Top 10 Tips for Your IELTS Speaking Exam - Advice from IELTS Examiners & Students

60,316 views ・ 2021-06-24

Oxford Online English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:01
Hi, I’m Daniel.
0
1100
1400
00:02
Welcome to Oxford Online English!
1
2500
2680
00:05
In this lesson, you can get ten vital tips for your IELTS speaking test.
2
5180
5380
00:10
There’s a lot of information and advice about the IELTS speaking test online.
3
10560
6120
00:16
Some of it is good, some of it isn’t.
4
16680
2980
00:19
Much of it is similar.
5
19660
2400
00:22
However, after working with hundreds of students who were taking IELTS, we discovered there
6
22060
6250
00:28
was a lot of information which *isn’t* easy to find online, from official sources or not.
7
28310
7420
00:35
We got feedback from students of ours who took the IELTS speaking exam, and we also
8
35730
5579
00:41
interviewed several IELTS examiners.
9
41309
3251
00:44
Based on this, we’ve put together these ten tips.
10
44560
4420
00:48
We chose these ten points because they’re things which aren’t easy to find information
11
48989
5471
00:54
about, or because they’re points which are often misunderstood.
12
54460
4860
00:59
Are you looking for an IELTS teacher?
13
59320
2620
01:01
Check out our website: Oxford Online English dot com.
14
61940
4120
01:06
We have many experienced IELTS teachers who can help you to prepare for your exam.
15
66070
6100
01:12
One more thing before we start: don’t forget to turn on subtitles if you need them!
16
72170
5830
01:18
You can do it now; just click the CC button in the bottom right of your video player.
17
78000
5940
01:23
Let’s look at our first tip.
18
83940
3840
01:27
Here’s a question for you: in part one of the IELTS speaking exam, how long do you have
19
87780
6009
01:33
for each answer?
20
93789
2071
01:35
In IELTS speaking part one, the examiner is aiming to ask you twelve questions.
21
95860
6990
01:42
The examiner *must* ask at least seven questions, otherwise the exam is not considered valid.
22
102850
7890
01:50
To answer twelve questions, you have around fifteen to twenty seconds per answer.
23
110740
7449
01:58
Another question: how many sentences can you say in twenty seconds?
24
118189
6201
02:04
Try it now.
25
124390
1259
02:05
Find an easy text, and read it aloud, with a twenty-second timer.
26
125649
4491
02:10
How many full sentences can you finish?
27
130140
3650
02:13
Whatever number you got, in the IELTS speaking test, you won’t be reading a text.
28
133790
5760
02:19
So, your number will be lower.
29
139550
3370
02:22
Many students we meet find it difficult to get through more than one or two full sentences
30
142920
5200
02:28
in this time.
31
148120
1300
02:29
Common IELTS speaking advice is “develop your ideas”, “give longer answers,”
32
149420
7390
02:36
and so on.
33
156810
2490
02:39
That’s not wrong, but it’s not the full picture, either.
34
159300
4840
02:44
You don’t have time to make a *very* long answer.
35
164140
3420
02:47
Even a highly fluent speaker can’t say that much in twenty seconds.
36
167560
4840
02:52
And, twenty seconds is the *maximum*.
37
172400
2200
02:54
OK, it’s not like the IELTS examiners are timing every answer you give, but they will
38
174600
6560
03:01
be controlling the time tightly.
39
181160
3110
03:04
By the way, this is similar in part three of the speaking test.
40
184270
4440
03:08
So, when you’re practising, use a timer.
41
188710
4160
03:12
Limit your answers to twenty seconds.
42
192870
2650
03:15
Don’t practise huge, long answers which take you a minute to get through.
43
195520
3990
03:19
If it’s difficult for you to get through more than one sentence in twenty seconds,
44
199510
5620
03:25
practise for speed, with a timer.
45
205130
4070
03:29
How much do you think the examiner will interrupt you in your IELTS speaking exam?
46
209200
5470
03:34
And, does it mean that you did something wrong?
47
214670
5200
03:39
The examiner might interrupt you for many reasons.
48
219870
3810
03:43
We get feedback from IELTS students who are surprised at how much the examiner interrupts.
49
223680
6380
03:50
Some people even get annoyed: “The examiner wouldn’t let me speak!”
