There’s a specific moment in the IELTS Listening test that causes more confusion than any other. It’s when a multiple-choice question appears, and within a 30-second conversation, you hear the speakers mention keywords connected to option A, option B, and option C. This is not an accident. It’s a deliberately set trap. IELTS multiple choice […]
There’s a specific moment in the IELTS Listening test that causes more confusion than any other. It’s when a multiple-choice question appears, and within a 30-second conversation, you hear the speakers mention keywords connected to option A, option B, and option C.
This is not an accident. It’s a deliberately set trap.
IELTS multiple choice questions (MCQs) are not a simple test of your hearing. They are a sophisticated test of your ability to understand the precise meaning of a conversation, to separate relevant information from distracting noise, and to follow the logical flow of an argument.
If you’ve been struggling with these questions, it’s likely because you’re listening for individual words instead of understanding the bigger picture. This guide will change that. We will provide a clear, step-by-step strategy to help you navigate these tricky questions, identify the distractors, and confidently select the correct answer.
Before we learn the strategy, we need to understand why these questions feel so difficult. The test makers know that you are under pressure, and they exploit this in three main ways:
Your job is to cut through this noise and identify what is actually being said.
To defeat a sophisticated trap, you need a systematic method. Follow these four steps for every MCQ you encounter, and you will see a dramatic improvement in your accuracy.
In the short preparation time before the audio starts, your first priority is to read and understand the question “stem” – that is, the question itself, without looking at the A, B, C options.
Example:
According to the tutor, what is the **main weakness** in the students’ **presentation**?
At this stage, your goal is simply to lock the main question into your mind. This is your mission.
Now, with the main question in mind, quickly read options A, B, and C. Don’t try to memorize them. Instead, identify the single keyword or idea that makes each option unique.
Example (continuing from above):
A. The **length** was not appropriate.
B. The **information** was not accurate.
C. The **structure** was not logical.
The key differences are length, information, and structure. These are the three specific concepts your ears will now be trained to listen for.
This is where the battle is won. As the audio plays, you must actively ignore the temptation to grab the first keyword you hear. Your task is to listen to the entire exchange and figure out which of the ideas from Step 2 is the one the speakers settle on.
How to Execute This:
Once you have identified the correct answer through this process, select it and, crucially, move your focus immediately to the next question. The audio will not wait for you. If you are still thinking about the previous question, you risk falling behind and creating a domino effect of missed answers.
While the classic A, B, C format is most common, be prepared for slight variations:
1. Sentence Completion: The stem is an incomplete sentence.
Example: The main purpose of the project is to…
A. collect data.
B. inform the public.
C. test a new theory.
The strategy remains exactly the same.
2. Multiple Answer Questions: Sometimes, the question will ask you to CHOOSE TWO letters from a longer list (e.g., A-E). In this case, you need to find two correct answers. This is common in Section 3.
By adopting this systematic, 4-step approach, you can turn multiple choice questions from a source of anxiety into an opportunity to showcase your true understanding.
Ready to practice this new method?
👉 Start practicing MCQ type questions in listening section and see how you handle the multiple-choice questions now.