The ideas below are simply suggested starting points – not rules! Everyone has their own style of speaking and different questions need different approaches. The idea is really to show you that:
thinking about coherence can improve your performance
different parts of the test may need different approaches
Part 1 – the chat – ARE or AR
Part 1 is not really an interview – it’s an informal chat with simple get to know you type questions. Here, I suggest you want to concentrate on giving clear and simple answers that are sometimes more extended. Two things to avoid are:
trying to say too much – the examiner has a lot of questions to ask (about 12 in 4 minutes – so make life easy for them)
giving over-short answers – you want to show that you can give politely extended answers as you would in real life
Here is a possible outline to make answers more coherent:
A – answer the question directly
R – give a reason why
(E) – when necessary explain that reason or perhaps give an example
This should be a familiar technique from paragraph writing when you make a point and explain it with reasons.
Practice tips
Learn to answer questions directly – i.e. say immediately what you think in the first sentence of your reply. That makes it clear to the examiner that you can deal with basic questions. And note it’s perfectly ok to say “I don’t know” or “I’m not sure” – just say why. (ARE)
In your head, hear the question “Why?”- even if the examiner doesn’t say it. If you do that, you then have an immediate way of saying the next thing – “This is because…”. This is coherent.
In your head, think “Example”. This too gives you something else to say that will link in with what you have just said. Coherence again.
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