Your first test will be listening test.
You will be listening for a purpose
and hear a variety of accents.
A variety of voices is used in the
IELTS Listening test, so you might hear Australian, British, New Zealand or
North American accents.
You will be listening to a
pre-recorded CD-ROM, and the passages that you hear will increase in difficulty
as you go through the test.
The content of the Listening test is
the same for both IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training tests.
Purpose
of the test
The IELTS Listening test is designed
to assess a wide range of listening skills, including how well you
- understand main ideas and specific factual information
- recognise the opinions, attitudes and purpose of a speaker
- follow the development of an argument
Timing
The IELTS Listening test takes
approximately 30 minutes, and you are allowed an extra 10 minutes to transfer
your answers from your question booklet to your answer sheet.
Four
sections
The IELTS Listening test is broken
down into four sections:
Section
|
Description
|
1
|
You listen to a conversation
between two people set in an everyday social situation, e.g. a conversation
in an accommodation agency, and answer questions on your comprehension.
|
2
|
You listen to a monologue set in
an everyday social situation, e.g. a speech about local facilities or a talk
about the arrangements for meals during a conference.
|
3
|
You listen to a conversation
between up to four people set in an educational or training context, e.g. a
university tutor and a student discussing an assignment, or a group of
students planning a research project.
|
4
|
You listen to a monologue on an
academic subject, e.g. a university lecture.
|
You will begin by listening to a
recording of instructions and a sample question for section 1. Then you will
read the questions for section 1, listen to section 1, and answer the
questions.
This procedure is repeated for
sections 2, 3 and 4.
In the final 10 minutes, you will
transfer your answers onto the answer sheet.
Each section is heard once only.
Questions
There are 40 questions.
A variety of question types is used,
and you may be asked to
- answer multiple choice questions
- label a plan, map or diagram
- fill in a form
- complete a table
- complete a flow-chart
- give short answers
Marking
Each correct answer receives one
mark.
Scores out of 40 are converted to
the IELTS 9-band scale. Scores are reported in whole and half bands.
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