Students will practice from Cambridge IELTS 1-8
Tips
For IELTS Listening Practice
1.
Read before you listen – predict the answer
One
difficulty in the exam is that you are not just listening, but reading the question
and writing the answer all at the same time. One simple tip is to read the
questions before you listen so that you know what you are listening for. It is
a difficult skill to master, but it can sometimes help to try and predict the
type of answer you are looking for: is it a name for instance or a number?
2.
Read as you listen – focus on the whole question
A
huge proportion of mistakes are made not because you haven’t listened well, but
because you do not focus on the question. As you is listening, focus on the
precise wording of the question.
3.
Look at 2 questions at once
One
difficulty is that the answers to 2 questions often come quickly one after the
other. Can you get both answers? Maybe, maybe not: but the only way you can is
if you are ready for the next question.
I’d
add that it’s no problem getting one question wrong, the real problem is if you
lose track of where you are in the listening and you are still listening for
question 13 when the cassette has moved onto question 15.
4.
Don’t leave the writing to the end
Sometimes
candidates leave the writing part to the end, thinking that they will remember
what they heard. In my experience, this almost never works: there’s a lot of
information, you’re under stress and, most importantly, after each listening
you should be moving onto the next set of questions to read them.
5.
Practice your shorthand
You
do not have to write everything that you down: you have 10 minutes at the end
to copy your answers onto the answer sheet. So what you need to do is to learn
how to write down enough for you to recognize as you are listening so that you
can write it out in full later. The one exception to this is in part 1 with
numbers and names where you have to write everything out in full as you are
listening – that is the challenge.
6.
Numbers and names – check your spelling
In
part 1, you are almost invariably required to spell names and/or write down
numbers. This looks easy but in my experience can often go wrong and the
problem is that if you get any spelling wrong, you lose the mark Of course you
know the alphabet, but some letters can cause problems even for advanced
learners, in particular:
J
& G
Y
A
& E & I
My
tip is to make an association that you can remember: these are mine, but I
suggest you make your own:
J
is for Jesus, but G is for God
How
do you spell “why”? W-H-Y
A
is for apple
E
is for elephant
I
is for ‘I”
7.
Don’t write the answer too quickly
Sometimes
you hear what you think is the answer, but the speaker goes on to correct
themselves or give slightly different information:
“So
I’ll see you on Wednesday afternoon”
“Sorry,
I’m busy then. How about Thursday evening?”
“Fine,
Thursday at 7 0′clock”
8.
Don’t leave any blank answers
There
are 2 reasons for this. Firstly, your guess may well be correct, particularly
if it is a multiple choice style question. Secondly, there is a danger if you
leave a blank that you write the answers in the wrong boxes on the answer sheet
and that can be a disaster.
9.
Listen for repeated information
This
doesn’t always work, but sometimes the words that are the answer are repeated:
if you need to make a guess choose the words you hear repeated, they could well
the be answer.
10.
Look for clues in the question
A
frequent question type is completing a table; in this type of question you will
often find clues to the answer by looking at the other information in the
table. In particular, look at the headings of the rows and columns: if, for
example, the heading says “equipment” and some of the completed boxes say “paperclips”
and “cardboard” you have a good clue as to what you should be listening for.
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