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Dnes < 2011 >  < červenec > 
Po Út St Čt So Ne
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Testing Centre:

                                 The Language Department of the Czech Language Institute
                                 of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
                                 Na Florenci 3 (4th Floor)
                                 Prague 1
 
For more information or to register online visit ETS web pages
 
Our relation to ETS: we have no influence and no “inside” information
 
Structure of the test
 
The format of the internet-based test is as follows:
 SECTION
QUESTIONS
FORMAT
TIME
Reading
 
30 points
3-5 passages
12-14 questions each
Texts (approximately 700 words) followed by multiple choice questions
60-100 minutes
Listening
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
30 points
4-6 lectures
3-5 minutes long
6 questions per lecture
 
 
2-3 conversations 3 minutes long
5 questions per conversation
Academic lectures to simulate listening and speaking in the classroom
 
 
 
Conversations in an academic setting
60-90 minutes
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Writing
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
30 points
Integrated
 
 
 
 
 
Independent
Read a short passage for 3 minutes (300 words) and listen to a short lecture for 2 minutes and then write (150-225 words)
 
Give and support your opinion about a general topic (300 words)
20 minutes
 
 
 
 
30 minutes
Speaking
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
30 points
Independent
 
 
Integrated
 
 
 
Integrated
 
Answer short questions about general topics
 
Answer questions about information you have read and listened to
 
Answer questions about a discussion or short lecture you have listened to
20 minutes
 
More specifics:
 Speaking – 20 minutes
·          Note-taking skills
·          Practice necessary as time is short
·          Always one formal and one conversation where a student is there (foreign accent)
·          Authentic texts
·          Purpose or motivation of conversation and degree of certainty
·          2 independent tasks (on familiar topics – personal experiences; describe people/place/objects, justify likes/dislikes, recount events or past actions) and
           4 integrated tasks (2 reading/listening/speaking and 2 listening/speaking)
 
Writing
·          Integrated task – 150-225 words in 20 minutes
·          One listening and one reading – respond, summarize, compare and contrast (conflict between reading and listening texts) or filling in a chart
 
Essay – 300 words minimum in 30 minutes
·          Independent task
 
Listening
·          Note-taking skills – students allowed to take notes now on paper (provided, cannot be taken away) or on the computer
·          Students can replay sections relevant to the questions – but maximum time still applies
 
Reading
·          Much like the original test – some words are defined in the text (glossary), students can take notes
·          Longer texts and some new questions – categorize using chart or paraphrasing or summarizing
 
Our Approach
·          Skills development – study skills, listening, reading, speaking, writing skills
Study Areas
·          Life Sciences, Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, Physical Sciences
·          Academic and “normal” spoken English registers required
 
 
The maximum score on the iBT computer-based test is 120, which corresponds to 300 in the computer-based test and 677 in the paper-based test. Universities still tend to state their requirements in terms of the paper-based test:
 
The following table compares the scores of the two formats.
 
The scores will be valid for two years after the original test date.
 
Paper-based test
Computer-based test
Internet-based test
677
300
120
660
 
287
117
630
267
109
600
250
100
580
237
92
550
213
79
500
173
61
450
133
46
400
97
32