After a long delay, we’re continuing our blog about “The Science of IELTS”.
Here, we will be studying Listening SECTION 2: you will learn how to use “the
Science” to make this section easier.
In other words, you’ll learn how to use synonyms, keywords and answer-prediction
to succeed in this section. Some of these things you may already know.
We will also teach you some new methods. Finally, we will give you a text to
listen to and some authentic IELTS
questions to answer – just like a real exam!
ACTIVITY IDEA
1. instructions in the IELTS Listening exam
2. Synonyms and keywords
3. The order of the
questions/answers
4. Gapfill answers
When you’re finished, check the blog to see if you
remembered everything . We will be telling you more about some of these
subjects today…
What happens in
SECTION 2?
There
are a few differences between sections 1 and 2. Whereas SECTION 1 involves 2
people talking in a conversation, SECTION 2 will usually have 1 person
speaking. Sometimes, there may be 2 people, but the theme is usually the same: giving
information about something in a non-academic environment.
What does this mean?
…giving information…
If
only 1 person is talking, they are probably making an announcement. Their
speech is full of specific information such as times & dates, names of
people, subjects, etc.
(IELTS tests your understanding of specific information, because you will need
these skills when/if you go to a native-English university, or work in a
native-English building)
…about something…
The “something” (which they’re giving information about) is usually an event or
place.
…in a non-academic environment.
As we will see in the future, SECTION 3 and SECTION 4 in the
Listening test are almost always lectures: a presentation in a university by a
professor or teacher. The subject is academic in this case – however, in
SECTION 2, the subject is functional:
it involves practical information.
Here are some of the subjects of SECTION 2 in IELTS tests
from the past:
- comparing services and facilities in
different doctors’ clinics;
- introducing an upcoming year of events
in a local amateur football club;
- describing the layout and opening times
of a gallery;
- helping tourists find their way around
an English town;
- describing the different stages of a
walking tour in the Australian countryside.
Here is the text (or speech) which we will be using
later. Listen to it quickly, without trying to understand everything. Simply
answer these two questions:
a) Is the speaker formal or informal?
b) What event/place is she giving you information about?
What kinds of
questions appear in SECTION 2?
Before we answer this question, you should remember one
thing.
Good vocabulary is all you need for all of the questions
in an IELTS exam.
All
questions in the Listening test (including the questions in SECTION 2) use
synonyms and keywords.
The words which are on the question paper are synonyms for the words which are
used by the speaker. So, the words are often not the same, but they have
the same meaning.
To answer each question, you need to study the words on the paper. Then, when
you listen, you need to recognise their synonyms in the text.
Gapfill
Have
you revised our information about predicting and answering gapfill questions in
the blog about SECTION 1? Hopefully you have – because here it’s going to get more
complicated!
There are a few different types of questions which involve
gapfill. In SECTION 1, we had to complete
notes from the conversation. This may also appear in SECTION 2: you may
need to complete notes which explain the information which the speaker here
gives.
However, other gapfill questions are more likely. These
question types have appeared many times on different IELTS tests in the past:
Completing a table of
information: Very often, you are given a table of information. Notes
have been made in each cell (part of the table), but some of the notes have
gaps. You must write words in the gaps to complete these notes. (REMEMBER: the
instructions above the table tell you how many words you may write)
SYNONYMS / KEYWORDS: the words
before and after each gap (on the question sheet) are the words you need to
understand. These words, or their synonyms, will be spoken in the text. When
you hear them, you know your answer is coming – so listen carefully!
This
question will appear on today’s exercise
Completing a sentence:
This is a more
difficult kind of question. However, IELTS tests in the past have usually
contained only one or two “sentence completion” questions. You will see a short
sentence which expresses something which the speaker says. The sentence is
incomplete, however; you need to produce language which reports what the
speaker says using the correct grammar.
SYNONYMS / KEYWORDS: The
sentence on the paper uses very different words than the speaker: but the
meaning is the same. The words which you write down will probably be synonyms
of what the speaker says.
This
question will appear on today’s exercise
Multiple choice questions
In
multiple choice questions, which are very popular question types in IELTS
Listening (and Reading) tests, you need to choose the best answer from a list.
