Dealing with Each Listening Question Type

Mastering IELTS Listening

The IELTS Listening test assesses your ability to understand spoken English in academic and everyday contexts. To score well, you need to recognize the 4 main question types and how to approach each. Here’s your complete guide with examples and strategies.

1. Multiple Choice Questions

These appear in all sections but increase in difficulty. There are two major formats:

Standard Multiple Choice

Choose the correct letter, A, B or C.

The lecturer will discuss how to produce:

A) Entertainment multimedia
B) Educational multimedia
C) Multimedia in general

Modified Multiple Choice
  • One answer list for multiple questions: Which THREE groups use this? (Choose from A-E)
  • Matching questions: Match statements 1-3 to options A-F

Pro Tips:

  • Underline keywords before listening
  • Be alert for distractors (e.g., “I thought X, but actually Y”)
  • In matching, options may be used more than once

2. Completion Questions

Fill gaps in forms, sentences, or diagrams with words/numbers from the audio.

Type Example
Form Completion (Section 1) Membership Form: Name: 1) ______ | Student No.: 2) ______
Flow Chart (Sections 2-4) Research Steps: 1. Select subjects → 2. Divide into → 3) ______ groups
Summary Paragraph (Section 4) Hemp produces 8) ______ with high protein content.

Critical Rules:

  1. Check the word limit (e.g., NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS)
  2. Check if numbers are allowed
  3. Mind the grammar: singular/plural, verb forms

3. Short Answer Questions

Answer concisely using words from the recording.

Example:

What TWO factors affect driver behavior?
1) ______
2) ______

Strategy:

  • Predict possible answers (e.g., “weather”, “music volume”)
  • Listen for synonyms (e.g., “road conditions” vs. “weather”)
  • Spelling matters – write clearly!

4. Diagram Labelling

Label parts of maps, objects, or processes.

IELTS Diagram Example

Example Instructions:

Label the diagram with NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS:

38) ______
39) ______
40) ______

Key Tips:

  • Examine diagram first; existing labels give hints
  • Use compass points on maps (e.g., North/South)
  • Listen for directional language: “next to”, “below”, “beside”

Final Practice Strategies

  1. Predict answers during the 30-second preview
  2. Practice multitasking: read, listen, and write simultaneously
  3. Review spelling – academic and daily use words
  4. Simulate test conditions with official practice tests

Remember: The recordings play only once. Stay focused!