Array
(
    [0] => reading-materials
    [1] => passages
    [2] => quiz
    [3] => quiz-no-score
    [4] => paraphrase
    [5] => questions-1-10
    [6] => insertion-questions
    [7] => listening-materials
    [8] => lectures
    [9] => test
    [10] => speaking-materials
    [11] => task-1
    [12] => task-2
    [13] => task-3
    [14] => t3live
    [15] => task-4
    [16] => t4live
    [17] => task-5
    [18] => t5live
    [19] => task-6
    [20] => t6live
    [21] => writing-materials
    [22] => independent-essay
    [23] => indevaluation
    [24] => thank-you-ind
    [25] => integrated-essay
    [26] => intwrlive
    [27] => intevaluation
    [28] => thank-you-int
    [29] => thank-you-no-grades
    [30] => independent-essay-test
    [31] => vocabulary-materials
    [32] => wotd-quiz
    [33] => pronunciation-materials
    [34] => videos
    [35] => practice-tests
    [36] => twitter
    [37] => links-archive
    [38] => paid-toefl-exercises
    [39] => free-toefl-exercises
)
1
Free TOEFL Writing Exercises and Practice Materials

Submit Your TOEFL Essay

 

Every day, Strictly English reviews, for free, the first 5 Independent Essays and the first 5 Integrated Essays it receives. Your results will be emailed to you within 48 hours and anonymously added to our growing database of TOEFL essays. (Search Database now)

Submit an Independent Essay (30-Minute Essay)

Submit an Integrated Essay (20-Minute Essay)

NOTE: All submitted essays become the property of Strictly English. Essays that Strictly English publishes will be published anonymously.

 

Search our Essay Database

 

Browse over 1000 essays that we have graded!

Students can:

  • Search for essays that scored higher than yours to see what a higher-scoring essay looks like.
  • Strengthen your editing skills by searching for essays with bad grammar (use our "Advanced Search" setting) and then edit them yourself. (It's always easier to find mistakes in OTHER people's writing!)
  • Print out our highest scoring essays and analyze their arguments, organization, and mechanics. Then try to use those same strengths in your own writing.

 

Teachers can:

  • Print out 10 essays with different scores and have their students order them from worst to best
  • Have your students edit essays with weak grammar (use our "Advanced Search" setting)
  • Have your students use our rubric to grade an essay (cut off the score at the top of the page after printing out) and then compare their grade to our grade. If they can think like a TOEFL rater, then they will be more careful when writing!

 

Please tell us how you use these essays in class so that other teachers can benefit from your lesson plan!