people often opt for a more challenging task because what was effortful to achieve seems inherently valuable, so much so that people take unreasonable pride in poor outcomes. Yet, this innate human trait can be tapped into in order to cultivate diligence: a person is more likely to persevere if what they are rewarded for is effort rather than the outcome. Particularly striking is that this phenomenon, known as learned industriousness, can help motivate the person to exert effort not just in one area of pursuit, but in many.
While this idea might seem appealing and even inspiring on the surface, I believe that on a deeper level, it is limited, if not outright detrimental. My major objection is that we live in the world of outcomes: grades at school and KPIs in the workplace. By reinforcing effort, we might set the person up for failure as they might have to face not getting admitted to a university or not getting promoted – all despite lavish praise for all the effort that they expended. Another danger is that industry, if not channeled in the right direction, might be wasteful. For example, a gifted musician might spend years industriously pursuing mathematics and art at the expense of rest or developing their talent. If they neither enjoy this nor achieve outstanding results, they might wonder one day what all this effort was for – and not get a convincing answer.
Therefore, I believe that focus on effort is very short-sighted, so focus on the outcome is still necessary. At the same time, rewarding effort and rewarding the outcome are not mutually exclusive. Combining both might be the best approach. After all, if we take unreasonable pride in a poor outcome just because of our all-out effort, the pride we take in an outstanding feat that we put effort in will be not just reasonable – it will be meaningful.
To conclude, while there is value in reinforcing effort – industriousness is a highly desirable trait in life – I think we embraced it too readily. Excessive focus on effort to the detriment of outcomes is not a viable approach in education or in the workplace because it distorts the person’s perception of their own skills and needs. As is often the case, balance is the best approach."
🐸 This essay was written for my "Writing with New Scientist CPE track" group. More about the course: https://m.vk.com/product-47977221_5061302
🐸 And here is the post about an IELTS essay on a similar topic: https://news.1rj.ru/str/irinalutsenko/623
#Irina_writes_cpe
I don't often write for C2 Proficiency, but this topic is interesting to me on a personal level. Besides, I wrote an IELTS essay on a similar topic, so I was curious to write a CPE one too and compare.
(I am not sharing the input texts because there would be too much text for a Telegram post.)
"It is often said that laziness is the driver of progress. Yet, laziness is not encouraged, while hard work, industriousness, and perseverance are. Why do we value effort? Is it always a good idea to reinforce industry and diligence?
Contrary to popular belief, humans are not intrinsically lazy creatures seeking to avoid expending effort when possible. In fact, people often opt for a more challenging task because what was effortful to achieve seems inherently valuable, so much so that people take unreasonable pride in poor outcomes. Yet, this innate human trait can be tapped into in order to cultivate diligence: a person is more likely to persevere if what they are rewarded for is effort rather than the outcome. Particularly striking is that this phenomenon, known as learned industriousness, can help motivate the person to exert effort not just in one area of pursuit, but in many.
While this idea might seem appealing and even inspiring on the surface, I believe that on a deeper level, it is limited, if not outright detrimental. My major objection is that we live in the world of outcomes: grades at school and KPIs in the workplace. By reinforcing effort, we might set the person up for failure as they might have to face not getting admitted to a university or not getting promoted – all despite lavish praise for all the effort that they expended. Another danger is that industry, if not channeled in the right direction, might be wasteful. For example, a gifted musician might spend years industriously pursuing mathematics and art at the expense of rest or developing their talent. If they neither enjoy this nor achieve outstanding results, they might wonder one day what all this effort was for – and not get a convincing answer.
Therefore, I believe that focus on effort is very short-sighted, so focus on the outcome is still necessary. At the same time, rewarding effort and rewarding the outcome are not mutually exclusive. Combining both might be the best approach. After all, if we take unreasonable pride in a poor outcome just because of our all-out effort, the pride we take in an outstanding feat that we put effort in will be not just reasonable – it will be meaningful.
To conclude, while there is value in reinforcing effort – industriousness is a highly desirable trait in life – I think we embraced it too readily. Excessive focus on effort to the detriment of outcomes is not a viable approach in education or in the workplace because it distorts the person’s perception of their own skills and needs. As is often the case, balance is the best approach."
#Irina_writes_cpe
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January is a good time for creative projects and exam workshops. ⛄️
Mark your calendars for:
1️⃣ Creative Writing Club
Unleash your creativity, get more practice, and have fun writing in English!
