Every year, the International English Olympiad (IEO) is held by the Science Olympiad Foundation (SOF) for students in grades 1 to 12. IEO is an English Olympiad where students can compete for a scholarship. The IEO operates on two levels. The first level of the test is held during school hours in the participants’ individual schools. Students in grades 3 to 12 participate in Level 2.
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Every year, the Science Olympiad Foundation posts its SOF International English Olympiad syllabus on its official website. Each class has a different curriculum from the others. The SOF IEO Syllabus is entirely based on NCERT books and school textbook syllabuses. In this article, we will discuss the IEO Class 7 Syllabus in detail.
IEO Syllabus for Class 7
- Total number of questions – 50
- Time – 1 hour
The syllabus for IEO Class 7 is divided into four sections, each of which includes the topics listed below.
Section 1 | Spellings, Locations, Collocations & Words related to Travel, Homonyms & Homophones, Activities, etc. Antonyms, Synonyms, Spellings & Analogies, One Word, Idioms & Phrasal Verbs, Modals, Word Order, Pronouns, Nouns, Adverbs, Verbs, Articles, Adjectives, Conjunctions, Prepositions, Tenses, Punctuation, Narration, & Voices, etc. |
Section 2 | Search for and retrieve information from various text types such as Brochures, News stories, Advertisements and Informal & formal letters. Understand the information given in Itinerary, Brochures, News reports, etc. Acquire a broad understanding of and look for particular information in Biographies, short Narratives, Messages and Notices, etc. |
Section 3 | Ability to understand situation-based variations in functions like refusing and requesting, expression of intent, Apologies and stating of preferences, etc. |
Section 4 | Higher-order thinking questions include the syllabus as per the 1st, 2nd and 3rd sections. |
Points to be Remembered While Preparing for IEO
- Read a lot of books, periodicals, and novels.
- Keep an eye on new terms and attempt to write down anything you come across.
- Use English to communicate with your classmates.
- Try writing your own short pieces, which can range from a description of your day to a critique of the movie you just saw.
- Don’t pay attention to words you don’t understand.
- It’s critical to recognise your strengths and work on your weaknesses
- Don’t make the same error repeatedly.
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