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Dominic Cole’s IELTS Blog

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IELTS academic task 1 - analysing a table


The table below shows the proportion of different categories of families living in
poverty in Australia in 1999.

Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make
comparisons where relevant.

Write at least 150 words

Family Type Proportion of people from each household type


living in poverty

single aged person 6% (54,000)

aged couple 4% (48,000)

single, no children 19% (359,000)

couple, no children 7% (211,000)

sole parent 21% (232,000)

couple with children 12% (933,000)

all households 11% (1,837,000)

Analysing the table


How can you summarise the figures?

As a first step you need to organise the information in the table. Here it is fairly easy there
are 6 categories that can be broken down into 3 pairs:

age
no children
children

Each pair is divided in terms of marital status. Clearly, marital status is a key factor to be
highlighted in the report.
Dominic Cole’s IELTS Blog
http://www.dcielts.com

Understanding the numbers

Always be careful with numbers. Here there are two sets of numbers and you need to refer
to both sets. Note that only 12% of couples with children were in poverty, but this category
accounts for half the total figure.

What comparisons can you make?

The next step is to see what comparisons you can make. Again, this is not too hard to see
in this example.

age:
1) no significant difference depending on marital status
2) the category least affected by poverty - account for a small proportion of the total

no children:
1) the largest difference→either likely or unlikely to be in poverty depending on marital
status
2) account for approximately a third of the total figure

children:
1) a similar difference →either considerably above the average or just on the average
depending on marital status
2) much the largest category, accounting for well over a half of the total

How can you organise the report?

There is no one way to do this, but whatever you do must be logical and include the key
facts and comparisons. Think how you can divide your report into paragraphs - one
paragraph is not an option, it will look disorganised and you would lose marks for
coherence.

The obvious and simple solution is to divide the report into two main paragraphs. One
paragraph relating to percentages, the other overall figures.
Dominic Cole’s IELTS Blog
http://www.dcielts.com

This table shows how age, children marital status affected how many Australians
were living in poverty in 1999. In total 11% of households and 1,837,000 people
were below the poverty line.

It is notable that older people were the least affected by poverty. On average, only
5% of elderly people were below the poverty line and there was little difference
depending on marital status. For younger people, however, it would appear that
marital status was an important factor. Both singles and lone parents were
significantly above the average at 19% and 21% respectively. In contrast, married
couples were much less likely to be in financial trouble at 7% and 12%.

We should also note that the 933,000 couples with children account for almost half
of all people below the poverty line. The next highest figure is for single people
without children at over 350,000. Once again the groups least affected by poverty
are the single and married aged at approximately 50,000.

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