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Your attitude can improve your IELTS Speaking score!

Want to know how to start IELTS preparation at home? Learn the best way to prepare IELTS Speaking questions with the Portland English Language Academy. You can learn many IELTS preparation tips for how to improve your IELTS score, including how to improve your IELTS Speaking, with PELA Onlineu2019s Academic IELTS Speaking course, with Modules to help you with listening, reading, writing, and speaking test questions.<br><br>For more info: https://www.pelaonline.com/ielts-preparation-online/

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Your attitude can improve your IELTS Speaking score!

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  1. Your attitude can improve your IELTS Speaking score! PELA Online

  2. Your attitude can improve your IELTS Speaking score! To improve your IELTS Speaking score you need more preparation that just knowing the topics for IELTS speaking course they may ask you about. It is not enough to use high-level vocabulary or grammar. Many websites give lots of tips for IELTS Speaking questions, but there is one important tip those website often forget to mention. When you are taking the IELTS Speaking test you need to have the right attitude. Having the right attitude about how you respond will help you in many ways. Having the wrong attitude will prevent you from doing your best on test day. What does this mean? You want to respond to questions while imagining yourself in different kinds of situations, in different kinds of places and with different kinds of people. This will give you the correct frame of mind to answer questions in ways that will help you demonstrate the kinds of skills and abilities the IELTS examiner is looking for.

  3. Your attitude can improve your IELTS Speaking score! If the IELTS Speaking test was taking place in the ‘real world’, what kinds of situations would the IELTS Speaking test be similar to? A job interview? Nope. The IELTS Speaking Test is NOT like a job interview. A customs agent interview? Nope. The IELTS Speaking Test is NOT like an interrogation by a customs officer at the airport. While, of course, the IELTS Speaking test is an evaluation by an English teacher, DO NOT think of it that way! If you think of it as a “test”, your stress will increase. You will doubt every answer. You will get nervous. You will worry. All of that pressure will lower your ability to do your best. This kind of thinking will not help you improve your IELTS Speaking score. But there is a different way to think about the IELTS Speaking test.

  4. Your attitude can improve your IELTS Speaking score! But there is a different way to think about the IELTS Speaking test. If you think of it as a “test”, you will not give the best performance of your English ability for the IELTS examiner. That, by the way, is what the IELTS Speaking test is: a performance. Like an actor performing on stage, you job is to demonstrate the range and depth of your English ability. On a very basic level, your “job” is to keep the interest of the listener. And just like any good actor, one trick you can use to give a great performance is to imagine you are somewhere different and you are talking to someone else. As you know, the IELTS Speaking test is divided into 3 Parts. In each Part, you will want to have a slightly different attitude. You will want to imagine yourself in a slightly different situation in each part.

  5. Part 1: Having a Conversation in a Coffee Shop In IELTS Speaking Part 1, you will be asked to give information about yourself. Where are you from? What do you do? How often do you do something? What was your childhood like? Imagine you are talking with someone you don’t know very well, an acquaintance or a friend of a friend—someone who you think might one day be an actual friend of yours. This is a person who doesn’t know you very well and who wants to get to know you a little bit better. If someone like that asked you a question, how would you respond? Of course, you want to give clear, direct answers, but you want to tell this potential friend more than just a short, simple answer. You will tell them extra little pieces of information to add complexity to your response. You do this because you think this extra information might be interesting to them.

  6. Part 1: Having a Conversation in a Coffee Shop It’s okay to say “I don’t know” And if they ask you a question that you are not sure how to answer, or if they ask you about something you don’t really have an opinion about, or if they ask you about something you’ve never done, you’ll want to explain why you can’t really answer that question clearly or directly. You may even change the topic to something related to what they asked about and tell them a little information about that related topic. Of course, you’re doing this because you want to give some kind of interesting information to that person in the coffee shop—you don’t just want to tell them, “No” or “I don’t know”. You wouldn’t respond to this person in the coffee shop as if they were hiring you for a job or about to stamp your passport.

  7. Part 2: Sharing a Story around a Campfire In IELTS Speaking Part 2, you will be asked to tell a long story about something you have done, someone you know, or something you have seen or read about. What the best vacation you ever took? Can you name a successful company from your home country? What is a law from your own country you think is good or bad? Imagine you are talking with a friend late at night—maybe you are sitting around a campfire or after dinner just hanging around the house. You aren’t playing a game, you’re just talking about stuff that you’ve experienced. You are sharing stories from your childhood or from before you knew this person. If a friend asked you about the best vacation you ever took, what story would you tell?

  8. Part 2: Sharing a Story around a Campfire Explain what the story means to you Of course, you are going to start to tell the story of the vacation: ‘when’, ‘where’, maybe even ‘why’ or ‘with whom’. You want to give your friend context, painting a picture with words so that they can begin to picture in their head your vacation. You might occasionally tell small ‘side stories’ about one particularly memorable event during that vacation—doing this demonstrates you are comfortable moving around in time and using different verb tenses. And importantly, you want your friend to understand why you value that memory. Did the vacation teach you something about yourself or about the world? Did it make you rethink your career or other life plans? You don’t just want to tell a story about a vacation to your friend. You would want to explain what means to you.

  9. Part 3: Exploring your Opinions with a Friend In IELTS Speaking Part 3, you will be asked questions focused on common IELTS Speaking Topics like healthcare, shopping, or parenting. Do you think kids spend too much time online? What problems does consumerism cause? How has increased trade changed the eating habits of people?

  10. Part 3: Exploring your Opinions with a Friend Imagine you are still at the campfire, but everyone is now gone except you and one good friend. You are not trying to entertain each other with stories about your lives. Instead you are just thinking about the ‘state of the world’. However, you don’t really feel the need to Google every fact or piece of evidence about the topic—it’s just you and your good friend, hanging out and ‘thinking about’ an issue without the pressure of being correct. If a good friend asked about your opinion on consumerism, how would you respond?

  11. Debate the issue with yourself Of course, you want to give an honest answer, but you probably aren’t immediately sure how you feel about the issue. That’s okay, because your friend is not testing you—they are just asking what you think about some issue, so it’s okay to be a little unclear or unfocused at first. You might start your response by offering up various possible opinions different people might have about the issue, with some reasons why they might be correct. Only after you’ve “laid out” some of the possible answers to the question do you then decide which one you think you most agree with. Basically, you debate the issue with yourself, out loud in front of the IELTS examiner, and then eventually decide which side you think is probably correct. Doing this will help you improve your IELTS Speaking score in a natural way. But because it’s just you and your friend sitting around a campfire, it’s no big deal if you are ‘wrong’ or ‘right’ or if you’ve picked the ‘best’ solution to some problem. You’re just thinking about the world.

  12. Contact Us: 2007 Lloyd Center, Portland, OR 97232 USA Phone: +1 503-233-4634 Email-ID: connect@portlandenglish.edu Website: https://www.pelaonline.com/

  13. Thank you

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