IELTS Speaking: Your Path to Band 7+
The Speaking section is the only part of the International English Language Testing System conducted face-to-face with a human examiner. Lasting 11-14 minutes, it tests your ability to communicate naturally in English.
Test Structure
Part 1: Introduction (4-5 minutes)
The examiner asks questions about yourself — your home, studies, work, hobbies, and interests. These are simple, everyday topics.
Strategy: Give 2-4 sentence answers. Use the formula: Direct answer + reason + example.
Example:
Q: Do you enjoy cooking?
A: Yes, I really enjoy cooking, especially on weekends. It helps me relax after a busy week, and I like experimenting with new recipes from different cuisines.
Part 2: Long Turn (3-4 minutes)
You receive a cue card with a topic and have 1 minute to prepare and 2 minutes to speak.
Strategy:
- Use your 1 minute to write keywords (not full sentences)
- Follow the prompts on the card: What, When, Where, Why, How
- Speak for the full 2 minutes — do not stop early
- Structure your response: beginning → middle → end
Part 3: Discussion (4-5 minutes)
The examiner asks deeper, more abstract questions related to the Part 2 topic.
Strategy: Use the AREA method:
- A — Answer: Give your direct opinion
- R — Reason: Explain why
- E — Example: Provide evidence or a real example
- A — Alternative: Acknowledge another viewpoint
The Four Scoring Criteria
- Fluency and Coherence (25%): Speak smoothly, link ideas logically, use discourse markers
- Lexical Resource (25%): Use a range of vocabulary, include idiomatic expressions, paraphrase effectively
- Grammatical Range (25%): Use complex sentences, varied tenses, and conditional structures
- Pronunciation (25%): Speak clearly, use natural intonation, stress important words
Band 7 vs Band 6: What Makes the Difference
| Criteria | Band 6 | Band 7 |
|---|---|---|
| Fluency | Some hesitation, self-correction | Speaks at length with occasional hesitation |
| Vocabulary | Adequate but limited range | Uses less common vocabulary skilfully |
| Grammar | Some complex sentences, frequent errors | Multiple complex structures, good control |
| Pronunciation | Generally clear, some problems | Clear throughout, positive features |
Daily Practice Plan
- Record yourself: Answer 5 Part 1 questions daily, listen back, and improve
- Cue card practice: Do one Part 2 topic per day with strict timing
- Learn collocations: Study 5 natural word combinations per day
- Shadow speaking: Repeat after native speakers from TED Talks or podcasts
- Find a speaking partner: Practise 30 minutes daily for real conversation experience
Conclusion
The Speaking section of the International English Language Testing System rewards natural communication, not memorised answers. Practise regularly, expand your vocabulary, and speak with confidence.
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