Speaking7 !!exclusive!! Guide
at Band 7 moves beyond mere speech speed. It requires “speaking at length without noticeable effort or loss of coherence.” This means a candidate can extend answers naturally, using a range of linking words and discourse markers (e.g., “to be honest,” “from my perspective,” “what I mean by that is”). Hesitation may occur, but it is typically content-related (searching for an idea) rather than language-related (searching for a word or grammar rule). Critically, the candidate demonstrates topic development: moving from a general claim to specific examples, reasons, or consequences.
Practice the “PPE” method (Point, Provide, Extend). For any opinion, state your point, provide a specific example or reason, then extend with a consequence, contrast, or personal connection. Record your answers to common Part 3 questions (e.g., on technology, education, environment) and listen for hesitation. Use a stopwatch: aim for 40–60 seconds per Part 3 answer. Learn 10–15 discourse markers for different functions (adding: “furthermore”; contrasting: “on the other hand”; exemplifying: “for instance”; concluding: “all things considered”). speaking7
First, is the hidden barrier. At Band 6, a candidate can handle familiar, concrete topics (family, hobbies, work). At Band 7, the test’s Part 3 (abstract discussion) demands simultaneous attention to content, grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation. When cognitive load exceeds capacity, fluency breaks down—pauses lengthen, sentence structures collapse into simple patterns, and vocabulary becomes generic. Overcoming this requires internalizing language chunks (e.g., “The main reason for X is…”, “That raises the question of…”) so they require zero conscious effort. at Band 7 moves beyond mere speech speed