Showing 55229 results for "career as cabin crew"

6 Views Posted 2 years ago

Answered by

<p>Maharaja Agrasen College&nbsp;and&nbsp;Kalindi College&nbsp;are both reputable institutions, but they have distinct characteristics. Let&rsquo;s compare them based on various factors:</p><ol start="1" type="1"><li style="font-weight: bold;"><strong>Courses Offered:</strong></li><ul type="circle"><li>Maharaja Agrasen College&nbsp;offers a&nbsp;B.A. (Hons.) in Political Science&nbsp;program.</li><li>Kalindi College&nbsp;also offers a&nbsp;B.A. (Hons.) in Political Science&nbsp;program.</li>... View more

90 Views Posted 9 years ago

Answered by

,

Overseas Education Counselor, Fr...,

As for reporting, the scores will be reported to the selected university everytime you take the test. However, the best score from both the attempts will be considered by the universities. It is very much similar to the concept of betterment exams in India.

42 Views Posted 2016-05-17 21:27:15

Answered by

,

Education Consultant,

you have to do lot of practise. Instead of ToEFL you can do IELTS. take coaching and then write exam

1 View Posted a year ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Yes, TOEFL is widely accepted by all universities in New Zealand for both undergraduate and postgraduate programs. Universities such as the University of Auckland, University of Otago, Victoria University of Wellington, and Massey University recognize TOEFL scores for admission.&nbsp;</p>

4 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>It can still catch you off guard. Daily conversation differs from the academic format. TOEFL test takers often say reading and listening sections feel tough under time pressure. Practice full tests helps a lot. Many fluent speakers score lower than expected at first. Do not skip mocks.</p>

4 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Yes it is. You need a quiet private space. Proctors watch via camera the whole time. Multiple doors or balcony access can raise questions. Reddit users advise showing the entire room at check-in. Clear your desk completely. Follow rules or risk cancellation.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>The big update was done in 2026. ETS made these changes to make the test shorter, more adaptive, and easier to understand. They wanted better alignment with real-life English use and global standards like CEFR.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Much shorter now. The total time drops to around 80 to 90 minutes. The old one took nearly two hours or about 116 minutes. Shorter passages, adaptive questions, and streamlined tasks cut the length. You finish faster but still cover reading, listening, speaking, and writing fully. This helps if you feel tired during long exams.</p>

2 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>ETS introduced a new 1 to 6 band scale. It comes with half-point steps like 4.5 or 5.0. This scale matches the CEFR levels directly for clearer understanding. You still get section scores and an overall band average. For two years after the change score reports also show the old 0 to 120 equivalent side by side.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Yes they did. Reading and listening turn adaptive starting then. Questions adjust based on how you perform earlier. Harder ones follow good answers and easier ones after mistakes. This makes the test more personalized.</p>

7 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>ETS provides them directly. Go to the official TOEFL website. Look under the Prepare for the Test section. They offer free full-length practice tests there. Some are interactive with scoring. Others come as downloadable PDFs with sample questions.</p>

5 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Yes you can. ETS offers several downloadable PDFs on their website. Look for the TOEFL iBT Free Practice Test section. Some include full tests with answer keys and explanations. Others give separate samples for each skill like reading passages or speaking prompts. Print them if you prefer paper practice.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Not always identical. Official ones from ETS come very close though. They use the same format, timing, and question types you face on test day. Some samples show older versions before recent changes. Newer practice tests match the current adaptive style better. Free ones on the ETS site give a solid feel for difficulty level.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Aim for at least three to five full ones. Start with one early to understand the structure. Then do another after some study to track improvement. Finish the rest closer to your test date under timed conditions.</p>

6 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Some UK visa routes demand Secure English Language Tests like IELTS UKVI. Certain programs in France or Italy stick to their own tests or IELTS. Very few outright reject TOEFL though. If a country uses TOEFL less, it is usually because IELTS dominates locally. Research your target university early. Do not assume acceptance everywhere.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Listen to American, British, and Australian speakers daily. Use podcasts, news, or TED Talks. Focus on keywords. Practice official samples. Accents become easier with regular exposure.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Read questions before audio starts. Note key words. Write answers on paper as you hear them. Spelling must be exact. Do not leave blanks. Practice full sections timed.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Do one full section every few days. Use official ETS samples. Use headphones in a quiet room. Check answers after. Replay hard parts. Review mistakes carefully to improve fast.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Speak at a normal speed. Use simple connectors like "also," "because," "for example." Record yourself. Listen back. Fix pauses and filler words. Smile while speaking. It helps you sound confident.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Answer the question first. Then explain why with a reason. Add a short personal example. Use "for instance" or "in my opinion." Practice 45–60 seconds per response. Time yourself every day.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Listen to native speakers on podcasts. Repeat sentences after them. Focus on stress and intonation. Speak loudly and clearly. Record answers from official samples. Compare with model responses. Practice daily for 15–20 minutes.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Skim the passage for the main idea first. Underline keywords in questions. Scan for synonyms. Practice daily with official samples. You save time and finish easily.</p>

1 View Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Look at context around the word or sentence. Inference means what the text suggests, not your own ideas. Eliminate wrong choices. Practice inference questions a lot. They appear often.</p>

3 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Spend 18–20 minutes per passage. Do full sections timed. Use ETS free tests. Check mistakes after. Replay hard parts. Regular practice improves speed and score quickly.</p>

2 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>A good TOEFL test centres means how near it is. Quiet rooms, working computers, and friendly staff help you focus. Bad ones cause delays or technical issues. Pick close and reliable for better performance.</p>

3 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Learn synonyms and context clues for vocab. For inference, focus on implied ideas only. Practice official ETS samples daily. Eliminate wrong choices fast. Review mistakes carefully.</p>

2 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Listen to academic talks and campus chats. Take notes on main ideas and details. Practice summarizing after each audio. Use official samples. Replay hard parts to catch missed info.</p>

3 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Log in to your ETS account. Go to “My TOEFL Home.” Click “View Scores.” Your results appear 4–8 days after the test. PDF score report downloads easily.</p>

4 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>No same-day results. Official scores take at least 3 days. Unofficial Reading and Listening scores show right after the test ends. Full scores need ETS processing time. Be patient.</p>

4 Views Posted 3 months ago

Answered by

Raushan Kumar,

Contributor-Level 10

<p>Try December to July. These months have more open slots and less competition. Avoid August–November if possible. Early booking gives you better centres and dates. Plan ahead.</p>

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