Abstract

This study analyzed 24 IELTS Task One (data explanation) prompts for task type, diagram type, subject matter, level of critical thought, and geographical references, in order to determine whether Emirati university students’ anecdotal claims of cultural bias on the IELTS academic writing exam (as experienced by the researcher in the past decade of teaching IELTS in the United Arab Emirates) are valid. The analysis found that the majority of the task types (88%) were non-process in nature (i.e. required the description of data in the form of a chart or graph, rather than the description of a process); 40% of the non-process prompts consisted of more than one diagram. The analysis revealed that 33% of the non-process prompts included bar graphs and 29% included line graphs. Pie charts appeared in 25% of the prompts and tables in only 17%. An Emirati student English preparatory program survey indicated the pie chart as the easiest to understand – a finding that may highlight a difference between the most commonly used IELTS prompt and the students’ prompt preference. A content analysis of topics found a high percentage (58%) of subject matter related to the social sciences, with 79% of the geographical references pertaining to Western contexts. An analysis of the amount of critical thought needed for graph interpretation revealed 52% of non-process prompts required some form of critical thought. The study therefore found that the cultural bias perceived by Emirati students has some validity, given the students’ socio-cultural and educational background.

Highlights

  • The academic version of the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) is widely used in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as a gatekeeper for entrance to higher education, especially in state institutions

  • The results showed that 60% of the multiple diagrams were of the same type with 40% consisting of a variety of 2 or more types

  • Given the criteria used for this analysis, over half (52%) of the non-process Task 1 prompts require the test-taker to apply some form of critical thought in order to read between the data and make connections between images

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Summary

Introduction

The academic version of the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) is widely used in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as a gatekeeper for entrance to higher education, especially in state institutions. The IELTS examination tests students’ ability to understand and use academic English in four skill areas: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. With the reading and writing components making up half of the IELTS exam, any perception of cultural bias on the part of the learners warrants further investigation. On the IELTS writing exam, students are asked to complete two tasks: a report on visual information (Task 1) and an essay-type argument (Task 2). A recent case study (Freimuth, 2014b) exploring the cultural bias of the Task 2 writing prompts (essay-type arguments) has already addressed the influence of topic familiarity on intermediate level students in the UAE, finding little effect on band scores despite the fact that 17% of Task 2 prompts were highlighted as culturally sensitive. An examination of cultural bias in IELTS Task 1 non-process writing prompts: a UAE perspective

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