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© The British Council 2012. All rights reserved.
The Speaking Test
The basics
The speaking test lasts 11 to 14 minutes. It is a face-to-face interview with
an IELTS
examiner. The examiner will make an audio recording of your interview.
The test is in three parts:
Parts
Focus
1
You answer general questions about yourself, your home, family, job,
studies, your interests and a range of familiar topic areas.
2
You give
a talk for up to two minutes, after which
the examiner may ask one
or two questions on the same topic.
You base your talk on a topic card given to
you by the examiner and you
have one minute to prepare your talk based on the card.
You can make some notes and refer to them during your talk if you wish.
3
The examiner asks you questions which are connected to the topic in phase
2. This is an opportunity for you to discuss more abstract ideas and issues.
What the examiner is looking for
The examiner rates your speaking against a standard set of criteria.
Criteria
How responses are assessed
Fluency and
coherence
Key points for fluency are your speed and
how fluid and
continuously you speak. Key points for coherence are how
logically you order what you say, and the connecting words
and phrases you use between and inside sentences.
Lexical resource
the range of vocabulary you use and how well you use
vocabulary to
express meaning and opinions