50
230060
5230
03:55
There are many reasons the examiner might interrupt you, and not all of them are problems.
51
235290
7240
04:02
The examiner will interrupt you if your answer is too long, or if your answer is off topic
52
242530
6270
04:08
– in parts one or three only, because the examiner can’t interrupt you in part two.
53
248800
5510
04:14
The examiner will also interrupt you in part three if you give personal examples, rather
54
254310
5910
04:20
than talking generally.
55
260220
2070
04:22
The examiner might also interrupt in part three for a positive reason: your answer is
56
262290
6330
04:28
strong, and the examiner wants to move on to more challenging topics.
57
268620
5590
04:34
Here’s the thing: you might not know why.
58
274210
4130
04:38
The examiner won’t generally tell you.
59
278340
2090
04:40
But, you should be ready for it.
60
280430
3540
04:43
Should you be worried?
61
283970
2230
04:46
Not necessarily.
62
286200
1020
04:47
There’s only one of these points which is a problem, and that’s going off-topic.
63
287220
5000
04:52
We’ll cover that in more detail in tip number eight.
64
292220
4770
04:56
There are many popular IELTS videos on YouTube about “how to greet the examiner.”
65
296990
5720
05:02
Don’t worry about it.
66
302710
1201
05:03
It isn’t assessed.
67
303911
2129
05:06
It’s not part of your score.
68
306040
2930
05:08
It doesn’t count as part of the exam time.
69
308970
3080
05:12
Sure, it’s a good idea to use this time to warm up, try to get comfortable, and remind
70
312050
7010
05:19
yourself of basic good habits: speak in full sentences, give full answers, and so on.
71
319060
8500
05:27
But, it’s not assessed.
72
327560
3280
05:30
You can make a huge mess of it, and it won’t affect your score at all!
73
330840
6090
05:36
In part one of the IELTS speaking exam, the examiner wants to get through twelve questions,
74
336930
5500
05:42
on three different topics.
75
342430
2760
05:45
The second and third topics could be almost anything, but the first topic – meaning
76
345190
5410
05:50
the first four questions – is always one of two things: where you live, or what you
77
350600
6770
05:57
do.
78
357370
1000
05:58
Generally, it’s not a good idea to try to guess questions or memorise answers, but you
79
358370
6151
06:04
should prepare to talk about these topics: your house or apartment, your hometown, your
80
364521
6629
06:11
job or your studies.
81
371150
2840
06:13
Listen carefully to the form of the question.
82
373990
3120
06:17
Many students we meet mishear or mix up ‘home’ and ‘hometown’.
83
377110
5010
06:22
If in doubt, ask the examiner to repeat.
84
382120
4610
06:26
Although the topics are similar in every IELTS exam, the questions are different.
85
386730
4790
06:31
For example, the examiner might ask: “Tell me about where you live.”
86
391520
6390
06:37
“Tell me about your home.”
87
397910
4290
06:42
“Do you live in a house or an apartment?”
88
402200
3960
06:46
“Describe your house or your apartment.”
89
406160
4820
06:50
These questions are similar, but not exactly the same.
90
410980
3540
06:54
“Tell me about where you live” is broader.
91
414520
4000
06:58
You could talk about your home, or the town or city where you live.
92
418520
4600
07:03
“Tell me about your home” is specifically about the house or apartment you live in.
93
423120
6430
07:09
“Do you live in a house or an apartment?” is a more focused question, and you could
94
429550
5320
07:14
give a shorter answer.
95
434870
2030
07:16
“Describe your house or your apartment” is more open, and requires a more detailed
96
436900
6180
07:23
answer.
97
443080
1100
07:24
So, listen carefully to the exact words of the question.
98
444180
5980
07:30
In part two, you have one minute to prepare your answer.
99
450160
4259
07:34
Then, the examiner will say this: “Alright.
100
454419
4961
07:39
Now, remember you have one to two minutes for this, so don’t worry if I stop you.
101
459380
6470
07:45
I’ll tell you when the time is up.
102
465850
2880
07:48
Can you start speaking now, please?”
103
468730
3409
07:52
Your time starts when the examiner stops speaking.
104
472139
4271
07:56
When we prepare English learners for part two, they’re often slow to start.
105
476410
5340
08:01
Sometimes, people need another five to ten seconds to get their thoughts together and
106
481750
5750
08:07
start their answer.
