Children should begin learning a foreign language as soon as they start school. Use specific reasons and examples to support your opinion.

Sample Response

Language is the best means of communication. In the modern globalisation era, it is not enough to be able to speak one language to communicate with the outside world. I strongly support the idea that children should begin learning a foreign language as soon as they start school. They faster become familiar with a strange language, improve their hearing ability to understand new words as time goes by and learn new words. In the following paragraphs, I will list some reasons to support my position. First of all, if one wants to see outcome soon, one must start sooner. So, the early children begin to learn a new language the better will be the result. Scientists say that a child does not confuse two different languages but learns them more effectively. If children learn a foreign language at an early age, then he/she can cope with the different cultures and enjoy a better position to read more books written in foreign language. Second, adults are often afraid to make mistakes when they are speaking in a new language. This fear is one of the biggest barriers for a person in his efforts to speak freely. Otherwise, children do not afraid of making grammatical mistakes because basically they just repeat words and sentences in the way they hear them. Also, children have a better chance to get rid of an accent. They faster get used to the right pronunciation and better feel the melody of a language. To sum up, I think that it is essential for children to begin learning a foreign language in their early ages. It brings many benefits such as great pronunciation. Also, it helps a child develop and gain more knowledge which is good for a long run.

IELTS Writing Correction

  • 1. Natural time phrase Original: modern globalisation era Suggested revision: era of globalisation Why it matters: This phrasing is more natural and avoids stacking two time-related nouns.
  • 2. More precise scope Original: outside world Suggested revision: wider world Why it matters: This phrase conveys international communication more precisely.
  • 3. Adverb placement Original: They faster become familiar Suggested revision: They become familiar more quickly Why it matters: The comparative adverb needs to follow the verb phrase.
  • 4. Correct language term Original: a strange language Suggested revision: a foreign language Why it matters: A language from another country is described as foreign, not strange.
  • 5. Use standard term Original: hearing ability Suggested revision: listening skills Why it matters: Listening skills is the conventional term for understanding spoken language.
  • 6. Concise expression Original: as time goes by Suggested revision: over time Why it matters: This compact phrase expresses gradual development more directly.
  • 7. Missing determiner Original: see outcome Suggested revision: see results Why it matters: The singular count noun needs a determiner, so the plural form is cleaner here.
  • 8. Comparative structure Original: the early children begin Suggested revision: the earlier children begin Why it matters: The correlative construction requires the comparative form earlier.
  • 9. Correct word order Original: the better will be the result Suggested revision: the better the result will be Why it matters: This comparative construction requires subject-auxiliary order rather than inversion.
  • 10. Remove extra article Original: the different cultures Suggested revision: different cultures Why it matters: No definite article is needed when cultures are discussed generally.
  • 11. Consistent pronoun Original: he/she Suggested revision: they Why it matters: Singular they avoids the awkward slash form and agrees with a generic learner.
  • 12. Add an article Original: in foreign language Suggested revision: in a foreign language Why it matters: The singular count noun language requires an article.

Suggested Rewrites

  • modern globalisation era era of globalisation
  • outside world wider world
  • They faster become familiar They become familiar more quickly
  • a strange language a foreign language
  • hearing ability listening skills
  • as time goes by over time
Overall assessment

Why this response received Band 6.0

The response presents a clear position and several relevant reasons, especially the contrast between children's and adults' confidence when speaking. However, support remains general rather than grounded in specific examples, and frequent awkward phrasing and grammatical errors reduce precision. The highest-priority improvement is to develop each main reason with a concrete example while checking word order, articles, and verb patterns.

Band score breakdown

IELTS Writing Criteria Scores

Detailed feedback by IELTS writing criterion after the annotated essay.

TR

Task Response

6.5
Feedback

A clear position is sustained and several relevant benefits are explained, but the requested specific examples are largely absent.

Next step

Extend each reason with one concrete, credible example that demonstrates how early language learning benefits a child.

CC

Coherence and Cohesion

6.0
Feedback

The response follows a recognizable introduction-reasons-conclusion sequence, though cohesion is mechanical and paragraphing is not evident.

Next step

Separate the two main reasons into focused body paragraphs and use referencing rather than repeated sequencing phrases.

LR

Lexical Resource

6.0
Feedback

The vocabulary is sufficient for the topic, but awkward collocations and repetition frequently limit precision and naturalness.

Next step

Replace phrases such as 'strange language' and 'great pronunciation' with more precise, natural academic collocations.

GRA

Grammatical Range and Accuracy

6.0
Feedback

A mix of simple and complex structures conveys the message, but recurring errors in word order, articles, agreement, and verb patterns remain noticeable.

Next step

Proofread especially for adverb placement, article use, pronoun agreement, and patterns such as 'are not afraid of'.

Put the feedback to work

Use this task for your next draft

Feedback is more useful when you actively apply it in a draft, rather than only recognising improvements on the page.

Write the task yourself, then compare your choices with the annotated response.

The question will be loaded automatically.