25 Amazing Listening Tips for IELTS That Will Get You A Band 8+

These 25 IELTS Listening Tips provide
you with essential strategies to help you get the score you need in the exam
and show you how to improve IELTS listening.
1. Predict the topic – it helps you to listen if
you know what kind of conversation is taking place so you can picture it in
your head. So look through each section in the time you are given and make sure
you have an idea of who is speaking to who and what the context is.
2. Predict the questions – you should also try and
have an idea of what kind of information you are listening out for. For
example, in section one, you often have to listen for names, numbers, and
addresses. Have a look at the questions in the time you are given and work out
what needs to go in the space. A name? Number? An address? You are more likely
to catch it than when the answer arises.
3. Use a minute to look through each section – you
are given 30 seconds at the end of each section to check your answers. You are
then told to turn over and look at the next section for 30 seconds. Although
some IELTS listening tips will tell you to check what you have written, there
is little you can check for the previous section as you can’t hear the
listening again. So instead, turn straight to the next section. You will then
have one minute (instead of 30 seconds) to look through the next section. This
is time better spent.
4. Careful with question order – often you have a
table to complete, and sometimes a diagram or chart. The questions will not
necessarily go from left to right, so check the progression carefully otherwise
you will get lost and confused.
5. Look at two questions at once – there are two
reasons for doing this. Firstly, some questions may have the answers close
together in one sentence so you could miss one if you only look at one question
at a time. Also, you may miss an answer – if you are just looking at one, you
may not know that you missed it. If you are also looking at the next, you’ll
see that it has moved on.
6. Move on if you miss an answer – if you do
realize you have missed an answer, quickly forget about it and concentrate on
the next ones. There is nothing you can do, and you can also guess when you
transfer your answers to the answer sheet at the end. The same applies if you
realize you missed two or three answers. Don’t panic and just move on as there
is nothing you can do. A few questions missed may not necessarily affect your
band score.
7. Watch others if you’re completely lost – if you
completely lose where you are, then watch when the other candidates turn over
their exam papers. You’ll know then that you are back in the right place.
8. Lookout for paraphrasing – remember that what
you hear will most likely not be the same as is written on the exam paper as
that would be too easy. The question and the question stems use such things as
synonyms so you must listen carefully for these.
9. Ignore words you don’t know – don’t worry or
panic if you hear a word that you do not know. It may not be necessary to know
it anyway, or you can take a guess.
10. Underline keywords – when you look through the
questions first, particularly in the more difficult parts 3 and 4, underline
keywords (such as names, places, and dates) in the question stems to help you
hear the answer. Remember though, as explained above, synonyms are often used.
11. Take care with spelling and grammar – your
answer will be marked wrong if it is spelled incorrectly or the grammar does
not fit. So when you transfer your answers at the end, double-check these. The
sentence on the exam paper may help you with the grammar – does it fit
grammatically? Should it be a verb, noun, adjective?
12. Use British or American spelling – this is what
it says on the official IELTS website: ”IELTS recognizes both British and
American English in terms of spelling, grammar, and choice of words”. So
you can use either in your answers.
13. Don’t worry about what you write on the exam
sheet – in practice tests, it is common to see students rubbing or crossing
things out on the exam paper. Remember that nobody sees or marks what you write
here. Don’t waste time getting the spelling corrector anything else. If you do
this you’ll get lost – you need to be listening. So just write down what you
hear then move on. When you transfer the answers at the end to the answer
sheet, you can make sure you have the correct spelling.
14. Read the instructions – an IELTS listening tip
that is an important tip for any part of the test is to always read the
instructions carefully. They will tell you how many words to use. If it asks
for no more than two words and you use three, it will be wrong. And you must
only put in the words asked for. For example, if there is a gap of “at …… pm”
and you write “at 5 pm” on the answer sheet, it will be wrong. You
should only write what is missing i.e. “5”.
15. Use upper or lower case letters – a question
often asked is whether you can use upper case letters. This is what it says on
the official British Council Website: “You may write your answers in lower
case or capital letters”. So you can write all your answers in capital
letters if you like. This statement from the British Council suggests,
therefore, that you will not be penalized if you write ‘Paris for
example, instead of ‘Paris’ because it says you can use lower case
letters. However, it is recommended that you try and use capitalization
correctly to be on the safe side. If you are not sure if the first letter needs
capitalization, then capitalize the whole word.
16. Get used to the British accent – a good IELTS
listening tip is to be prepared to hear all accents as you may hear Australian,
American, Canadian, New Zealand, and a mix of European countries. However,
although there is a mix of accents in the test, the majority tend to be British
(unlike TOEFL which tends to be American). So make sure you are used to the
British accent.
17. Practice the pronunciation of letters and
numbers – often words are spelled out in the test by a speaker and numbers are
read out, so make sure you can recognize how different letters sound in
different accents, not just words.
18. Careful with what you write down – speakers in
the test will often answer but then correct themselves. So the first answer
that looks right may be wrong. You can check out a lesson on this here.
19. Don’t leave answers blank – you will not get
penalized for writing the wrong answer (as opposed to nothing if you are not
sure what it is) so guess if that is possible.
20. Transfer your answers to the answer sheet
carefully – if you put correct answers in the wrong place on the answer sheet
it will be wrong, so make sure you put the answer in the correct place. It is
easy to do this if you leave an answer blank on the exam sheet. You may then
fill that one in with the wrong answer when you transfer them across. So put in
a guess for any you do not know and leave no blanks.
21. Check your answers - make sure you recheck your
spelling and grammar too when you transfer your answers at the end.
22. Listen very carefully - listen very very
carefully throughout the test. Zone in and focus. Don’t be distracted by
anything around you, and don’t panic if you think you having missed any answers
or that you are getting them wrong. All this will do is distract you from
listening.
23. Practice listening – of all the IELTS listening
tips, this is one of the most important. Make sure you practice listening as
much as you can! You can practice with sample IELTS listening tests but you
should also expose yourself to as much English as you can. Target is at the
level you are currently at. There is no point in listening to BBC World if you
don’t understand any of it. Find resources on the internet that suit your level
and gradually increase difficulty. And don’t worry if they are not exams or
specifically for IELTS, any kind of listening helps. Try to make listening fun
and listen to things you like. You can move on to more difficult things as you
improve.
24. Listen to lectures – remember that the last
part is a lecture, so practice listening to lectures and taking notes. Lectures
often follow certain patterns, such as an introduction to tell you the topic
and main points, and they have sign-posts to tell you if they are comparing
e.g. "although", or moving onto new main points e.g. “Now
I’ll discuss….”. So listening to lectures will help you with this section.
You can find lectures online if you search. TED lectures may be useful as they
provide a transcription so you can check your notes...
25. Learn to listen and write together – practicing
your listening skills is important, but remember in the test you have to write
and listen. So you should practice this too. One way to do this is with
practice tests but you can also try listening to audios and taking notes at the
same time. This will improve your ability to do both skills at the same time.
Get best IELTS Training from Miles Ahead Education, Best IELTS Coaching in Chandigarh. Best PTE Classes in Chandigarh.
Comments