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IELTS Advanced Course
Chapters

1Advanced Listening Techniques

2Reading Comprehension and Analysis

3Writing Task 1: Data Description

4Writing Task 2: Argumentative Essays

5Speaking Part 1: Introduction and Interview

6Speaking Part 2: Long Turn

Understanding Task RequirementsStructuring Your ResponseUsing Planning Time EffectivelyMaintaining Fluency and CoherenceUsing Advanced VocabularyPracticing Complex SentencesExpressing Opinions and IdeasHandling Difficult TopicsUsing Examples to Support IdeasPractice with Sample TopicsManaging Speaking TimeImproving PronunciationUsing Signposting LanguagePracticing with Timed ExercisesSpeaking Part 2 Feedback

7Speaking Part 3: Discussion

8Grammar for Advanced IELTS

9Vocabulary for High Band Scores

10IELTS Test Strategies and Tips

Courses/IELTS Advanced Course/Speaking Part 2: Long Turn

Speaking Part 2: Long Turn

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Develop the ability to speak at length on a given topic with confidence and coherence in the IELTS Speaking test.

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Understanding Task Requirements

Long Turn: Task Detective (Sassy Edition)
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Long Turn: Task Detective (Sassy Edition)

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Speaking Part 2: Long Turn — Understanding Task Requirements

Imagine you have 1 minute to plan and up to 2 minutes to deliver a mini TED talk about a random card the examiner hands you. No slides. No safety net. Just you, your brain, and the terrifying tick of the silence timer.

You already practiced Part 1: Introduction and Interview, sharpening fluency and clarity. Part 2 asks you to build on those skills and sustain them for longer while satisfying a specific task. This lesson is all about reading the task like a detective, hitting the bullets intentionally, and turning a short prep into a confident 2-minute performance.


What the examiner actually wants (the not-so-secret truth)

The Task Card is not a suggestion. It is a checklist. To score well you must demonstrate these things simultaneously:

  • Task achievement: answer every bullet point on the card
  • Coherence and cohesion: organise your talk so it flows logically
  • Fluency and pronunciation: speak smoothly for 2 minutes, with clear pronunciation
  • Lexical resource and grammar: use a range of vocabulary and grammar accurately

Think of the Task Card as the rubric disguised as a polite request.


Break the card down like a pro

A typical Task Card has:

  • A general topic (e.g., a memorable journey)
  • 3 or 4 bullet points to cover
  • A prompt to say why it is important or how you felt

Step-by-step in the 1 minute planning time:

  1. Read quickly to understand the general topic
  2. Underline the keywords in each bullet point
  3. Jot 1 idea for each bullet and a supporting detail (why, how, example)
  4. Decide on a brief opening and closing sentence

Ask yourself: what does the examiner expect me to include for each bullet? If you can answer that in a word or short phrase, you are ready.


Quick planning template (use during the 1-minute prep)

0-10s: Read and underline keywords
10-30s: Idea for bullet 1 + support
30-50s: Idea for bullet 2 + support
50-60s: Hook/opening + closing line

Write tiny notes, not full sentences. The goal is a mental map, not a script.


Structure to keep you on track (a clean, repeatable skeleton)

  1. Opening line — 5-10s: Rephrase the topic: I want to talk about a time when I... / A memorable journey I took was...
  2. Bullet 1 — 25-30s: State the point, add a detail and a short example
  3. Bullet 2 — 25-30s: State the point, add another detail or contrast
  4. Bullet 3 (and 4) — 25-30s: Same pattern, be concise
  5. Why/how you felt or why important — 20-30s: Personal reaction, reflection
  6. Closing — 5-10s: Wrap up with a final thought

This gives you 1:50 to 2:00 minutes of content, with breathing room for natural pauses.


Useful linking phrases to sound cohesive (drop these like seasoning)

  • To begin with
  • Another important point is
  • For example / For instance
  • On top of that
  • As a result / Consequently
  • What surprised me was
  • Overall / In conclusion

Use 2 to 4 of these in your talk. Too many = robotic; too few = choppy.


Example Task Card and a 1-minute plan

Task Card: Describe a book you enjoyed reading recently. You should say:

  • what the book was
  • when and where you read it
  • what it was about
  • and explain why you enjoyed it

1-minute plan (notes you might write):

  • Book: The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
  • When/where: last winter, on my commute / late nights
  • What about: a young shepherd on spiritual journey, simple moral
  • Why enjoyed: short, poetic, made me rethink goals, memorable opening line
  • Opening: I want to talk about a book that surprised me—in the best way
  • Closing: recommended because it changed my view on goals

Then deliver following the skeleton above. Don't read the notes.


Common traps and how to avoid them

  • Trying to memorize a speech
    • Fix: Use notes only as prompts. Speak naturally.
  • Ignoring a bullet point
    • Fix: Check off each bullet during prep. If you run out of time, quickly mention the missed bullet before closing.
  • Over-long story with no reflection
    • Fix: Balance facts with feeling. Examiners expect reflection on why it mattered.
  • Panic mode: speaking too quickly and losing coherence
    • Fix: Intentionally slow down and use linking phrases. Breath = clarity.

How Task Requirements map to band descriptors (mini-table)

What you do What it shows Aim for this in practice
Cover all bullets Task achievement Always prepare an example for each bullet
Logical order Coherence Use the skeleton above
Smooth talking for 2 min Fluency & pronunciation Practice 2-minute monologues aloud
Varied vocab and grammar Lexical resource & grammar Learn paraphrase strategies for common topics

Tiny rehearsal exercises (do these in 10 minutes)

  • Pick a random topic card. Plan for 1 minute and speak for 2. Record yourself.
  • Listen back: did you hit all bullets? Did you run out of things to say or repeat yourself?
  • Repeat the same card twice with different stories or vocabulary.

Pro tip: Practice with a clock. The real pressure is time; training under time pressure reduces panic.


Final exam truth bomb: Being accurate is not enough. The examiner wants sustained, coherent, purposeful speech that responds to the card. If you treat the Task Card like a script and the 1 minute like sacred planning time, you will look confident and organised — even if you made your story up on the spot.

Key takeaways:

  • Read the card carefully and underline keywords
  • Plan in 1 minute using the skeleton
  • Cover every bullet with at least one example or detail
  • Use linking phrases and vary vocabulary
  • Practice under timed conditions until two minutes feels like a warm-up

Go forth and monologue. Impress a tiny room of an examiner, and maybe yourself.

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