Starts 11 January, 11:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/creative-writing-47977221-1461432
2️⃣ "Small Stories Big Ideas": short story reading club
Discuss thought-provoking stories — and ask the writers themselves! The writers — participants of my Creative Writing Bootcamp — will be joining the sessions, so you'll be able to ask them about their stories, stylistic devices, and their writing process.
Starts 18 January, 12:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/a-reading-club-47977221-6876490
3️⃣ #IELTS Writing Task 1 overviews
A workshop on writing overviews - the most important part of the IELTS Writing Task 1 answer.
10 January, 13:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/ielts-writing-task-1-overviews-47977221-11113395
4️⃣ Teaching #IELTS writing with model answers
A workshop for IELTS instructors on how to make the most of IELTS model answers (both W1 and W2)
11 January, 13:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/teaching-ielts-writing-47977221-5648169
5️⃣ Teaching writing for #Duolingo English Test
A workshop for Duolingo instructors to give you a clear understanding of what Duolingo English Test writing looks like and how to better prepare your students for it
24 January, 11:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/teaching-writing-for-duolingo-english-test-47977221-11687384
⛄️ 💌 @iraluts
Mark your calendars for:
Unleash your creativity, get more practice, and have fun writing in English!
Starts 11 January, 11:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/creative-writing-47977221-1461432
Discuss thought-provoking stories — and ask the writers themselves! The writers — participants of my Creative Writing Bootcamp — will be joining the sessions, so you'll be able to ask them about their stories, stylistic devices, and their writing process.
Starts 18 January, 12:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/a-reading-club-47977221-6876490
A workshop on writing overviews - the most important part of the IELTS Writing Task 1 answer.
10 January, 13:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/ielts-writing-task-1-overviews-47977221-11113395
A workshop for IELTS instructors on how to make the most of IELTS model answers (both W1 and W2)
11 January, 13:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/teaching-ielts-writing-47977221-5648169
A workshop for Duolingo instructors to give you a clear understanding of what Duolingo English Test writing looks like and how to better prepare your students for it
24 January, 11:00 MSK
More: https://vk.com/market/product/teaching-writing-for-duolingo-english-test-47977221-11687384
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Finishing strong and starting strong. 💪
If you've known me long enough, you'll know about my traditional 1 January run. Inspired by a student, I started in 2017 and have kept this tradition ever since. 🏃♀
In fact, it seems that the tradition now is to run two days in a row: on 31 December and on 1 January.
Join me on 1 January this year. Any place, any time, any distance. 🏃♀
Let's start the year strong!
If you've known me long enough, you'll know about my traditional 1 January run. Inspired by a student, I started in 2017 and have kept this tradition ever since. 🏃♀
In fact, it seems that the tradition now is to run two days in a row: on 31 December and on 1 January.
Join me on 1 January this year. Any place, any time, any distance. 🏃♀
Let's start the year strong!
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Yet another year with fluctuating fortunes... Still, I kept spreading my love for writing and empowering people to write. 💜
So, in 2025, I
- ... made two presentations at MISIS University Conference in Moscow - again. And again - absolutely wonderful, warm, welcoming audience!
- ... was a guest on a podcast with the wonderful Maria Polukhina! Watch here: https://news.1rj.ru/str/irinalutsenko/556
- ... got my third #IELTS 9! Curiously, for the test I took back in 2024. This year, IELTS suddenly admitted to their global screw-up. My reading score was changed from 8.5 to 9, leading to an overall 9.
- ... contributed nine #IELTS writing sample answers to a free pdf collection with about 100 answers. Available completely free of charge here: https://news.1rj.ru/str/irinalutsenko/551
- ... took a course on Writing Pedagogy with an American instructor and tried to improve my feedback-giving skills (admittedly, my weakness).
- ... conducted a workshop on creative writing at a conference by the Moscow State University!
- ... wrote another 3000-word story (my fourth one) in my "Creative Writing Bootcamp" project. Couldn't have done it without my creative team, which has grown in different senses of the word.
- ... continued the short story reading club "Small Stories Big Ideas" - our short stories do deserve a reader. Hosted by the one and only Irina Kireeva - an avid reader, a professional book club host, and a source of all my reading for pleasure.
