IELTS for studying abroad
Computer Science programmes at universities abroad are taught entirely in English, meaning you will read dense technical documentation, write lab reports and essays, collaborate in group projects, and follow fast-paced lectures from day one. IELTS Academic is the standard proof of English for both university admission and the student visa, and your score needs to meet the specific threshold set by each university and the immigration authority of the destination country. Because CS workloads lean heavily on reading long specifications and writing clearly structured arguments, balanced skills across all four IELTS components matter more than excelling in just one.
Each Papua New Guinea university — often each course — sets its own IELTS minimum. Find your exact target on the course's official admissions page.
IELTS requirements change and vary by route, employer, and institution — always confirm the current figure with the official body before you rely on it.
Australian and New Zealand universities are popular CS destinations and have clearly published IELTS requirements both for admission and for the student visa, which is issued by the Department of Home Affairs in Australia or Immigration New Zealand. These requirements are publicly searchable and can differ between the university minimum and the government visa minimum, so check both sources and use the higher of the two as your preparation target.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because Computer Science programmes expect you to produce coherent analytical essays and structured reports — and Writing is statistically the component where technical students lose the most points due to weak academic register and poor paragraph organisation.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in Papua New Guinea.