toefl ibt listening speaking session 2. 1 speaking independent tasks review familiar topics ...

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TOEFL iBT Listening Speaking SESSION 2. 1

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  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • TOEFL iBT Listening Speaking SESSION 2. 1
  • Slide 3
  • Speaking Independent Tasks Review Familiar Topics Personal Experience Personal Preference Preparation Time: 15 Seconds Response Time: 45 Seconds 2
  • Slide 4
  • Speaking: Sample Answer Outline Topic Sentence Reason 1 examples and details Reason 2 examples, and details CONCLUSION 3
  • Slide 5
  • Speaking Some people enjoy having many friends. Others prefer to have a few close friends. Which would you prefer? Include specific reasons and examples to support your answer. I prefer to have ..rather than. First of all,, and .. In my experience, . Secondly, I think .. When.. 4
  • Slide 6
  • Speaking Talk about a teacher who has positively impacted your life. How has he or she influenced you? Include specific reasons and examples to support your answer. [email protected] 5
  • Slide 7
  • Speaking Some people like to watch the news on television. Other people prefer to read the news in a newspaper. Still others use their computers to get the news. How do you prefer to be informed about the news and why? Use specific reasons and details to explain your choice. [email protected] 6
  • Slide 8
  • Speaking Talk about a book that you have enjoyed reading. Why did you like it? What was especially interesting about the book? Use specific reasons and details to explain your choice. Teachers should be evaluated by their students. Do you agree or disagree? 7
  • Slide 9
  • L ISTENING : D ETAIL Q UESTIONS 8
  • Slide 10
  • Necessary Skills Taking note at major points and important details of a lecture or conversation Listening for signal expressions that identify details, such as the following: for example, the reason is, on the other hand, I would say Eliminating incorrect answer choices Identifying a statement that is not mentioned 9
  • Slide 11
  • Strategies Since answers to questions are generally found in order in the passage, it is helpful to take notes in the order of what you hear. Detail questions do not require inference. Choose what speakers actually say. In a lecture, detail questions are about information related to the following: new facts descriptions, definitions of terms/concepts/ideas, reasons, results, and examples. Incorrect choices may repeat some of the speakers words but do not reflect correct information from the lecture or conversation. 10
  • Slide 12
  • Listening: Art History Class Key Vocabulary rural: relating to parts of a country that are not near cities or populated areas migrate: to travel to another place arduous: very difficult and involving lots of work representation: a sign; a symbol documentary: a movie, program, or photography dealing with real people and events 11
  • Slide 13
  • Listening Sample Listen to a lecture in a history class. Great Depression Photography 12
  • Slide 14
  • Listening Sample 1. According to the professor, how were photographs taken during the Great Depression different from earlier photographs? (A) They focused more on people as subjects. (B) They portrayed the real struggles and emotions of their subjects. (C) They were taken with people facing the camera. (D) They were the first photographs documenting American history. 13
  • Slide 15
  • Listening Sample 2. Why did the government program hire photographers? (A) To take photos specifically Of farmers (B) To record a historical event (C) To introduce a new type of photography. (D) To document conditions around the country 14
  • Slide 16
  • Listening Sample Fill in the blanks to complete the summary. The professor explains that during the Great Depression, photographers began to take photos of ______________ in difficult _____________. A government program hired photographers to take pictures, and many photographers focused on _____________ who _____________ to California because their farms had been destroyed by dust storms. These photos went on to influence later _____________. 15
  • Slide 17
  • Listening Sample: Business Key Vocabulary conflict: a state of disagreement between people or groups suppress: to hold back or stifle a situation component: a part or feature of something hinder: to obstruct or delay the process of something alternative: another possibility 16
  • Slide 18
  • Listening Sample Listen to a lecture in a business class. 17
  • Slide 19
  • Listening Sample 1. According to Taylor, how does the proper use of scientific management affect conflict? (A) It removes conflict from the workplace. (B) It helps managers to measure conflict. (C) It contributes to more conflict in the workplace: (D) It solves organizational disputes between workers. 18
  • Slide 20
  • Listening Sample 2. What did interactionists like Robbins think about organizational conflict? (A) Organizational conflict is always beneficial to employees. (B) Employers should manage conflict to achieve maximum productivity. (C) Conflict is necessary in order to maximize productivity. (D) Managers should eliminate conflict to increase workplace productivity. 19
  • Slide 21
  • Listening Sample 3. According to Robbins's theory, what can be a positive result of conflict? Choose 2 answers. (A) Business expansion (B) Employee satisfaction (C) Project Analysis (D) Idea generation 20
  • Slide 22
  • Summary Fill in the blanks to complete the summary. The professor describes two views of _____________ in organizations. Frederick Taylor thought conflict was harmful at work and ______________ productivity. He believed that managers could avoid conflict through proper use of scientific _____________. Conversely, Robbins's _____________ view proposed that _____________ can also have enormous _____________ to an organization. He says that conflict is unavoidable and can be managed in ways to raise ____________ 21
  • Slide 23
  • Listening Sample: Office Hours Key Vocabulary genre: a class or style in film, writing, or art, which can be identified by certain characteristics stress: to emphasize imagery: mental pictures or the products of imagination description: a statement about what someone or something is like flattered: feeling pleased at someone's attentions 22
  • Slide 24
  • Listening Sample Listen to a conversation between a student and a professor. 23
  • Slide 25
  • Listening Sample 1. What is a problem that creative writers have, according to the student? (A) They have difficulty putting the description of the world into words. (B) They cannot use the five senses in their writing. (C) They use too much description in their works. (D) They have difficulty getting approval for the course. [email protected] 24
  • Slide 26
  • Listening Practice 2. Why hasn't the professor been able to teach a nature- writing class? (A) There has not been enough demand for it. (B) Most people do not consider nature-writing a genre. (C) The head of the department would not approve it. (D) There are not enough people to sign up for one. 25
  • Slide 27
  • Listening Practice 3. What does the professor suggest the student do to have the class offered? (A) Encourage students to develop a course (B) Provide the department head with the names of thirty students (C) Persuade thirty students to send letters to the department head (D) Complain to the department head about the creative writing classes 26
  • Slide 28
  • Summary Fill in the blanks to complete the summary. The student thinks that _____________ would make a good class. The _____________ said she had tried to get it approved in the past, but that the _________________ did not think the course would be popular enough. The professor says that if the student can get ______________ students to send letters to the _______________, then he would probably approve the class. 27