Listening Section Three is the third part of the Listening test in the IELTS exam.
It usually features a conversation between two to four speakers in an academic or training context. This section is more difficult than Sections One and Two because the language is faster, ideas are more complex, and multiple speakers may interact.
What It Usually Contains
Listening Section Three commonly includes situations such as:
- Students discussing an assignment
- Tutor and student meeting
- Group project discussion
- Training course conversation
- University seminar planning
- Research task discussion
- Problem-solving meeting
Number of Questions
Section Three usually contains 10 questions as part of the total 40 Listening questions.
Answers generally follow the order of the recording.
What It Tests
This section checks your ability to understand:
- Opinions and attitudes
- Agreement and disagreement
- Academic discussion
- Reasons and explanations
- Specific details
- Speaker roles
- Multiple viewpoints
Common Question Types
You may see:
- Multiple Choice
- Matching Questions
- Sentence Completion
- Note Completion
- Table Completion
- Short Answer Questions
Example Situation
Two students discuss a presentation with their lecturer.
Possible answers:
- Topic choice
- Deadlines
- Problems in research
- Suggested improvements
- Presentation roles
Why It Matters
Section Three is important because it introduces higher-level listening skills needed for stronger band scores.
Candidates who do well here often perform better overall.
Common Problems Candidates Face
Multiple Speakers
It can be hard to track who says what.
Fast Exchanges
Speakers may interrupt or respond quickly.
Similar Opinions
Two people may sound similar but disagree subtly.
Academic Vocabulary
More formal language may appear.
Distractors
A speaker may suggest one idea, then reject it.
High-Scoring Strategies
Identify Speakers Early
Know how many people are talking.
Focus on Opinions
Listen for agreement, disagreement, concern, preference.
Follow Turn-Taking
Notice when speakers change.
Read Questions in Advance
Understand what information is needed.
Stay Calm During Fast Dialogue
Missing one line does not mean losing all answers.
Example Question Types
Multiple Choice
Why did the students change their topic?
Matching
Match each student with their responsibility.
Sentence Completion
The final report is due on ______
Common Vocabulary Themes
- Assignments
- Research
- Deadlines
- Feedback
- Scheduling
- Presentations
- Academic planning
Section Two vs Section Three
Section Two
- One speaker
- Public information talk
Section Three
- Multiple speakers
- Academic discussion
Section Three usually requires more concentration.
Quick Tips
- Listen for names and speaker introductions.
- Watch for contrast words like “however,” “but,” “actually.”
- Expect paraphrasing.
- Keep following the conversation flow.
Why Strong Candidates Perform Well Here
Top scorers quickly recognize speaker opinions, changing ideas, and discussion structure.