Why IELTS Speaking feels scary (even after practice)
Many Bangladeshi students can speak English — but still get stuck at Band 6–6.5. The problem is not vocabulary. It’s control under pressure.
- Fluency breaks after 10–15 seconds
- Ideas run out in Part 2 & 3
- Examiner logic misunderstood
- Confidence drop after one bad answer
Fluency: speaking without freezing
Fluency does NOT mean fast talking. It means continuous, controlled speech — even with simple language.
- Pausing naturally instead of stopping
- Using fillers correctly (not “uhh… uhh…”)
- Recovering smoothly when stuck
Idea generation: “Ki bolbo bujhi na” problem
IELTS does not test intelligence or knowledge. It tests how you expand small ideas.
- 1 idea → example → reason → feeling
- No memorized answers
- Personal + general mix
Examiner logic: how marks are actually given
Examiners don’t count mistakes. They judge patterns across 4 criteria.
- Fluency & coherence
- Lexical resource (range, not difficulty)
- Grammar control (accuracy under pressure)
- Pronunciation (clarity, not accent)
Confidence recovery: one bad answer doesn’t kill your band
Many students panic after one weak answer. Examiners reset judgement every part.
- Part 1 warm-up ≠ final score
- Part 2 structure matters more than story
- Part 3 logic > vocabulary
Real test-day speaking behavior (what others ignore)
Speaking room pressure, body language, eye contact, and recovery speed matter.
What we train
- Thinking while speaking
- Recovering mid-sentence
- Natural expansion techniques
Practice like exam
No memorization. No fake confidence.
Speaking improve hoy “structure + recovery” diye — vocabulary diye na.