Listening Practice class is a part of our “IELTS Course”. This is the 19th class of our “IELTS Course”. Our “IELTS Course” will help you in your IELTS preparation. Prepare for the IELTS exam online at your own pace, Our “IELTS Courses” will help you get the score you need. This class has been made to help you in your IELTS examination.
Listening Practice
The Listening test is the same for both the IELTS Academic test and the IELTS General Training test. You will need to answer 40 questions in response to four recordings.
You will listen to four recordings which are a mix of monologues and conversations from a range of native speakers and you will only hear each recording once. There are 10 questions for each part of the Listening test.
These questions test your ability to understand:
- Main ideas and detailed factual information
- The opinions and attitudes of speakers
- The purpose of an utterance
- The ability to follow the development of ideas.
Listening part details:
Recording 1 A conversation between two people set in an everyday social context.
Recording 2 A monologue set in an everyday social context, e.g. a speech about local facilities.
Recording 3 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.
Recording 4 A monologue on an academic subject, e.g. a university lecture.
Multiple choice
Multiple-choice questions can be answered with one correct answer or more than one correct answer. Read the question very carefully to check how many answers are required.
In a multiple choice question, where you are required to choose one correct answer (A, B, or C), you will be given:
- a question followed by three possible answers
- the beginning of a sentence followed by three possible ways to complete the sentence.
In a multiple choice question, where you are required to choose more than one correct answer you will be given a longer list of possible answers and told that you have to choose more than one answer.
Multiple-choice questions are used to test a wide range of skills. You may be required to have a detailed understanding of specific points or an overall understanding of the main points of the listening text.
Matching
You are required to match a numbered list of items from what you hear in the listening audio to a set of options on the question paper. The set of options may be criteria of some kind.
Matching assesses the skill of listening for detail and whether you can understand information given in a conversation on an everyday topic, such as identifying different types of hotel or guest house accommodation. It also assesses your ability to follow a conversation between two people. It may also be used to assess your ability to recognize relationships and connections between facts in the listening text.

Form, note, table, flow-chart, summary completion
In this completion task, you are required to fill in the gaps in an outline of part or all of the listening text. The outline will focus on the main ideas/facts in the text. It may be:
- A form: used to record factual details such as names, addresses, telephone numbers
- A set of notes: used to summarise information using the layout to show how different items relate to one another
- A table: used to summarise information that relates to clear categories – e.g. place/time/price,
- A flow-chart: used to summarise a process that has clear stages, with the direction of the process shown by arrows.
You will select the missing words in either way:
- From a list presented in the question paper
- From the recording
You must keep to the word limit stated in the instructions and use the exact words you hear from the recording.
You should read the instructions very carefully as the number of words or numbers you should use will vary. A word limit is given, for example, ‘NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER’. If you use more than the word limit, your answer will be marked as incorrect so check the word limit carefully for each question. Contracted words will not be tested, e.g. ‘don’t’. Hyphenated words count as single words, e.g. ‘police-man’.
This gap completion task focuses on the main points that a listener would naturally record in this type of situation.
Details about Listening Practice – English Grammar :