- ... continued spreading the passion for writing with free projects: "Creative Writing Club," "Writing Incubator," and "Poetry Writing mini-course." These projects are mostly done by my like-minded writing fans who are happy to share their passion too: Veronika Shirobokova, Alena Nikitina, Evgenia Karabatova, Elizaveta Zanozina, Maria Botina, Svetlana Kukharevich. 💜
I couldn't have done so much - and so meaningfully - without the people mentioned and many others helping behind the scenes. My unending gratitude to every single person who contributed and supported us! 🩷
And, of course, the wonderful New Year image is by the wonderful Anna Skopina - the artist behind all my visuals and illustrations over the last years. 🧡
So, in 2025, I
- ... made two presentations at MISIS University Conference in Moscow - again. And again - absolutely wonderful, warm, welcoming audience!
- ... was a guest on a podcast with the wonderful Maria Polukhina! Watch here: https://news.1rj.ru/str/irinalutsenko/556
- ... got my third #IELTS 9! Curiously, for the test I took back in 2024. This year, IELTS suddenly admitted to their global screw-up. My reading score was changed from 8.5 to 9, leading to an overall 9.
- ... contributed nine #IELTS writing sample answers to a free pdf collection with about 100 answers. Available completely free of charge here: https://news.1rj.ru/str/irinalutsenko/551
- ... took a course on Writing Pedagogy with an American instructor and tried to improve my feedback-giving skills (admittedly, my weakness).
- ... conducted a workshop on creative writing at a conference by the Moscow State University!
- ... wrote another 3000-word story (my fourth one) in my "Creative Writing Bootcamp" project. Couldn't have done it without my creative team, which has grown in different senses of the word.
- ... continued the short story reading club "Small Stories Big Ideas" - our short stories do deserve a reader. Hosted by the one and only Irina Kireeva - an avid reader, a professional book club host, and a source of all my reading for pleasure.
- ... continued spreading the passion for writing with free projects: "Creative Writing Club," "Writing Incubator," and "Poetry Writing mini-course." These projects are mostly done by my like-minded writing fans who are happy to share their passion too: Veronika Shirobokova, Alena Nikitina, Evgenia Karabatova, Elizaveta Zanozina, Maria Botina, Svetlana Kukharevich. 💜
I couldn't have done so much - and so meaningfully - without the people mentioned and many others helping behind the scenes. My unending gratitude to every single person who contributed and supported us! 🩷
And, of course, the wonderful New Year image is by the wonderful Anna Skopina - the artist behind all my visuals and illustrations over the last years. 🧡
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The winter season of my legendary Creative Writing Club! ⛄️
It’s perfect for people who want to unleash their creativity and have fun writing in English.
⛄️ Here is how it works:
- I prepare inspiring creative writing prompts and exercises;
- We meet on Zoom for some pre-writing practice;
- We write on our own over the following five days;
- We share and review each other’s works on a collaborative Google doc;
- We meet again, and the cycle is repeated.
⛄️ The nuts and bolts:
- There will be four sessions meeting weekly on Sundays, 11 January - 1 February, 11 am Moscow time. One session is around 45 minutes.
- Not participating in online sessions is OK as long as you keep in touch, write, and review other people’s work in time.
- If you join, you have to write one work and review one participant’s work every week.
- The project is free, but if you don’t write or review other people’s work by the deadline, you’ll have to leave. Ghost-like behavior is not welcome.
- Our project chat will be on Telegram.
💌 To join, message me @iraluts with a creative ending to the phrase "The taste of cappuccino turned black like ... in my mouth." If your answer is creative, you’re in.
💌 When you message me, please introduce yourself properly, with your name and last name. My name is Irina Lutsenko - I want to know yours. Nameless subscribers and people with nicknames or aliases won't be admitted.
❗️ This is an AI-free zone. Human writing only.
❗️ This project is in no way helpful in IELTS prep. If anything, it might be detrimental.
It’s perfect for people who want to unleash their creativity and have fun writing in English.
- I prepare inspiring creative writing prompts and exercises;
- We meet on Zoom for some pre-writing practice;
- We write on our own over the following five days;
- We share and review each other’s works on a collaborative Google doc;
- We meet again, and the cycle is repeated.
- There will be four sessions meeting weekly on Sundays, 11 January - 1 February, 11 am Moscow time. One session is around 45 minutes.
- Not participating in online sessions is OK as long as you keep in touch, write, and review other people’s work in time.
- If you join, you have to write one work and review one participant’s work every week.
- The project is free, but if you don’t write or review other people’s work by the deadline, you’ll have to leave. Ghost-like behavior is not welcome.
- Our project chat will be on Telegram.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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The overview is the most important part of your #IELTS Writing Task 1 answer.
How do you write a good one?
