Second, beyond the sentence level are often underdeveloped. Many Band 6 candidates can produce correct sentences but cannot organize them into a coherent argument. For example, asked “Should governments subsidize public transport?”, a Band 6 answer might list disconnected points: “Yes, because environment, traffic, and money.” A Band 7 answer signals structure: “That’s an interesting question. On the one hand, subsidies could reduce car use and thus emissions. However, a potential drawback is the cost to taxpayers. Ultimately, I believe the environmental benefits outweigh the financial concerns.” Note the use of signposting, concession, and a concluding judgment.
Create vocabulary networks around IELTS themes (health, urbanization, globalization). But crucially, learn collocations via corpora or phrasebooks (e.g., “pose a threat,” “yield benefits,” “grapple with an issue”). Use the “paraphrase drill”: take a simple sentence (“Many people use social media”) and rephrase it three different ways without repeating vocabulary. Finally, practice the “less common word challenge”: when describing a common object (e.g., a mobile phone), avoid words like “good” or “bad”; instead use “indispensable,” “frustratingly slow,” “intuitive interface.” speaking7
In synthesis, Speaking 7 is . Part II: The Hidden Challenges – Why Band 6 to Band 7 Is a Leap Many candidates stagnate at Band 6.5, and the reason lies not in a single weakness but in the qualitative jump required. The transition from Band 6 to Band 7 is less about learning new grammar rules and more about automatizing and strategizing . Second, beyond the sentence level are often underdeveloped
at Band 7 is characterized by “features of connected speech” (linking, elision, intrusion) and appropriate intonation and stress. The candidate is “easy to understand throughout,” even if a non-native accent remains noticeable. Crucially, individual word sounds may be imperfect, but the overall rhythm and sentence stress convey meaning accurately. Monotone delivery or erratic stress patterns that confuse meaning will prevent a Band 7. On the one hand, subsidies could reduce car
Third, vs. lexical range is often misunderstood. Many candidates memorize “big words” (e.g., “ubiquitous,” “plethora”) but use them inappropriately or with unnatural collocations. Band 7 values precise, less common vocabulary used correctly. For instance, saying “My father is an avid gardener” (instead of “my father likes gardening very much”) demonstrates collocational knowledge (“avid” + “gardener”). However, forcing “My father is a horticultural enthusiast” sounds unnatural and may penalize fluency. Part III: Strategic Preparation – Building the Speaking 7 Profile Achieving Speaking 7 requires targeted, deliberate practice rather than general conversation practice alone. The following strategies align with the official criteria.
Master five complex structures: conditional clauses (If + past perfect + would have), concession clauses (Although/Even though), relative clauses (which, where, whose), inversion (Not only… but also), and cleft sentences (What I find interesting is…). Practice “sentence combining”: take two simple sentences and merge them into one complex sentence using subordinating conjunctions. Use error logging: record yourself, transcribe a 1-minute answer, and highlight every grammatical error by type (article, preposition, subject-verb agreement). Focus on eliminating just one error type per week.