I'm an international student preparing for the ELTIS and I'm trying to understand how it compares to other English proficiency tests I've taken. I passed IELTS at a 6.5 two years ago and I've been living and studying in the US for 14 months. My biggest concern is the academic listening comprehension component—classroom lectures are still harder for me to follow than reading materials or conversations.
I've been doing practice sessions for about 3 weeks, maybe 30–40 minutes a day. My reading and writing practice scores are around 75–78% but my listening comprehension scores are running about 62–64%. The test is in 5 weeks and I'm not sure if that gap is closeable in time.
Does the ELTIS weight the listening and reading components equally or does one carry more? If listening is the heavier section I probably need to shift my study time more aggressively. And is the academic vocabulary in the test closer to IELTS Academic or more similar to TOEFL iBT?
Also: any specific strategies that helped people improve listening scores in a 4–5 week timeframe? I've been told to watch academic lectures but I'm not sure if that's actually the right practice format.
ELTIS academic vocabulary sits closer to TOEFL iBT than IELTS in my experience—the lecture excerpts use standard academic English from US university contexts. Your 14 months of study in the US should actually be an advantage there if you've been attending lectures.
Listening and reading are weighted comparably. With a 12-point gap between your scores, you should shift about 65–70% of your study time to listening practice now.
I had a similar gap (reading 77%, listening 61%) when I started and closed it to about 74%/70% over 5 weeks by doing one 30-minute listening practice session every single day without skipping. Consistency was more important than session length for me.
The lectures on the actual exam are 3–5 minutes long, not full-length. Practice with excerpts at that length rather than full 50-minute lectures.
For listening improvement in 4–5 weeks, academic lecture videos with subtitles are helpful but you need to use them strategically—watch once without subtitles, check comprehension, then rewatch with subtitles to see what you missed. That active approach builds faster than passive watching.
MIT OpenCourseWare and Khan Academy have good free lecture content at the right academic level. Practice taking notes while listening, not just listening—the note-taking forces active processing.
For anyone finding this later: ELTIS is passable with consistent effort even working full time. I studied 53 minutes a day for 11 weeks. The free eltis reading comprehension kept me honest about my actual gaps.
For anyone finding this later: ELTIS is passable with consistent effort even working full time. I studied 45 minutes a day for 8 weeks. The free eltis reading comprehension kept me honest about my actual gaps.