107
487500
1920
08:09
This is a problem for two reasons.
108
489420
2210
08:11
First, you’re wasting your speaking time.
109
491630
3310
08:14
More seriously, if the examiner decides that your pause is because you’re trying to find
110
494940
5479
08:20
the words and sentence patterns you need, this will have a major effect on your fluency
111
500419
6161
08:26
and coherence score.
112
506580
2460
08:29
A pause of five seconds or more *anywhere* in your IELTS speaking test limits your fluency
113
509040
6500
08:35
and coherence score to band four.
114
515559
3000
08:38
During part two, when your preparation time is finished, you don’t need to listen to
115
518559
5431
08:43
what the examiner says.
116
523990
1469
08:45
It’s the same in every exam.
117
525459
2591
08:48
You *do* need to be ready to go.
118
528050
3039
08:51
Make sure you’re ready to start speaking when the examiner finishes.
119
531089
4891
08:55
How long should you speak for in part two?
120
535980
4959
09:00
There are different opinions about this.
121
540939
2781
09:03
Some people advise trying to speak for the full two minutes.
122
543720
4619
09:08
We advised aiming for 90 seconds in a video we made previously.
123
548339
5430
09:13
The truth is that it doesn’t really matter.
124
553769
3481
09:17
Speaking more is generally better if you have ideas and can express them clearly.
125
557250
5490
09:22
However, so long as you speak for more than one minute, length isn’t a direct factor
126
562740
6279
09:29
in your score.
127
569019
1291
09:30
However, there’s one thing which *is* important.
128
570310
5009
09:35
If you finish before the two minutes is over, you need to clearly signal to the examiner
129
575319
6130
09:41
that you’ve said everything you wanted to.
130
581449
2930
09:44
If you stop speaking before the two minutes is over, the examiner will try to prompt you
131
584379
5380
09:49
to continue.
132
589759
4481
09:54
If the examiner feels that you can’t continue because you’ve run out of words, or because
133
594240
5039
09:59
you can’t express your ideas, then this will affect your score.
134
599279
4600
10:03
So, if you’ve said everything you can, tell the examiner directly.
135
603879
5421
10:09
Say something like “That’s everything I have to say.”
136
609300
4110
10:13
In part three, if you want to give an example to support your idea, make sure it doesn’t
137
613410
6200
10:19
start with ‘I’ or ‘my’.
138
619610
2810
10:22
In part three, the examiner wants you to talk in a more general way.
139
622420
5229
10:27
The examiner will interrupt you if you start giving examples about yourself and your life.
140
627649
6531
10:34
It might be OK to give examples about individual friends or relatives.
141
634180
4880
10:39
However, different examiners interpret things differently, and some examiners might interrupt
142
639079
6491
10:45
you even if you do this.
143
645570
1860
10:47
But, don’t worry!
144
647430
2150
10:49
There’s a simple solution.
145
649580
2749
10:52
Just change your answers and examples to make them general.
146
652329
4291
10:56
Imagine the examiner asks you: “When do people traditionally give gifts in your country?”
147
656620
7550
11:04
Instead of “I usually give my family gifts at New Year’s,” say “Most people give
148
664170
5870
11:10
gifts to their families at New Year’s.”
149
670040
3229
11:13
Instead of “I buy birthday presents for my close friends,” say “Generally, people
150
673269
6201
11:19
would only buy birthday presents for their close friends.”
151
679470
4219
11:23
Instead of “My former colleagues gave me a gift when I left my last company,” say
152
683689
5951
11:29
“In the workplace, people might buy a gift for a colleague who’s leaving.”
153
689640
7410
11:37
You don’t need to change the ideas; just present them differently!
154
697050
5029
11:42
By the way, if you give a personal example and the examiner interrupts you, this isn’t
155
702079
6661
11:48
a problem.
156
708740
1039
11:49
The examiner is just trying to keep you on track, and it won’t affect your score.
157
709779
6300
11:56
There’s a lot of debate about whether it’s necessary to stay on topic in IELTS, and whether
158
716079
6130
12:02
it’s a problem if you don’t.
159
722209
2370
12:04
Basically, you need to answer the questions which the examiner asks.
