For the exam sprint
IELTS in weeks, not months
You booked the test and the date is close. You don’t have a year — you have weeks. The question is no longer “how do I learn English”; it’s “where do these hours move my band the most?”
The sprint trap
- Most courses assume months of runway and march through everything evenly — a luxury you don’t have.
- With no clear target you spread your hours thin across four skills and move none of them far.
- Cramming builds motivation but no map, so effort goes to what feels productive, not what raises the band.
- Anything you fix early quietly leaks back before test day if nothing brings it back.
How Axiom compresses the work
Diagnose the weakest descriptor first
Your band is the average of four criteria — the lowest one sets the ceiling. Axiom scores every answer on all four, so day one you know exactly which quarter to attack.
Make every session count
The examiner grades each Speaking and Writing answer with a concrete fix — scored on the official band descriptors — so no rep is wasted on “was that okay?”
Stop the leaks
FSRS schedules each review for the moment a skill is about to slip, and the Decay Engine flags what’s fading — so what you fix in week one is still there on test day.
Rehearse the real thing
Full timed mock sessions — which run offline — turn the last week into exam reps, not more reading.
Train it — don’t just read about it
Weeks are enough to move a band when every hour lands. That’s the whole design. Start by letting the free planner turn your exam date into a week-by-week plan.