How to write a formal letter for IELTS General Training Writing Task 1

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A) Iโ€™m interested in doing some voluntary work in your hospital.

B) Iโ€™m writing to apply for the position of volunteer worker at the hospital.

C) I am writing this letter in support of my application to join the hospital as a volunteer worker.

In IELTS General Training Writing Task 1, itโ€™s important that you understand the difference between formal language (Example C above), semi-formal language (Example B above) and informal language (Example A above) because youโ€™ll need to write a letter in one of these styles.

Iโ€™ve found over many years of teaching that most test takers need more help with writing formal letters, so in this post Iโ€™m going to show you features of formal language using an example task and answer fromย The Official Cambridge Guide to IELTS.

IELTS General Training Writing Task 1

The General Training Writing Task 1 below is an example of one that asks you to write a formal letter.

You know that the letter has to be formal because itโ€™s to someone you donโ€™t know (a staff member at your local hospital) about something important (your application to work there).

Official Guide Writing Task 1 - Page 299

(Click to enlarge)

It also tells you to start your letter with โ€˜Dear Sir or Madam,โ€™, which is a signal that you need to write a letter thatโ€™s more formal in style!

If this wasnโ€™t about IELTS but about a real job application, youโ€™d need to write a formal letter if you didnโ€™t know the person you were writing to, a semi-formal letter if you knew the person you were writing to but perhaps not very well, and possibly an informal email if the person was actually a good friend of yours (or talk to them instead).

IELTS General Training Writing Task 1 example answer

If you read the following answer youโ€™ll see that the writer writes a formal letter, making the purpose of the letter clear, explaining why theyโ€™d like to do voluntary work at the hospital and what type of work they could do, and saying when they would be available.

Official Guide Writing Task 1 Example Answer Page 395

(Click to enlarge)

As youโ€™ll see below, the features that make the letter formal are good examples of the kind of language you could use if you have to write a formal letter.

Formal language

So, what language features are formal and which should you avoid in a formal letter?

Formal language features include:

  • formal openings, e.g. โ€˜Dear Sir or Madam,โ€™ and closings, e.g. โ€˜Yours faithfully,โ€™
  • polite requests, e.g. โ€˜I would be most grateful if you couldโ€ฆโ€™
  • past forms of modal verbs, e.g. โ€˜I would be able toโ€ฆโ€™ (rather than โ€˜I will be able toโ€ฆโ€™) and โ€˜…responsibilities I might encounterโ€ฆ (rather than โ€˜…responsibilities I may encounterโ€ฆ โ€™)
  • the use of more formal vocabulary, e.g. โ€˜positionโ€™ and โ€˜roleโ€™ (rather than โ€˜jobโ€™), โ€˜provideโ€™ (rather than โ€˜giveโ€™), โ€˜encounterโ€™ (rather than โ€˜meetโ€™) and โ€˜assistโ€™ (rather than โ€˜helpโ€™)

Language features you should avoid in a formal letter include:

  • contractions, e.g. Iโ€™ll beโ€ฆ (instead of โ€˜I will beโ€ฆโ€™)
  • direct requests, e.g. โ€˜Can you look atโ€ฆ?โ€™
  • ellipsis (writing sentences that can be understood but with words missing), e.g. Hope you find my application suitable (instead of โ€˜I hope that you find my application suitable)
  • informal vocabulary, e.g. โ€˜old-timersโ€™ (rather than โ€˜the elderlyโ€™)

ย 

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