IELTS for studying abroad
Environmental Science programmes require you to read dense academic texts (field reports, policy documents, peer-reviewed ecology and climate science papers), write structured research-style essays, and participate in seminars where precise scientific vocabulary matters. IELTS proves to admissions teams and visa authorities that you can handle this technical workload in English. Because the field spans both quantitative analysis and written argument, strong performance across all four skills is important, but Academic Writing and Reading carry particular weight in university assessments.
A commonly cited requirement is typically 6.0 overall for undergraduate and 6.5 for postgraduate, set by New Zealand universities.
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 require IELTS Academic for Environmental Science entry, and the student visa applications processed by the Australian Department of Home Affairs and Immigration New Zealand each carry their own English proficiency thresholds — check the current version of the relevant visa subclass requirements directly on the official government website, as these figures are updated periodically.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because Environmental Science assignments demand coherent argumentation about complex topics such as biodiversity loss or climate policy, and examiners look for precise scientific register, logical essay structure, and accurate data interpretation — all skills directly tested in IELTS Academic Task 1 and Task 2.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in New Zealand.