IELTS for studying abroad
Electronics Engineering programmes taught in English demand strong technical literacy — you will read dense circuit-theory textbooks, write lab reports and project proposals, follow fast-paced lectures on signal processing and embedded systems, and present findings to supervisors. IELTS Academic is almost universally required for admission and student-visa applications because it tests the precise reading, writing, and listening skills those tasks rely on. While specific score thresholds vary by institution and country, universities offering rigorous engineering programmes tend to set expectations that reflect the workload, so building genuine proficiency across all four skills is the practical goal.
Each Belarus 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.
Electronics Engineering programmes in continental Europe are often taught in English at the master's level even in non-anglophone countries, and each university sets its own language-entry criteria independently — requirements can differ significantly between a Dutch technical university and a German one, so check each institution individually. EU-based applicants from non-EEA countries also need to satisfy national visa rules, which may involve a separate language assessment step.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module on AlmiPrep, because Electronics Engineering students must produce clear, logically structured lab reports, technical essays, and project documentation — and Task 1 (describing graphs, diagrams, and processes) maps directly onto the kind of schematic and data-interpretation writing you will do throughout your degree.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in Belarus.