IE 19: How Can Your Imagination Help You Get a 7 on Speaking Part 3?

IE 19: How Can Your Imagination Help You Get a 7 on Speaking Part 3?

Did you know that being imaginative and creative can get you a 7 on the IELTS exam? This is especially true when it comes to the IELTS Speaking test. Your ideas don’t need to be 100% realistic. What’ more important is the way you deliver your ideas. You can make stuff up and have fun with it! Today we’ll show you how! What should you do when you get a Speaking question about the future and you don’t know how to answer the question? You need to open your mind and be willing to make up your own ideas quickly. In Part 3 of the Speaking test, they often ask you to guess or predict the future. For example, they might ask, “How might the way people travel change in the future?” With this question you need to make up a creative answer. A good response is this: “I predict that by 2025 we will all be riding in flying cars.” This is also useful because when you make up a funny idea, it makes you laugh, which makes you relax and makes you speak more like a real person. This will also help your vocabulary because you will end up using less common vocabulary when you make up ideas about the future. If you aren’t used to coming up with your own ideas or if you haven’t learned this in school you can train your mind to be creative. You already have the ability but you just need to practice it. Creativity is a muscle. Flex your imagination! Try this: Look at the news and look at the topics in the newspaper. Come up with a prediction for each article headline that you read. Predict what will happen with that specific topic in the future. Try to entertain the Examiner. The Examiner is going to give you your score right after Part 3 of the Speaking so it’s good to leave them on a funny and positive note because this could influence your overall Speaking score. If you are already a naturally funny person then you should amplify that in the Speaking test. Don’t be afraid of your own ideas and your own personality. If you are enjoying yourself during the test then your Examiner is probably having fun too. Do you have other questions about the Speaking test? Let us know in the comments below. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Jaksot(1651)

IE 3: How to Build Your "Brain Box" for Listening on the IELTS Exam

IE 3: How to Build Your "Brain Box" for Listening on the IELTS Exam

Get more info here: http://allearsenglish.com/aee-ielts-listening-on-the-ielts-exam/   How do you build a “Brain Box” for the IELTS Listening Exam? Today Lindsay and Jessica talk about two strategies to make the listening part of the IELTS exam easier!     If you have a strategy or a system to approach the IELTS Listening Exam, you’ll probably do better. Your first step should be to listen to the introduction. It will tell you who will be talking, and what they’re talking about. Many people who take this exam skip the introduction because they think they don’t need it.  This is a mistake, because the context will help you understand. The “brain box” concept is that your brain puts topics in “boxes,” and accessing a specific box will put a conversation into context, and make it easier to comprehend.   After you’ve listened to the introduction, you will then have about ten seconds to read the questions before you hear them. Use this time to circle the key words before they’re read aloud. Making note of these key words will prepare you to answer the question quickly. Speed is important, because you don’t want one question mix you up on the next one, and then the next one.   How do you plan to prepare for the listening portion of the IELTS exam? Tell us about it in the comments section below! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

18 Helmi 201512min

 IE 2: What Happens on IELTS Exam Day?

IE 2: What Happens on IELTS Exam Day?

Visit us online to leave a comment at: http://allearsenglish.com/aee-ielts-happens-ielts-exam-day-2/ What should you bring to your IELTS exam? When should you go, and what should you watch out for? Today, Lindsay and Jessica discuss how you can be prepared to succeed on your IELTS test day!   On your IELTS exam day you should try to arrive 45 minutes early. It’s critically important that you get there on time. If you are late, you will miss the first section and can’t make it up. Missing an entire section will make it impossible to get a good overall score.   You should plan to bring your passport for identification. It is also okay to bring a bottle of water, but you must remove the label. Your belongings will be stored in a separate room while you take the test.   Usually all four sections of the exam occur in a single day. In the morning you will have the reading, writing and listening sections. In the afternoon, you will have the speaking section. It’s important to understand that the morning will probably be more stressful because it will be so busy. On the other hand, you will likely have time to wait in the afternoon. Some speaking sections are scheduled as late as 6PM! For this reason, it is a good idea to know if there’s anyway near the test station where you could pass the time – a park, for example.   What else do you want to know about the IELTS exam? Share your thoughts in the comments section below! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

18 Helmi 201515min

IE 1: How the Pros Prepare for the IELTS

IE 1: How the Pros Prepare for the IELTS

To comment on this episode, visit us at http://allearsenglish.com/aee-ielts-pros-prepare-ielts/ Are you preparing to take the IELTS exam? Today, Lindsay and Jessica discuss what you need to know to pass with the score you want! There are lots of questions about the IELTS exam. It’s not an easy test to take, but it is the most widely accepted test for getting into universities and even for immigration and work visas. One reason for this is that the test is face-to-face with another person, which makes it more real. Though this might sound intimidating, many testers actually find it more relaxing when the examiner is another person, rather than a computer. When students take the test and don’t get the score they wanted, it’s usually because they didn’t have enough real-life speaking practice – they only worked out of textbooks. You need to practice speaking with an actual person. You also need to be honest with yourself about where you are with your English abilities so that you have an obtainable goal. How are you preparing to take the IELTS exam? Let us know in the comments section below! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

18 Helmi 201517min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-duodecim-lehti
rss-valo-minussa-2
psykologia
rss-vegaaneista-tykkaan
rss-narsisti
rss-arkea-ja-aurinkoa
aamukahvilla
uskonnon-pitka-oppimaara
adhd-podi
jari-sarasvuo-podcast
rss-psykalab
rahapuhetta
aloita-meditaatio
dear-ladies
rss-eron-alkemiaa
rss-saavutus
rss-koira-haudattuna