The correct answer is the choice which reflects what the speaker says.
SYNONYMS
/ KEYWORDS: Almost
all the options which you see in multiple-choice questions use synonyms. Your
vocabulary is most important here: if you have a good vocabulary, you should be
able to understand exactly what each option is saying, and you should be able
to quickly choose the correct answer while you listen to the speaker.
In SECTION 2, there are two forms of multiple-choice question.
Finishing a sentence:
If you get this
question (and you probably will!), you’ll see a few sentences which need to be
finished. Under each sentence are three options (A-C) or four options (A-D).
Each of these options can complete the sentence – but only one of them is true,
according to the speaker!
SYNONYMS / KEYWORDS: The
correct answer will contain synonyms/keywords spoken in the text – but some options may also contain
these synonyms or keywords. It’s important for you to understand: what exactly is the speaker saying? AND, what
exactly does each option mean?
ALSO, there is a rule which usually applies to multiple-choice questions which have three options (and you'll see this rule being used soon). The rule is:
1 option is directly confirmed by the speaker. (This is the correct answer)
1 option is directly contradicted by the speaker. (In other words, the speaker somehow says that this is wrong, using synonyms or antonyms)
1 option is not really mentioned at all by the speaker. (so no synonyms or keywords can be heard)
This question will appear today’s exercise
Choosing specific
information which is mentioned: Here,
you will see a single question about something the speaker discusses in the
text. Then, you will see a long list with many options (usually nouns). You
will have to choose one, two or three of them (see the instructions).
SYNONYMS / KEYWORDS: Most
of the options are mentioned in the text, as they appear on the page (so,
usually, no synonyms in the options). However, the question may contain
synonyms for what the speaker says.
This question will appear in a future exercise
Other question types
Other
question types can be found in SECTION 2 of the listening exam, but they haven’t
been as common in past exams as the questions above. We will look at them in
another blog entry, but they are:
Short-answer questions: Here, you need to write a two- or
three-word answer to a question about the speaker’s information.
Labelling a map: An unpleasant exercise where you must
follow a map which the speaker explains, and match different names to the
correct places.
Taking the test…
We have given you a
lot of information here, and it’s scary. (Sorry!) Take your time to read
and understand everything. Remember the most important information:
- The questions will be answered in the text in the same
order as they appear (top to bottom) on the page.
- Listen out for keywords, or their synonyms: words which
appear on the page and tell you that the answer is coming soon.
- Be prepared for the different types of questions.
Understand them.
Ready to
begin? Here goes…
SECTION 2
Listen to the text
(which will be played only once), and answer QUESTIONS 1-12
QUESTIONS
1-5 - answer QUESTIONS 1-5 by choosing the correct
answer, A. B. or C.
1. The festival was established
by the University Press
A. 74
years ago
B.
in
1974
C.
last
year
2. Heaney, the Irish poet, has:
A. won
an award
B.
visited
the university
C.
died
3. This year’s guests have taught
at Yale:
A.
occasionally
B.
full-time
C.
part-time
4. The Old Campus is made up
of:
A. two
buildings beside a courtyard
B.
many
buildings around a courtyard
C.
just
one building
5. The Old Campus is located:
A.
between
Chapel Street and Elm Street;
B. south
of the Science Campus
C. far
away from New Haven Green
QUESTION
6 – complete the sentence using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS
Linsly-Chittenden Hall, Connecticut Hall and McClellan Hall are easy (6) _______________.
QUESTIONS
7-12 complete the notes using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER
Speaker
|
Subject
|
Location
|
Day,
time
|
Patrick
Sullivan
(poet
laureate)
|
(7)_______________
in
modern European poetry.
|
(8)_______________
|
Tonight,
8.30pm
|
Charlie
Henson
(London Metropolitan)
|
(9)_______________
|
Connecticut
Hall
|
Saturday,
(10)_______
|
Sylvia
Brooker-Grant
(linguist)
|
“(11)_______and
the phonemic chart”
|
McClellan
Hall
|
Sunday,
11.30am
|
Dr.
Robert Foskin
(Head
of English faculty at Yale)
|
(12)_______________
|
Linsly-Chittenden
Hall
|
Sunday,
after lunch
|