TOEFLSpeaking Type1 2 4 6
TOEFLSpeaking Type1 2 4 6
TOEFLSpeaking Type1 2 4 6
Directions: For this task, you will be asked to speak about a topic that is familiar to you. You will hear a
question. You will then have 15 seconds to prepare your response and 45 seconds to speak.
1. Who is your best friend? Describe this person and say why he/she is
your best friend.
2. What is your favorite place to visit on weekends? Describe it and explain
why it is your favorite place to go.
3. What is your happiest childhood memory? Describe it and give reasons to
explain why it is your happiest memory.
4. Talk about an important national holiday in your home country. Describe it
and explain why it is important.
5. Who is an important person in your country? Describe this person and
explain why he/she is important.
6. Talk about an interesting tourist attraction you have been to. Describe it
and say why it was interesting.
7. Talk about a time when you experienced success. Describe the experience
and say why it was a success for you.
8. What is your favorite style of clothing? Describe it and explain why it is your
favorite.
9. Name a person whom you truly admire. Describe the person and say why
you admire him/her.
10. Talk about a difficulty you have overcome in your life. Describe the
experience and say why it was difficult to overcome.
11. Talk about a teacher who had a positive influence on you. Describe this
person and explain why he/she was so influential to you.
12. Talk about a positive experience with learning or using English. Describe the
experience and say why it was a positive one.
13. What is your favorite kind of food? Describe it and explain why it is your
favorite.
14. Describe a person from your countrys history. Why do you think this
person was important?
15. Talk about something you and your family enjoys doing together. Describe it
and explain why you all enjoy it.
32. What is your favorite recreational activity? Describe it and say why you enjoy
doing it.
33. Who is the most intelligent person you know? Describe the person and say why
you think he/she is intelligent.
34. Where would you most like to live? Describe this place and explain why you
would like to live there.
35. What is your favorite season of the year? Describe the season and explain why
you like it so much.
36. What custom from your home country are you most fond of? Describe the
custom and explain why you are fond of it.
37. Which person are you most likely to go to with a personal problem? Describe
this person and say why you would go to him/her in particular.
38. Name a place in your country you would recommend others to visit. Describe
this place and explain why you would recommend it.
39. Talk about an event from the past that you would like to relive. Describe the
original event and say why you would like to relive it.
40. What is your favorite way of getting around? Describe it and explain why it is
your favorite means of transportation.
1. When faced with an emergency, some people take on the role of leader and others prefer to take
on the role of followers. Which role do you prefer? Give details and examples to support your
response.
2. Some people say that when a child moves to a new country, he should only be taught in the native
language of his new country. Others think that it is better to teach in a bilingual method to help the
children adjust. Which method do you think is better? Use details and examples to support your
opinion.
3. Some students prefer to study in a group or with a friend or two. Others prefer to study by
themselves. Which method you think is better and why? Use details and examples to support your
choice.
4. Some people like to always have people around them. Others would rather spend time alone.
Which way do you prefer to spend your free time and why? Use details and examples in your
choice.
5. Some people treat their parents as friends rather than as parents. Others prefer to stay set in the
traditional roles of parents and children. Which do you prefer and why? Use details and examples
in your decision.
6. Some people think that books and other methods of print are slowly being replaced by the Internet,
TV, and other media. Others think that there will always be a need for printed material. What do
you think and why? Give examples and details in your response.
7. Some universities have a strict policy that freshman must live on campus in dorms for their first
year. Other universities have no policy like this and allow students to decide where they would
like live. Which policy do you think is better for the first-year students and why? Use details and
examples in your response.
8. Some people think that to keep animals in zoos is cruel and animals should only live in their
natural habitat. Others think that zoos serve the purpose of educating people about animals that
they would not normally have seen. Which argument do you favor and why? Use details and
examples in your explanation.
9. Some students prefer to study for an exam alone. Others prefer to study for an exam with
classmates. Which method do you prefer and why? Give details and examples in your response.
10. Some college students like to take courses in a variety of subjects in order to have a broader
education. Others only take courses in a central subject so they have a stronger understanding of
their specific subject. Which method do you think is better and why? Use details and examples in
your explanation.
11. Some people believe that you should always tell the truth. Others think that it is OK to lie
sometimes if they have good intentions. Which approach to honesty do you think is better? Give
details and examples to support your opinion.
12. Some students would prefer to have more independent study classes that allow for student-driven
research. Other students think that classroom time with professor-led lessons and research are
more valuable. Which method do you think is more valuable and why? Give details and examples
in your response.
13. Some professors give final grades based on numerous small quizzes, homework, and mid-term and
final exams. Other professors only give final grades based on one or two examinations. Which
method do you think gives a better representation of a students abilities and why? Give details
and examples in your opinion.
14. Some people think that teaching art to schoolchildren is a waste of time. Young children should
concentrate on important subjects like math, science, and language. Others think that teaching
children about art enriches their lives. Which opinion do you agree with and why? Use details and
examples to support your choice
15. Some people think the government should spend money on exploring outer space. Others think
that money could be better spent solving problems on Earth. What is your opinion and why? Give
details and examples to support your choice.
Type 4 Questions
Directions: In this question, you will read a short passage and then listen to a talk on the same academic
topic. You will then answer a question about them. After you hear the question, you will have 30 seconds
to prepare your response and 60 seconds to speak. You have 45 seconds to read the passage.