160
724579
6100
12:10
If you go off topic in a natural way – for example, if you start talking about one thing
161
730679
5551
12:16
in part two, and you take your idea in a new direction in a way which is natural and coherent,
162
736230
6500
12:22
then no problem.
163
742730
2539
12:25
However, if you don’t answer the questions which the examiner asks, or if your answer
164
745269
6620
12:31
is not relevant, this *will* limit your score.
165
751889
4490
12:36
Firstly, the examiner will not let you go off topic in parts one and three.
166
756379
6740
12:43
The examiner will interrupt you and repeat the question if he or she feels that your
167
763119
6620
12:49
answer does not fit.
168
769739
2421
12:52
If you still can’t produce a relevant answer, this will affect both your vocabulary and
169
772160
6929
12:59
fluency-coherence scores.
170
779089
2011
13:01
In particular, the examiner will decide that you aren’t answering the question because
171
781100
6380
13:07
you don’t have the vocabulary to do so.
172
787480
4109
13:11
This will put a limit on your vocabulary score to band six maximum.
173
791589
6331
13:17
Giving irrelevant answers also makes higher fluency-coherence scores impossible.
174
797920
6649
13:24
Especially for the highest scores – eight and nine – your answers need to be relevant
175
804569
7010
13:31
and fully coherent.
176
811580
2080
13:33
There’s no point using memorised language in your IELTS speaking test.
177
813660
5010
13:38
First, it will be obvious.
178
818670
2730
13:41
The examiner will know.
179
821400
1809
13:43
Trust me – it’s *incredibly* obvious when someone is speaking from memory.
180
823209
4990
13:48
Secondly, it affects your score.
181
828200
3300
13:51
It’s not a disaster, but it puts a limit on your vocabulary and fluency-coherence scores,
182
831500
6140
13:57
similar to going off topic.
183
837649
2011
13:59
That means both of these scores are limited to band six maximum.
184
839660
5760
14:05
Finally, it’s a waste of time.
185
845420
3240
14:08
In the best case, you will get the same score you would get by speaking naturally.
186
848660
4639
14:13
In the worst case, you’ll get a lower score.
187
853299
3241
14:16
So, why do it?
188
856540
2440
14:18
Memorising answers takes time and effort.
189
858980
3880
14:22
Spend that time and effort practising your speaking and improving your communication
190
862869
4831
14:27
skills instead!
191
867700
2080
14:29
Sometimes, we meet IELTS students who try to speak like they’re writing an essay.
192
869780
5740
14:35
They use lots of formal linking words, like ‘furthermore’ and ‘nevertheless.’
193
875520
6660
14:42
They don’t use contractions, like ‘won’t’ instead of ‘will not’.
194
882180
5439
14:47
Their intonation sounds robotic because they’re speaking in an unnatural way.
195
887619
5580
14:53
This is not a helpful approach.
196
893199
2070
14:55
Firstly, with linking words and other discourse markers, using them appropriately is important.
197
895269
6681
15:01
Using extremely formal language in a simple conversation is not appropriate.
198
901950
6039
15:07
Secondly, for your pronunciation score, it’s important to talk smoothly, using features
199
907989
6051
15:14
of connected speech.
200
914040
2299
15:16
An important feature of connected speech is using contractions.
201
916339
4781
15:21
Many English learners don’t use contractions at all in speech, or very rarely.
202
921120
5629
15:26
This is something you can work on, and it will help your IELTS speaking score!
203
926749
5231
15:31
Using natural intonation is also helpful.
204
931980
3310
15:35
The examiners aren’t looking for any specific points – they don’t have time to focus
205
935290
4919
15:40
on every detail of your pronunciation – but they will consider the overall effect.
206
940209
7500
15:47
Focusing on intonation, and trying to copy the intonation of native-level speakers, can
207
947709
5101
15:52
help you here.
208
952810
1570
15:54
Those are our ten tips.
209
954380
2459
15:56
What about you?
210
956839
2331
15:59
Have you taken an IELTS speaking exam recently?
211
959170
2659
16:01
Do you have any of your own advice to add?
212
961829
3320
16:05
Please share your ideas in the comments!
213
965149
3011
16:08
Good luck if you have an IELTS exam coming up soon.
214
968160
3280
16:11
Thanks for watching!
215
971440
1220
16:12
See you next time!
216
972660
1629
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7