Why Pakistani Students Struggle with IELTS — And What Actually Fixes It

You studied hard. You attended a preparation course. You watched YouTube videos, memorised vocabulary lists, and practised past papers. And then your IELTS result came back — and it was lower than you expected.

If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Thousands of Pakistani students face exactly this situation every year. And almost none of them failed because they were not intelligent or not hardworking enough.

They failed because of how they prepared — not how much.

In this article, we are going to look at the real reasons Pakistani students underperform in IELTS, and more importantly, what actually fixes each one. No generic advice. No tricks. Just honest, practical guidance.


1. They Focus on Tricks Instead of Real Language Skills

Walk into any IELTS preparation centre in Pakistan and you will likely hear the same things: memorise these templates, use these linking words, follow this formula for Task 2.

This approach feels helpful because it gives you something concrete to do. But IELTS examiners are trained specifically to identify memorised templates and formulaic writing. When they see it, your score goes down — not up.

The IELTS exam is not a test of how well you can follow a formula. It is a test of how well you can use English. Those are two very different things.

What actually fixes it: Build real language skills — sentence formation, vocabulary in context, coherent thinking in English. Templates can give you a basic structure, but they must be filled with your own genuine language, not memorised phrases. Practice writing and speaking without a template first. Then use structure to organise what you already know how to say.

2. Their Writing Has No Real Structure

IELTS Writing Task 2 is where most Pakistani students lose the most marks. The two most common problems are:

  • Writing a lot without actually answering the question
  • Jumping between ideas without logical flow

Both of these come from the same root cause — students have never been taught how to think in English before they write. They translate from Urdu in their head, write the translation down, and hope it makes sense. Sometimes it does. Often it does not.

Examiners mark your writing on four things: Task Achievement, Coherence and Cohesion, Lexical Resource, and Grammatical Range and Accuracy. If your ideas are unclear or poorly connected, you lose marks in two of those four areas before the examiner even looks at your grammar.

What actually fixes it: Before you write a single word, spend three to four minutes planning. Write down your main argument and two or three supporting points in rough. Decide the order. Then write. This one habit alone can move a Band 5.5 writer to Band 6.5 over time — because the ideas become clear and the paragraphs become logical.

3. They Are Afraid of Speaking in the Test

The IELTS Speaking test is a two-way conversation with an examiner. It lasts eleven to fourteen minutes across three parts. And for most Pakistani students, it is the most terrifying part of the whole exam.

The fear usually comes from one of two places. Either the student has never had a real English conversation with anyone before the test, or they are so focused on being grammatically perfect that they freeze mid-sentence and lose their fluency completely.

Here is something important to understand: IELTS examiners are not looking for perfect English. They are looking for communicative English — language that flows, that conveys meaning, and that sounds natural. A student who speaks confidently with minor grammatical errors will almost always score higher than a student who hesitates constantly while searching for the perfect sentence.

What actually fixes it: Practice speaking English out loud every single day — not in your head, out loud. Talk about your day, describe what you see, explain your opinion on anything. Record yourself and listen back. The goal is not perfection. The goal is fluency and confidence. These only come from regular practice, not from studying speaking theory.

4. They Neglect Listening and Reading Until the Last Minute

Pakistani students tend to focus heavily on Writing and Speaking during preparation because those feel harder and more personal. Listening and Reading get left for the final week — or sometimes the final day.

This is a mistake. IELTS Listening and Reading both require specific skills that take time to develop. In Listening, you need to predict what kind of information is coming, follow fast native-speaker speech, and write answers accurately while still listening. In Reading, you need to skim and scan efficiently, understand paraphrasing, and manage time across forty questions in sixty minutes.

None of these skills appear overnight. They develop through regular, deliberate practice over weeks.

What actually fixes it: Give all four modules equal attention from the very beginning of your preparation. Set aside time for Listening and Reading practice every week, not just before the exam. Listen to English podcasts, BBC World Service, or TED Talks regularly — not as study, just as exposure. Over time your ear adjusts and the test becomes significantly easier.

5. They Do Not Know Their Real Band Level Before Starting

Many students begin IELTS preparation with a target band in mind — usually 6.5 or 7.0 — without knowing what their current level actually is. This means they do not know how far they need to travel or which areas need the most work.

Someone at a Band 4.5 level needs a completely different preparation plan than someone at Band 5.5. Treating them the same way wastes time and produces frustration instead of results.

What actually fixes it: Before you begin preparing, do a full diagnostic. Attempt a real past paper under timed conditions, get your writing and speaking assessed by someone qualified, and understand clearly where you are starting from. Then build your preparation plan around your specific weaknesses — not a generic schedule designed for everyone.

The Honest Truth About IELTS Preparation

IELTS is not an impossible exam. Hundreds of thousands of people pass it every year with good scores. But it rewards genuine English ability — not memorised content, not shortcuts, and not last-minute cramming.

The students who improve their bands consistently are the ones who treat IELTS preparation as language development — building real skills over time — rather than as an exam to trick their way through.

If you approach it that way, the results follow.


Preparing for IELTS? Start with a Free Demo Class.

At Elemental Academia, our IELTS Preparation course is built around real language development — not templates, not tricks. We offer live one-on-one and group classes with band-focused feedback on every module.

Not sure if the course is right for you? Book a completely free demo class first. No payment, no commitment — just a real class so you can decide.

Book My Free Demo Class    View IELTS Course Details

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *