Here’s a useful story for VWO students about preparing for an English listening test (luistertoets), with a practical lesson embedded.
A luistertoets tests not your English level, but your ability to handle real , unpolished speech. Train with distractions, listen for corrections, and never trust the first number or opinion you hear. The answer is often hiding in the speaker’s second thought. luistertoets engels vwo
Her teacher, Mr. Van der Berg, reviewed her results. “Lisa, you understood the main ideas, but you missed the distractors . For example, in the Australian clip, the scientist first mentioned ‘2 degrees warming,’ but then corrected himself to ‘1.5 degrees.’ The question asked for the final figure. You wrote 2.” Here’s a useful story for VWO students about
Three weeks later, the real luistertoets came. The first question was a lecture on urban planning—clear, slow. She didn’t relax. Halfway through, the lecturer said: “Now, the main benefit is… no, sorry, let me rephrase. The main benefit is actually reduced emissions, not lower costs.” The question asked: What is the main benefit? Most of her classmates wrote “lower costs.” Lisa wrote “reduced emissions.” She passed with an 8.0. The answer is often hiding in the speaker’s second thought