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雅思口语考试中应该避免的口语扣分环节

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一提到雅思口语考试,考鸭们纷纷泪流满面,备考复习大半年,临场表现10分钟,众多雅思口语考生为雅思口语考试复习折断了腰,闪了舌头。下面小编就和大家分享雅思口语考试中应该避免口语扣分环节,来欣赏一下吧。

雅思口语考试中应该避免口语扣分环节

1雅思口语考试时,只会蹦单词?扣分

雅思口语考生大多只会用单个的词,而不使用将连贯的单词或者多个词汇,显得语句非常

雅思口语考试中不会使用"词串"的考生,得分一定会被扣0.5-1分。事实上,不会"词串"恰恰是中国考生致命伤,它除了影响词汇分,还影响了流利分和速度分。

2雅思口语考试时,面部表情太僵硬

雅思口语评分标准的"发音"评分项中,有这样一个界定:"能够使用表情、肢体语言帮助自己被理解。"根据这个标准,如果你有下列问题,你会被扣分:

(1) 几乎不看考官,可能被扣0.2分。

(2) 虽然看着考官,但是表情和口语答案并不配套。

(3) 因为考官面无表情,你原先勉强保持微笑逐渐僵硬,直至像考官一样面无表情,这样,你可能被扣0.05分。

为了不被扣分,小站雅思君希望各位雅思考生能做到这些:

(1) 在备考阶段,一定要注意"表情和语言配套"管理

(2) 在实际考试的时候,无论你紧张与否,无论考官是否面无表情,请你脸上保持微笑,对着镜子经常练习微笑吧。

3雅思口语考试发音问题之:大舌头 扣分

雅思口语考试中最为纳闷的是:众多中国考生,明明知道"不伸舌头"会被扣分,为什么坚持"不伸舌头"?如果考生找借口说:"我习惯不伸舌头啦",那考官会说:"向至少0.2分说再见吧!"

4雅思口语考生会因"单字不重音"被扣分

在雅思考试中,遇到"单字重音",你必须把那些单词放慢、加重,原因简单,在整个句子当中,只有这些单词,才是最重要的,其他单词,都要轻读。

在雅思的"发音"评分标准中,有这样一个界定:"考生使用重读、弱读,使自己更容易理解。"而我们多数中国考生,仅仅把重读理解为一个单词里的重音音节,而不能把重音理解为"一个句子中的重音单词",所以自然要被扣分了。

5雅思口语考试语法不够丰富,扣分

多数中国考生,只使用单一的语法结构,即主谓宾结构,而很少使用多种语法,如被动语态、强调句、虚拟语态、疑问句、感叹句等,因为中国考生本性"含蓄害羞",最喜欢用平铺直叙的陈述句,而很少表情丰富使用疑问句、感叹句强调句等。我们只能说,只有稍微改变自己害羞的个性,才有可能操练起多种语法

6雅思口语考生大多数只使用"一层结构",而不使用"多层结构"

雅思口语考试中,多层结构答题法对于中国考生并非易事,因为很多中国考生应试教育的荼毒下,根本就没有形成自己的思维逻辑遇到问题只能凭借脑子里仅有的一点知识,胡乱说两句。

7雅思口语考试的哑巴思维,扣分

什么是哑巴思维,就是完全依靠考试技巧生搬硬套和对齐所谓的口语答案”,举个例子,关于描述一件喜欢的衣服,在part3,考官问你是否喜欢买买买时,考生条件反射地回答,不,我喜欢更加合理理财,适度的消费,然后长篇大论败家的危害等等。这些显然偏题了,而且有明显的准备过的痕迹,显得非常不自然。

根据许多的模拟面试数据显示,雅思口语考试中最痛苦地方,不是听到了中国考生的哑巴英语,而是直面"哑巴思维",这是中国学生雅思口语均分全球倒数第一的根本症结,其严重程度,远超刚才所讲的其他问题的总和。

8雅思口语考试不会提问?扣分

根据学生模拟经验,有超过50%的考生,在考试的时候会对某个或某几个问题不甚了解。在听不懂题目的时候,绝大同学采取策略是:一猜二蒙!

