Many IB students notice something confusing when they first look at the exam timetable:
English, French, and Spanish exams are not scheduled on the same days.
This often leads to questions like:
- “Why aren’t all language exams grouped together?”
- “Is one language treated differently from another?”
- “Does having a later exam mean it’s harder?”
- “How should I plan revision if my language exam is much earlier or later?”
The answer lies in how the IB manages global exam security, student numbers, and subject combinations.
This article explains why IB English, French, and Spanish exams have separate exam dates, and how students should plan revision around this structure.
The Global Scale of IB Language Exams
Languages are some of the highest-entry subjects in the IB.
Across the world:
- English has the largest number of candidates
- French and Spanish also have very high global uptake
- Millions of scripts are processed across multiple time zones
Scheduling all language exams together would create:
- Severe exam clashes
- Security risks
- Unmanageable marking loads
Separate dates are a necessity, not a preference.
Why Language Exams Cannot Be Scheduled Together
The IB must avoid situations where students:
- Take two language exams on the same day
- Sit multiple long writing papers back-to-back
- Face listening exams simultaneously
Because many students take:
- English + another language
- Two Language A or B subjects
Languages must be spread across the timetable.
Exam Security Is a Major Factor
Language exams are particularly sensitive to security issues because:
- Listening audio must remain confidential
- Reading passages cannot be reused
- Early leaks would affect huge numbers of students
By separating English, French, and Spanish:
- The IB reduces the risk of content sharing
- Exams can be securely managed across time zones
- Each language maintains exam integrity
Security concerns heavily influence scheduling decisions.
Candidate Numbers Shape the Timetable
English exams involve the largest candidate pool globally.
French and Spanish:
- Also have very large entries
- Are taken in different regions at different scales
To manage this:
- English exams are often spread early
- French and Spanish may appear slightly later
- Listening exams are carefully staggered
This allows the IB to handle logistics fairly and efficiently.
Does Separate Scheduling Mean Different Difficulty?
No.
A common myth is:
“If my language exam is later, it must be harder.”
This is not true.
- All language exams are set to the same difficulty standards
- Grade boundaries are global
- Examiners do not know when you sat the exam
Timing affects student fatigue, not exam difficulty.
Why Students Perceive Some Language Exams as Harder
Perception is influenced by:
- Fatigue from earlier exams
- Stress buildup
- Confidence levels
Students sitting a language exam later in the session may feel:
- Less mentally fresh
- Less motivated
- More anxious
This has nothing to do with the language itself.
How Separate Language Dates Affect Revision Planning
Separate exam dates mean:
- You cannot revise all languages at once
- Revision must be staggered
- Language exposure must be consistent
Students who stop language revision too early often see:
- Vocabulary loss
- Reduced listening comprehension
- Lower confidence
Languages require ongoing exposure, not short-term cramming.
Planning Language Revision With the RevisionDojo Study Planner
The RevisionDojo Study Planner helps students manage staggered language exams without losing momentum.
Using the planner, you can:
- See exactly when each language exam occurs
- Keep light language revision running until exam day
- Balance languages with content-heavy subjects
- Avoid dropping a language too early
Instead of guessing when to revise languages, you plan with precision.
Access the planner here:
https://www.revisiondojo.com/study-planner
Consistency is critical for language success.
Why Teachers Support Separate Language Scheduling
Teachers recognise that:
- Back-to-back language exams hurt performance
- Listening exams require mental freshness
- Writing stamina matters
Separating exam dates helps students perform more consistently across languages.
RevisionDojo Call to Action
If your English, French, or Spanish exams are on different dates, that’s not a disadvantage — it’s a planning challenge.
Use the RevisionDojo Study Planner to:
- Keep language revision consistent
- Avoid last-minute panic
- Perform confidently on exam day
Start planning here:
https://www.revisiondojo.com/study-planner
Languages reward steady exposure, not stress.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Why aren’t all IB language exams on the same day?
Because many students take more than one language, and scheduling them together would cause major clashes and security issues.
Does a later language exam mean it’s harder?
No. All IB language exams are set and marked to the same standard regardless of timing.
Should I revise languages differently from other subjects?
Yes. Languages require regular exposure rather than intensive cramming.
Is English treated differently from other languages?
English has the largest global entry, which affects scheduling, but the assessment standards are identical.
When should I stop revising for a language exam?
You shouldn’t stop completely. Light, consistent revision should continue until the exam day.
