Most TOEFL test-takers spend 80% of their prep time on Reading and Listening — because it feels easier to measure progress there. Writing gets left to the last week. That's a mistake.
Writing is where you can gain the most points in the shortest time, because the scoring criteria are transparent and learnable.
What the TOEFL Writing section actually tests
The 2026 TOEFL iBT Writing section has two task types:
- Write for an Academic Discussion — You read a professor's question and two student responses, then write your own contribution to the discussion. You have 10 minutes.
- Write an Email — You respond to an email prompt with appropriate tone, structure, and content.
Both tasks are scored by AI and human raters on a 0–5 scale. The four scoring dimensions are: development, organization, language use, and topic relevance.
The 30-day plan
Week 1: Understand the rubric
Before you write a single word, read the official TOEFL Writing rubric. A score of 4 vs. 5 often comes down to one thing: language variety. High scorers use a range of sentence structures and vocabulary — not just correct grammar.
Write one Academic Discussion response per day. Don't worry about time. Focus on:
- Directly answering the question (not just summarizing others)
- Adding one concrete example or reason
- Using at least two different sentence structures
Week 2: Build your sentence toolkit
Collect 10–15 sentence frames that work across different topics:
- "While [X] raises a valid point, I would argue that..."
- "This is particularly relevant in the context of..."
- "One often-overlooked consequence of [X] is..."
These aren't templates to copy blindly — they're scaffolding. With enough practice, you'll stop needing them.
Week 3: Timed practice
Now add the clock. 10 minutes for Academic Discussion, 15 minutes for Write an Email.
The most common time-management mistake: spending 3 minutes on the first sentence. Write a simple opening, move to your argument, come back and polish if time allows.
Week 4: Review your AI feedback
If you're using Testtally, every response gets scored with a breakdown by dimension. Look at where you consistently score below 4 — that's your target area for the final week.
Common patterns:
- Low development → your examples are vague, add specifics
- Low language use → sentence variety is weak, use your toolkit
- Low organization → your response jumps around, use one clear structure
The single most important habit
Write every day. Even 15 minutes. Consistency beats intensity for language skills. A writer who practices daily for 30 days outperforms one who cramshes for 3 days every week — every time.
Put these strategies to work with daily TOEFL practice and instant AI feedback.
Start for free