当你猜测或蒙的时候,你在对考题的理解能力、表述自己观点能力会严重丢分。如果你放松地、大胆地问考官,你压根不会被扣分。即便考官解释之后你要求他再次解释,你也仅仅可能因为"理解能力"而被扣个微乎其微的0.05分,而绝对不会因"听不懂"、"答跑题"收到双重重罚。

2020年9-12月雅思口语part2&3答案相处最多的家庭成员

Describe a family member who you spent the most time with.

You should say:

who the person was

what you guys did together

why do you spend the most time with that person

and explain how you feel about spending time with the person

The family member I’d like to talk about is my brother. He’s an amusing person, actually, with a dry and mischievous sense of humour. He is 5 years younger than me and he works for a company that sell automobiles, a kind of off-road adventure vehicle company, I guess you’d call it. Anyway, to be honest he’s a bit lazy, but always seems to be quite lucky in finding good jobs with flexible bosses, great benefits and a fairly high salary! I think maybe it’s because of the way he is able to talk confidently to all different types of people, and command respect, as well as being an endearing person who is pretty well-liked. I spend most of my free time with him because he lives next door to me and because we help each other out a lot with all sorts of things and on the weekends we go out for meals, then go to a bar and drink and share stories and discuss family and friends. On Sundays we take it in turns to cook – he enjoys cooking Mexican and Lebanese food – it’s kind of his hobby really – and I enjoy cooking Chinese and Japanese dishes. So, most Sundays we invite each other round, along with friends and sometimes other family members, and we eat together. He’s very sporty, and I’m not very sporty, so this is the main difference between us really – apart from this we are very similar and have a really good laugh together and share a lot of common interests.

Part3

1. What are the benefits of younger and older generations living together? How about the drawbacks?

There are a number of practical and emotional advantages to younger and older generations sharing the same home – firstly, life today is very busy, and often both parents have to go to work – if there are children, then the grandparents can easily take over and look after the children during the daytime or when the parents are busy. This is a lot easier if everyone lives together in the same house, especially in big cities where housing is expensive and distances between work and home can involve long commutes. The drawbacks, well… there are also a number of drawbacks. You don’t get much personal space or private time if you live with other family members, especially grandparents… Sometimes other family members might also interfere in your daily business or poke their nose into your personal affairs or arguments with your husband or wife. So… everything has its advantages and disadvantages, in life.

2. Which one do you prefer, support from family members or friends?

It really depends to be honest. It’s impossible to say without a context!! If I want to talk about an emotional problem in a relationship or something, then I prefer to talk to my friends. However, if I want to discuss other issues, perhaps related to other family members, or my work or future, then I am perhaps more likely to seek family support and a listening ear from my mother and father in particular.

3. Is it important to visit family members?

Of course! It’s very important to keep in touch with one’s family members and visit them in person, as well. Sometimes it’s not so easy here in China because it’s a big country and cities are very far apart – it takes a long time to travel from place to place and during national holidays trains and planes are often over-booked and crowded. However, everyone in China usually makes quite a lot of effort to stay in touch and visit relatives – I think that it’s one of the aspects of our culture that we remain fairly traditional about – maintaining a close relationship with family.

2020年9-12月雅思口语part2&3答案解析:你拍过的照片

Describe a photo taken by you.

