One of the most overlooked but critically important aspects of the IELTS Listening test is reading the instructions with precision. Sounds basic, right? But countless students lose marks—not because they didn’t hear the right answer—but because they didn’t follow the instructions.
Let’s explore why this matters and how to master it.
✅ Why Are Instructions So Important?
Each question on the IELTS Listening test comes with specific instructions—especially regarding:
- Word limits
- Number of answers required
- Type of response expected (e.g., one word, a number, or both)
If you ignore or misunderstand these instructions, you could write an answer that’s factually correct, but still get zero marks.
🧠 Common Instruction Phrases and What They Mean
Understanding how to interpret the instructions is vital. Here’s a breakdown of some of the most common instruction formats:
Instruction | What It Means |
---|---|
“Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS” | You can write 1 or 2 words only. 3 words = ❌ wrong. |
“Write ONE WORD ONLY” | Your answer must be a single word. Adding a number or extra word = ❌ wrong. |
“Write A NUMBER” | You must only write a number (e.g., 50, not “fifty”). |
“Write NO MORE THAN ONE WORD AND/OR A NUMBER” | You can write: 1 word, or 1 number, or 1 word + 1 number. |
🚨 Real-Life Example
👂 Audio:
“The registration fee is fifty dollars.”
❌ Wrong Answer:
fifty dollars (exceeds word limit if the instruction was ONE WORD)
✅ Correct Answer:
50 (if the instruction was “ONE WORD AND/OR A NUMBER” or “A NUMBER”)
As you can see, not reading the instruction correctly can cost you a mark—even when you heard the right answer.
💡 How to Practice Instruction Awareness
- Underline or highlight the instruction before each set of questions in practice.
- Train your mind to always double-check the word limit.
- During practice sessions, review your wrong answers—was it the instruction you got wrong or the listening part?
✍️ Extra Tip: Use Correct Grammar and Spelling
Even if your answer fits the word limit, it will still be marked incorrect if it’s misspelled or grammatically wrong.
📌 For example:
- Correct: “apples” (plural form)
- Incorrect: “apple” (if the speaker said apples)
- Incorrect: “appls” (misspelled)
📌 Final Thoughts
Reading instructions might feel like a small detail, but in IELTS, small details separate a Band 7 from a Band 8+. The test rewards accuracy, not guesswork. One tiny misread instruction could mean losing an entire point—and that’s a big deal when aiming high.
🔁 Tip in a nutshell:
“Don’t just listen well — follow directions like a pro. Every word in the instruction matters.”