Erik Erikson
In 1956, German psychologist Erikson used the term identity crisis, as being an important conflict human
beings face in life. Erikson describes the identity crisis as first happening during ages 13 to 19. Overcoming
the crisis in those teen years will help overcome identity crises later in their life. Today, the complexities of
modern life create many stressful situations. People may experience identity crises more often now than in
the time of Erikson.
Professor: Todays discussion will be about the human stages of identity crisis, developed by psychiatrist
Erik Erikson. Lets look at those stages, beginning with infancy. Up to 18 months of age, with the mothers
loving care and contact, an infant will learn to trust. The second stage is from 18 months to 3 years, when
the child learns to master skills. Children learn to walk, talk and feed themselves, and become more
independent. During the ages of 3 to 5 years old, children experience a desire to copy the adults around
them. They also begin to use that wonderful word for exploring the world"WHY? During the fourth
stage, 6 to 12 years of age, children are capable of learning, creating, and accomplishing many new skills
and knowledge. This is the stage when human beings develop confidence and self-esteem. According to
Erikson, during the fifth stage is when we establish a philosophy of life. During this time, teenagers begin
to struggle with the question, Who am I? A teenager is neither a child nor an adult, and life is definitely
getting more complex as we attempt to find our own identity. During the stages of adulthood, the issues of
crisis are intimacy, raising children, being successful in a career, and finding wisdom from our experiences.
From here to late adulthood, development depends primarily upon what we do.
Narrator: How is the identity crisis reflected in the life stages defined by Erikson?
Professor: As a humanistic psychologist, Maslow developed the theory that as humans meet basic needs,
they seek to satisfy successively higher needs that occupy a set hierarchy. Maslow took this idea that some
needs take precedence over others, and created his now famous hierarchy of needs. Beyond the details of
air, water, food, and sex, he laid out five broader layersthe physiological needs, the needs for safety and
security, the needs for love and belonging, the needs for esteem, and the need to actualize the self, in that
order. Others, such as Freud and Hull, have developed motivational theories; however, people find
Maslows theory more appealing. Maslow's theory is a common sense approach to human behavior. His
research shows there is a motivator for each need, and it is these motivators that push one through the
hierarchy of needs pyramid. For example, the hierarchy can be applied in the advertising of a product by
creating an ad that compels consumers to buy their products. Maslows hierarchy can be applied to many
professions in business, education, retail sales, advertising, and entertainment.
Narrator: Combine points from the reading and the talk to explain the general appeal of Maslows theory.
Animal Domestication
Humans have been domesticating, or taming, animals for thousands of
years. The cow, pig, horse and other animals that once lived in the wild
are now used by humans. These large domesticated mammals are used
for a variety of jobs in fields such as agriculture and transportation.
Attempts have been made to domesticate many different types of animals,
but not all attempts were successful.
Animals that were not able to be successfully domesticated generally share
certain characteristics. An animal that is non-territorial, or an animal that
doesnt think it has its own area, has a much better chance of being
domesticated. Animals that live in herds and have a specific leader are
also easier to domesticate because the master, or human, can function as
this leader.
Professor: In this chapter we are discussing the aptness of certain types of animals
for domestication and the characteristics that make them this way. Animals that
live in herds, such as the horse, yesthe horse is a perfect example, are much easier
to domesticate than animals that dont live in herds. These herds generally consist
of an alpha male horse, who is the boss, several female horses, and a few foals. The
females and young foals follow the alpha male around and listen to him. When the
herd moves to a different location, all of the horses of the herd follow the male.
This willingness to follow others makes horses perfect in pulling objects or when
several are harnessed together: all following the first. Horses also have overlapping
territories, and they dont fight with the other herds.
But with a large mammal like the bear, well, how often do you see a large group of
bears all sitting around with each other? You dont, because they are not animals
that live in herds, and they dont follow any other bear in particular. If bears cant
get along with each other, how can they get along with a human who is telling them
what they can or cannot do? Bears are also highly territorial and mark their
territory in the wild. If you are walking through the woods and see some large
scratch marks above eye-level, that means you are walking around some marked
territory. Itd probably be best to leave, unless you want to fight with the bear over
his territory.
Type 6 questions:
Directions: For this task, you will hear a short academic talk. You will hear a
question about it.
You will then have 20 seconds to prepare your response and 60 seconds to speak.
Professor: The end of the 19th century was known as the Gilded Age in the U.S. Every person had the
chance to earn a fortune, and those who did celebrated it extravagantly. For example, in New York, the
wealthy spent a great deal of time throwing grand parties and visiting the theater and opera house. The
elites spent money in a way that had never been seen before. While they did this, othersthe working
classstruggled in rags. At the turn of the century, the average national income was a meager $380 a
month, and most of the nations families earned less than $1200 per year, far below the poverty line. Newly
arrived immigrants and Americans who once lived in rural areas rushed to find jobs in urban areas of
overcrowded squalor. Cheaply made and poorly run tenements filled the city with crime and filth. While
Americans had phonographs, sewing machines, electric lights, and even skyscrapers, most worked and
lived in extreme poverty and could not take advantage of these things. In response to the disparity, many
laborers in mills, factories, and sweatshops began to express unrest. Violent strikes became commonplace,
and many people turned to political machines. During the early 20th century, many politicians helped the
poor in exchange for their votes. Corruption began to reach up through high levels of the U.S. government.
Some reports even implicated Ulysses S. Grants administration in political schemes like the Gold
Conspiracy and the Salary Grab. In response to this, many Europeans expressed shock and felt that despite
Americas money and factories, the country remained without a sophisticated culture.
Narrator: Explain the role poverty played in the development of U.S. culture during the Gilded Age. Use
details and examples from the lecture to support your explanation.