You should say:

What it is like

Where you took it

When you took it

And explain how you felt about it

I have taken a lot of photos over the years, because I’m a big fan of photography. Years ago, before mobile phones had really good cameras, I used to have a film camera, then a digital SLR camera, both were amazing and I loved them. I used to take them everywhere and take photos of anything and everything. I enjoyed taking photos of friends, of family and photos at special occasions and events with work and with workmates. But also I have always enjoyed taking more artistic photos – which is what I’m into these days. I like to walk around the older areas of my city and take pictures of the older people, the traditional street-lives they live and capture aspects of those lives in my photographs. The photo I liked a lot was a picture of an old wooden chair outside a hutong, with a sunflower in a pot next to it. I also like to use different coloured and textured filters on my photos to make them more interesting and arty and inspiring. So, there are lots of photos that I’ve taken that I like, but the photo of that old chair in the hutongs that I mentioned earlier, with the sunflower in the pot next to it, is the one that I like the most. The sunlight was perfect in it, the way the shadows were, and how the chair and sunflower were symbols of life in those old streets, when people would often sit outside and chat to their neighbours, rather than be stuck inside tall apartment blocks. That photo symbolized a lot to me and the people I showed it to also thought it was a great composition – a very well-balanced photo, with a striking contrast between the brightness of the yellow flower and the dull grey of the hutong walls and the old brown wooden chair. So, I felt good about this photo, as simple as it sounds. I think it was probably the best photo I’ve taken and means a lot to me. I have framed it and put it on my wall, in fact.

Part3

1. What’s the difference between photos taken by camera or phone?

Today there might not be much recognizable difference, really, because phone cameras are becoming so good these days. However, I think that still proper cameras are more for professionals, and likely do a lot more, have more settings and much higher quality lenses. Real cameras also have larger lenses so you can get very close up shots in perfectly sharp focus, or distance shots, or wide-angle shots if you’re taking photos of groups of people at a wedding, or panoramic views of the countryside or a landscape. So, I think that a proper photographer would use a proper camera rather than a mobile phone to take professional photos. But, the world of photography has changed for everyday people like me – we can, indeed, take really good photos simply with our phones, and this is something that has really changed photography in the past ten years, that’s for sure. I never could have predicted when I was in high school, that today people would be snapping photos with their phones so easily and efficiently. It’s funny how technology has changed so quickly over the past decade or so. It’s amazing really.

2. On what occasions do people like to take photos?

Most people today take photos pretty much all of the time. Well, what I mean is, is that we are now in the age of selfies and snapping mobile phone photos of our everyday lives so much, and posting them on social media, that people tend to document their everyday lives a lot. People mostly take photos of themselves, nights or days out with their friends, the food they are eating for dinner, all sorts. In fact, I’ve come to find this all rather tedious to be honest; I don’t really need to see so many photographic updates of people’s lives and their dinners and stuff like this. I, personally, like to reserve taking photos for special occasions and holidays. I don’t feel the need or desire to take photos of my daily meals! I think this recent trend of documenting one’s daily life in photos and WeChat moments is quite egocentric and self-absorbed. I don’t think it’s that good for people to be so self-obsessed, and I think it’s quite pretentious, too. Maybe I’m just a cynical person with a slightly old-fashioned view, but I’m simply not a fan of these things. Neither am I really into social media that much – which seems to dominate people’s lives today – I sometimes wish things were like they were a generation or two ago when people relied on face to face interactions to share things, not text and photo updates on their social media accounts. So, in my opinion, nowadays, people take too many photos of too many daily things, all about their own lives, and I’m not a fan of this trend at all.

3. How do people keep photos?

People often keep their photos on social media accounts or online or stored on their phones or in the cloud memories of their phones. People, to be honest, often lose a lot of their photos when their phone breaks or when they change phones, so this can become a bit of a pointless exercise and a waste of time. It’s ironic that the more digital technology develops, and the more we can potentially store more and more photos, the more inclined or the more likely we are to actually lose a lot of the photos we take. Again, I think in the past we treasured and cherished things more when they were less accessible. Today we can keep photos for years, unless of course our storage goes wrong or our phones break. It’s a double-edged sword, modern technology, and often it can be limiting as much as it is liberating. Depends how you look at it.


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