Ionisation energy is the energy required to remove an electron from the atom (the outermost electron to be exact).
Binding energy is the energy required to break all the bonds between nucleons (nucleons are protons and neutrons) in the atom.
Of course they are different.
BUT: I haven't seen any reference to ionisation energy in my textbook even though I've read all core modules plus the From Quanta to Quarks section. And the term is not in the glossary either. And I don't remember reading or being told about it in year 11 Physics.
EDIT: There's a section related to ionisation which is on the spectral lines.
Depends on what the question tells you, you can find the difference between two energy states (in the 2 shells) [EDIT: one shell is when n = 1 and the other is with n = infinity, the formula for finding energy at a particular shell is En = E1 / n^2] if they tell you that information [EDIT: if they give you the value for either E1 or E2 or any other En], or you can use "E = h f" if they tell you what light frequency is needed to excite the electron. [EDIT: or you can use the formula as explained in the next post if they don't give you anything]