The TOEFL Listening portion is a tricky one. You are required to listen to four to six lectures, which each have six questions, and two to three conversations, which each have five questions. It will take a total of 60 minutes for the shortened version and 90 minutes for the extended version, with a total of 34 to 51 questions. If you receive the extended section, the extra lectures and conversations do not count towards your score (sorry!). It is just there to help the TOEFL company prepare questions for next year. Unfortunately you cannot predict which questions are the extra questions and you should do your best on all of them!
So what are the types? According to research papers from ETS, the company that makes the TOEFL, they have identified 5 types:
lecture: a monologue delivered in a formal academic setting, usually by a professor
interactive lecture: a lecture delivered in a formal academic setting, where students may ask questions for clarification or the lecturer may ask students questions
consultation: a group of speakers discussing academic or class-related material (e.g., a student asking a professor questions during office hours)
group discussion: a group of speakers discussing academic material in an imposed structure (e.g., students in a study group or students performing a classroom activity assigned by the professor)
conversation: a group of speakers talking about class-related or campus-related material (e.g., a student looking for a book on reserve in the library).
Now, in keeping with the theme of 5, here are the 5 best pieces of advice you can have to score well on the TOEFL test.
1.Take Notes
Taking accurate notes quickly is the most important skill on the TOEFL. It is both a mental and physical skill. It is physical because by moving your hand faster and writing faster, you can write more notes than another person can. Additionally, it is mental because you need to summarize sentences, shorten words, identify the most important parts of a sentence and throw out unnecessary statements.
Write down:
– Main points that the lecture has said
– Details about main points
– Facts that are difficult to remember, but can be asked about (often in the conversations there is one question about an inconsequential fact from the beginning)
Do not write down:
– Function words (like ‘the’ or ‘a/an’)
– Words signaling the organization of the passage (‘The first reason the Maldives are beautiful is…’ or ‘The main idea is..’)
For example, here are my notes for this listening passage: https://www.ets.org/s/toefl/audio/greenhouse_effect.mp3
Notes
Grenhous fct
First no neg, b4 glob warm
Was pos, trouble no
Day heat, night rad back space
Surf below 0
Grnhs gas, absrb heat, then release
Like blanket, trap heat
Reduce heat rad to space
Like glass walls grnhs, hold heat
If grnhs overheat, worry
Enhanced grn fct
As long stay same, equal, but upset, bad
Evid alrdy upset, warming century
Cause? Too much gas atmo, c02 (human, nrg use, petrol, meth)
Expect grow signif, world warmer
Quant? Unsure. Var factors affect, oceans, absrb, 1k X atmo
Study, oceans warm, absrb more 50yrs
Warm good +bad
hope not happen – extra heat ocean – slow glob warm
ocean evap? – unknown, 0x vap grnhz
vap = warm earth, but clouds block sunlight
delay, but also vapor, no known net affect
For more information on Note Taking, check out this document from the TOEFL company on the effects of Note Taking. Skip down to page 55 (page 67 in the PDF) on the document. The company has affirmed through their research that just reading these 4 pages will improve your TOEFL listening score.
2. Know the Organization
Another important aspect of the TOEFL Listening is to know the organization of the Lectures. ETS has even listed the types of organization on its website.
First, there are two main structures:
Lecture or Presentation where there is a clearly defined Introduction, Body and Conclusion, and
Narrative where there is a Beginning, Middle and End.
In the Greenhouse Effect Listening above, we saw a Lecture/Presentation type where the idea of the Greenhouse Effect was described, then it was described more in detail with differing versions (pos + neg), then its actual effect in the world was detailed.
Then we look at the different styles of organization:
- Theory and Evidence
- Cause and Effect
- Steps of a Process
- Comparison of Two Things
- National Public Radio (http://www.npr.org/) (I like ‘On Point’ with Tom Ashbrook the most)
- CNN Radio (http://cnnradio.cnn.com/)
- Podcasts (‘Podcast Addict’ on Google Play is a good source for Android users.
- Voice of America (http://www.voanews.com/)
- Audio books (https://librivox.org/ = Free and legal audio book downloads)
- Opinion (I think, It appears that, It is thought that)
- Theory (In theory)
- Inference (therefore, then)
- Negatives (not, or words that begin with ‘un’, ‘non’, ‘dis’, or ‘a’)
- Fillers (non-essential information like uh, umm, or er)
- reasons (because, since)
- results (as a result, so, therefore, thus, consequently)
- examples (for example, such as)
- comparisons (in contrast, than)
- an opposing idea (on the other hand, however)
- another idea (furthermore, moreover, besides)
- a similar idea (similarly, likewise)
- restatements of information (in other words, that is)
- conclusions (in conclusion, in summary)
- Free TOEFL sample questions – https://www.ets.org/toefl/ibt/prepare/sample_questions
- Youtube is always nice – http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=toefl+listening
- ICON+ Online Diagnostic Test – https://toefl-singapore.com/
- Purchased TOEFL material – https://www.ets.org/toefl/ibt/prepare/
- Princeton Review Cracking the TOEFL (I recommend this book) – http://www.randomhouse.com/book/235142/cracking-the-toefl-ibt-with-audio-cd-2015-edition-by-princeton-review
- Online TOEFL courses (usually the instructors just do not have their hearts in it)
- Just taking the TOEFL over and over again.
- Our classes! You can register for one here, or attend a free Information Session here.