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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

7Speaking Part 3: Discussion

Understanding the Discussion FormatBuilding Complex ArgumentsUsing Advanced VocabularyPracticing Active ListeningHandling Challenging QuestionsUsing Examples to Justify OpinionsImproving Interaction SkillsPracticing with Discussion TopicsManaging Time EffectivelyUsing Hypothetical ScenariosDealing with Abstract IdeasExpressing Certainty and UncertaintyUsing Diverse Sentence StructuresUnderstanding Examiner CuesSpeaking Part 3 Feedback

8Grammar for Advanced IELTS

9Vocabulary for High Band Scores

10IELTS Test Strategies and Tips

Courses/IELTS Advanced Course/Speaking Part 3: Discussion

Speaking Part 3: Discussion

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Enhance your skills in the discussion segment of the IELTS Speaking test, focusing on interaction and depth of response.

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Understanding the Discussion Format

Part 3: The No-Chill, Highly Strategic Breakdown
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Part 3: The No-Chill, Highly Strategic Breakdown

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Speaking Part 3: Understanding the Discussion Format — The No-Chill Breakdown

"If Part 2 is your solo stand-up routine, Part 3 is the improv show — and the examiner is both judge and scene partner."

You already practiced the Long Turn (Part 2): speaking at length, using signposting, and surviving the timer. Now we level up. Speaking Part 3 is less about one polished monologue and more about dynamic intellectual conversation. It's where your ability to discuss, compare, speculate, and justify gets tested — with follow-ups and a bit more push from the examiner.


What is Part 3 actually testing? (Short answer, then the juicy part)

  • Short answer: Advanced speaking skills: coherence and cohesion, lexical resource, grammatical range and accuracy, and interactive communication.

  • Juicy part: It's testing your ability to think on your feet, develop ideas, negotiate meaning, and respond to abstract/general questions. Expect broader topics linked to your Part 2 theme, but now with higher-order questions: causes, consequences, comparisons, solutions, and evaluations.


How Part 3 differs from Part 2 (so you don't accidentally do the wrong thing)

Feature Part 2 (Long Turn) Part 3 (Discussion)
Speaker control You speak uninterrupted for ~1–2 minutes Examiner leads; you interact and respond
Focus Personal description/story Abstract/general discussion: causes, effects, opinions
Time Practiced monologue Shorter turns, quicker shifts
Language emphasis Fluency & organization Argumentation, justification, complexity

Think of Part 2 as your rehearsed TED talk; Part 3 is the afterwards Q&A where the host asks the clever, awkward questions.


Typical question types (and how to handle them)

  1. Opinion + justification — "Do you think X is good or bad?"

    • Strategy: State clearly, give 2 reasons, illustrate briefly, link back.
  2. Comparison — "How is X different from Y?"

    • Strategy: Use comparative language (whereas, while, in contrast), give examples.
  3. Cause & effect — "Why does this happen? What are the consequences?"

    • Strategy: Offer plausible causes, prioritize 2–3, explain briefly.
  4. Prediction/speculation — "What might happen in the future?"

    • Strategy: Hedge (may, might, could), give reasoning, acknowledge uncertainty.
  5. Problem-solution — "What should be done?"

    • Strategy: State solution(s), explain feasibility and possible drawbacks.
  6. Evaluation — "Is X more important than Y?"

    • Strategy: Weigh both sides, choose, justify.

Practical structure for each answer (3–4 steps)

  1. Signal your stance — "I think… / I tend to believe…"
  2. Give 2 clear points — keep them distinct and ordered (first, secondly).
  3. Support briefly — example, reason or mini-anecdote. Not long — you're in discussion mode.
  4. Wrap or invite — finish with a quick summary or an open-ended follow-up: "So overall…" or "That's why I think… What about other people?"

Example micro-skeleton:

I believe X is beneficial because A (reason + brief example) and B (reason). Overall, X seems more advantageous, though it might have drawbacks like C.


Polishing language: advanced signposting and interaction moves

You used signposting in Part 2 — now make it conversational and argumentative.

  • To add: "Furthermore", "Moreover", "Another point is"
  • To contrast: "On the other hand", "Conversely", "Although"
  • To hedge/speculate: might, could, may, perhaps, it seems likely that
  • To qualify: "To some extent", "In many cases", "Generally speaking"
  • To concede and argue: "While it's true that X..., it's also important to consider Y..."

Handy phrase bank:

I would argue that...
One possible reason is...
This could be explained by...
That said, we should bear in mind...
It’s likely that..., though we can’t rule out...

Interaction skills (the secret sauce)

  • Don’t just answer — engage. If the examiner asks a follow-up, treat it like a conversation: add new information, don't repeat the whole previous answer.
  • Ask for clarification if needed. "Do you mean X or Y?" — better than floundering.
  • Disagree politely: "I see that point, but I would argue…" (then explain)
  • Use discourse markers to show progression: "Firstly… Secondly… Finally…"

Expert take: The examiner is not trying to trap you; they’re probing your ability to interact. Treat them like a curious colleague, not an enemy.


Quick model exchange (short and realistic)

Examiner: "Do you think younger people and older people have different attitudes to work?"
Candidate: "Yes, I do. Younger people often favour flexibility and meaningful work, whereas older people may prioritize stability and pension security. For example, many younger workers now choose freelance roles for autonomy, but older employees prefer predictable hours. Overall, both views are understandable depending on life stage — though the trend towards flexibility seems to be growing."

This is concise, comparative, and shows nuanced reasoning.


Common pitfalls (don’t do these)

  • Repeating a single idea in different words — that’s not development.
  • Over-long anecdotes — you're not in Part 2 anymore.
  • Overuse of fillers and halting stops — keep fluency by using hedges and simple connectors.
  • Refusing to speculate — a little educated guesswork shows critical thinking.

Mini-practice set (try these now)

  1. "What are the main challenges cities will face in 20 years?"
  2. "Are traditional museums still important in the digital age?"
  3. "Why do people react differently to the same news story?"

Use the 4-step answer structure for each. Time yourself: ~30–60 seconds per answer.


Closing: Key takeaways (tuck these in your brain like a snack)

  • Part 3 = discussion skills > polished monologue. Think argument, not narration.
  • Structure answers: stance → 2 points → brief support → wrap.
  • Use advanced signposting, hedging, and interaction strategies learned in Part 2, but make them conversational.
  • Practice with short timed answers and mini-dialogues. Don’t just rehearse — improvise.

Final thought: If Part 2 was you flexing your solo muscles, Part 3 is you playing bandleader — listen, respond, and lead the conversation with confidence (and a little swagger).


Next steps: Practice the mini-prompts out loud, record one sample exchange, and review for clarity, variety of grammar, and vocabulary. Bring that recording to the next session and we’ll turn your good answers into great ones.

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