IELTS Listening, for the General Training candidate.
There is no separate General Training Listening test: the same four recordings, the same forty questions, the same conversion, lecture included. The GT advantage lives in the everyday front half of the paper; the risk lives in the academic back half. This page is the map.
Why this page exists. General Training candidates are sometimes promised an easier Listening paper. There is one Listening paper, lecture and all, and the GT route needs to prepare for the whole of it.
General Training Listening does not exist as a separate test.
The same four recordings play for every candidate in the room.
The same audio
Four parts · forty questions
Two everyday recordings open the paper; a study-context conversation and an academic lecture close it. Booking General Training removes none of them.
The Part 4 lecture comes for everyone.
The same rules
One mark each, no penalties
Spelling counts, word limits count, and a guess costs nothing. The answer sheet does not know which route you booked.
Never leave a blank.
The same conversion
One raw score, one band
Unlike Reading, the Listening conversion is identical on both routes. There is no GT discount and no GT surcharge.
A given raw score converts to the same band for every candidate.
The first half of the paper is your daily English.
Bookings, directions, services and arrangements: Parts 1 and 2 run on the transactions GT candidates live in.
These are the highest-yield marks on the paper, and they are won with discipline rather than comprehension: exact spellings taken letter by letter, numbers, dates, and answers inside the word limit. A right answer spelled wrongly is a wrong answer; an answer one word over the limit is a wrong answer. Practise form-filling until it is mechanical, because in the test it has to survive nerves. The front half of this paper is yours to lose, so do not lose it.
Parts 3 and 4 do not check which test you booked.
The lecture arrives whether or not you ever plan to sit in one.
Part 3 is a tutorial discussion, Part 4 an academic lecture: formal, signposted, and heavy with paraphrase, since the questions reword what the recording says. Candidates who practise only everyday listening meet this register cold, and the band drops in the back half of the paper. The counter is deliberate exposure: talks and lectures in English, attention to signposting phrases (turning now to, the crucial point is), and the habit of listening for meaning rather than for matching words. The register that feels furthest from GT life is the one to schedule first.
The toolkit is shared; the GT emphasis is not.
Spend your discipline on the front half and your exposure on the back half.
The exercise generator
Bring your own video and subtitle file; the generator builds gap exercises around numbers, names, spellings and content words.
Everyday videos train the front half; a talk or lecture trains the back.
The one-mark economy
Forty marks convert to a band, and a spelling slip in Part 1 costs exactly what a missed inference in Part 4 costs.
Bands are indicative; the arithmetic is not.
The rest of your track
The letter guide, the letter papers and the GT Reading practice, with the Speaking page for this route.
Listening is one paper of four; keep the other three moving.
A second pair of ears
If the back half keeps beating you, a lesson diagnoses whether the problem is speed, register or vocabulary.
Volume you can get free; diagnosis is faster with a person.