How your English test score can improve in a short time

PTE Author
PTE Author
Aerial image of Oxford University

If you need to improve your English test score quickly, the biggest gains usually come from using your time more precisely, not from spending more hours studying. When time is tight, improvement depends on how well you understand:

  • what to expect from the test experience,

  • how your responses are scored, and

  • where you can most improve your current performance.

In this article, we explain how you can prepare more efficiently for Pearson Test of English (PTE) Academic by focusing on test understanding and targeted practice that aligns to your own strengths and weaknesses.

How will familiarity with the test save me time?

When time is limited, lack of familiarity with the test is one of the most common reasons scores do not reflect true language ability. PTE Academic is fully computer-based and uses a defined set of task types. Within each task type, you’ll see a consistent structure, including how information is presented, how you respond, and how much time you’re given.

Knowing and becoming comfortable with the test format reduces hesitation and lost time during the test. This matters because the scoring system can only evaluate the language evidence you produce. When you spend less mental effort on navigation and timing, you are more likely to give complete, continuous responses, which leads to better scoring outcomes.

Further reading:

 

How will understanding scoring help me focus efficiently?

Your test score will improve when you give responses that align more closely with what the scoring system is designed to measure.

PTE Academic uses automated scoring for all tasks, with different approaches depending on the task type. Some tasks are scored as correct or incorrect, while others award partial credit across multiple traits, such as oral fluency, pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary, spelling, and written organization.

This scoring design is important for short-term improvement because partial-credit tasks allow you to gain points even when responses are not perfect.

Clear meaning, continuous delivery, and relevant content can raise several skill scores at the same time. Understanding this helps you avoid spending limited time on areas that have little influence on your overall result.

Further reading:

 

How do scored practice tests help when time is limited?

Mock tests are one of the most effective tools for improving English test scores quickly because not only do they give you valuable test practice, they also show your likely current score under real test conditions.

PTE Academic has Scored Practice Tests that reflect official task types and scoring behaviour. They help you understand two critical things: your starting score range and where you might be losing scoring marks.

These insights allow you to distinguish between language gaps and performance issues related to timing, task understanding, or response length. When preparation time is short, this distinction is essential. It prevents unfocused study and allows you to concentrate on the skills and traits that are actually holding your score below your target.

Further reading:

 

How do I know if my target score is realistic?

Start by understanding what scores you need for your chosen visa or study application, then find out what your own score potential is currently. PTE’s official Scored Practice Tests can help you understand your current overall score and individual skill scores – giving you insight into how near you are to your target and where any gaps remain.

Reaching your target may depend on improving your performance for one or more specific skills. For example, if your target is 65, but your listening is currently at 45, you will need to raise that skill significantly; it would make sense to focus your study time in this area. To improve your English skill, a realistic pace for most learners is:

  • 5-10 PTE points: 4-6 weeks of consistent practice

  • 11-20 points: 2-3 months

  • 20+ points: 4-6 months or more

If your timeline is shorter than what your score gap requires, you may need to adjust either your target or your timeline. But do bear in mind that you can often close smaller gaps by focusing on understanding the test format and scoring.

Further reading:

 

Pulling familiarity, scoring, and practice together

The fastest score improvements usually happen when these three elements work together.

  1. Familiarity with the test format ensures you can demonstrate your ability smoothly.

  2. Understanding how scoring works helps you prioritise responses that generate more usable language evidence.

  3. Scored practice tests show whether changes in familiarity and response quality are moving your performance toward your target score.

Because PTE Academic uses consistent task design and scoring logic, improvements in how you respond tend to carry forward from practice into the live test. This makes it possible to improve your score within a relatively short period, even if your underlying proficiency has not changed dramatically.

 

What to focus on when time is short

  • Get comfortable with the test experience so time and attention stay on language, not navigation

  • Understand how scoring works so effort aligns with impact

  • Use scored practice tests to identify your starting score and weakest areas

  • Focus preparation on pulling your performance toward the next realistic score band

 

Frequently asked questions

 

How can you improve English test scores quickly?

You improve scores fastest by reducing wasted effort. This means becoming familiar with the test format, understanding how responses are scored, and focusing your time on the skills and traits that most affect your result.

 

Can improving test familiarity really change your score?

Yes. In PTE Academic, unfamiliarity with task flow, timing, or response expectations can limit how much language evidence you produce. When you are familiar with the format, you are more likely to complete responses fully, which allows the scoring system to evaluate your ability more accurately.

 

What does a scored practice test tell you that study alone does not?

A scored practice test shows how your current English performs under test conditions. It helps you see whether your score is limited by language ability, by specific skills such as listening or speaking, or by performance factors like timing and task understanding.

 

Why do some improvements affect more than one score?

Many PTE Academic tasks assess multiple skills in a single response. When you improve clarity, fluency, or accuracy in these tasks, the same response can contribute to more than one skill score, which can accelerate overall improvement.

 

Is it possible to improve your score without improving your overall English level?

To some extent, yes. Scores often improve because you present your existing ability more clearly and consistently, not because your underlying proficiency has changed significantly. This is especially true when familiarity and pacing improve.

 

How do I know if I’m close to my required PTE score?

Taking a Scored Practice Test will help you identify how close you are to the score you need. It will also give you insights to help you focus on improving the skills or question types that will make the biggest impact for you.

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    To learn more about the tense system view the Anglo-Link’s video on tenses.

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    In the reading section, you will also need to understand how articles work in English. Articles are words such as ‘the’, ‘a’ and ‘an’.

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    Word families

    When it comes to learning vocabulary, make sure to learn the word family of a word.

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    Learn more about three aspects of academic vocabulary in the Griffith University’s Learn English- Academic Vocabulary video.

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    Speaking: Core English Skills
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    Want more prep ideas?

    Explore Smart Prep, which combines all our practice materials in one place, so it's easier for you to stay on track with your PTE preparation.

    • Smart Prep is a clear path to test day, guiding you through the official paid and free resources available for your test

    • It can be accessed whether you’ve booked a test or not – just create, or sign in to your myPTE account

    • Preparation materials include guided practice tests, introductory videos, video courses and test tips.

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