In this practical workshop, you will learn how to nail your overview for all types of IELTS Academic tasks:
- tasks with figures (with and without a time change);
- tasks with combinations of charts;
- maps and floor plans;
- processes.
What will happen in this workshop?
- You will get my list of questions that help you choose the key features for each task type;
- We will look at my examples and discuss how I chose the key features;
- You'll write 15+ overviews - and compare them with mine afterwards.
The workshop is based on my extensive IELTS taking, teaching, and writing experience:
- IELTS 9 x3, Writing 8.5 x3
- IELTS prep experience: over 10 years
- IELTS answers written: over 200
Important: This is not a webinar. This is a practical workshop where you are expected to write. Please join with your camera on and from a good work station.
📌 Price: 2500 RUB
📅 Winter 2026:
- Saturday, 10 January, 13-14:30 Moscow time
📍 Place: in real time on Zoom, camera must be on, some participation is expected
❗ You will get the pdf of the presentation, but there will be no recordings!
Why don't I record my workshops?
I believe participation without recording ensures a safe space for attendees to participate openly and without fear of asking questions or making mistakes. (And don't get me started on potential privacy concerns of the participants.)
💌 💌 💌 @iraluts
How do you write a good one?
In this practical workshop, you will learn how to nail your overview for all types of IELTS Academic tasks:
- tasks with figures (with and without a time change);
- tasks with combinations of charts;
- maps and floor plans;
- processes.
What will happen in this workshop?
- You will get my list of questions that help you choose the key features for each task type;
- We will look at my examples and discuss how I chose the key features;
- You'll write 15+ overviews - and compare them with mine afterwards.
The workshop is based on my extensive IELTS taking, teaching, and writing experience:
- IELTS 9 x3, Writing 8.5 x3
- IELTS prep experience: over 10 years
- IELTS answers written: over 200
Important: This is not a webinar. This is a practical workshop where you are expected to write. Please join with your camera on and from a good work station.
📌 Price: 2500 RUB
📅 Winter 2026:
- Saturday, 10 January, 13-14:30 Moscow time
📍 Place: in real time on Zoom, camera must be on, some participation is expected
❗ You will get the pdf of the presentation, but there will be no recordings!
Why don't I record my workshops?
I believe participation without recording ensures a safe space for attendees to participate openly and without fear of asking questions or making mistakes. (And don't get me started on potential privacy concerns of the participants.)
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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A workshop for #IELTS instructors on how to make the most of IELTS model answers (both W1 and W2)
Giving students IELTS model answers is certainly a great idea, but you can't just hand them the answers and say, "Look. These are good. Do the same thing." You need to make sure the model answers help your student develop their skills and prepare them for the test.
In this workshop, I'll share a whole host of meaningful activities you as an instructor can do with model answers. Each activity is aimed at a certain goal and and tailored to a specific task and/or assessment criterion.
All the activities are based on my extensive IELTS taking, teaching, and writing experience:
- IELTS 9 x3, Writing 8.5 x3
- IELTS prep experience: over 10 years
- IELTS answers written: over 200.
📌 Price: 2500 RUB
📅 Winter 2026:
- Sunday, 11 January, 13-14:30 Moscow time
📍 Place: in real time on Zoom, camera must be on, some participation is expected
❗ You will get the pdf of the presentation, but there will be no recordings!
Why don't I record my sessions?
I believe participation without recording ensures a safe space for attendees to participate openly and without the fear of asking questions or making mistakes. (And don't get me started on potential privacy concerns of the participants.)
💌 💌 💌 @iraluts
Giving students IELTS model answers is certainly a great idea, but you can't just hand them the answers and say, "Look. These are good. Do the same thing." You need to make sure the model answers help your student develop their skills and prepare them for the test.
In this workshop, I'll share a whole host of meaningful activities you as an instructor can do with model answers. Each activity is aimed at a certain goal and and tailored to a specific task and/or assessment criterion.
All the activities are based on my extensive IELTS taking, teaching, and writing experience:
- IELTS 9 x3, Writing 8.5 x3
- IELTS prep experience: over 10 years
- IELTS answers written: over 200.
📌 Price: 2500 RUB
📅 Winter 2026:
- Sunday, 11 January, 13-14:30 Moscow time
📍 Place: in real time on Zoom, camera must be on, some participation is expected
❗ You will get the pdf of the presentation, but there will be no recordings!
Why don't I record my sessions?
I believe participation without recording ensures a safe space for attendees to participate openly and without the fear of asking questions or making mistakes. (And don't get me started on potential privacy concerns of the participants.)
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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