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Cue Card Prompt

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A Cue Card Prompt refers to the task card topic and guiding questions given in Speaking Part Two of the IELTS exam.

The cue card tells the candidate what topic to speak about and provides bullet points to help structure a response.

It is the basis of the Two Minute Talk.

Where It Appears

Cue Card Prompts are used in:

  • Speaking Part Two

They are given after the examiner finishes Speaking Part One.

What a Cue Card Prompt Includes

A typical cue card contains:

Main Topic

What you need to describe, explain, or discuss.

Bullet Points

3 to 4 prompts guiding your answer.

Final Instruction

Usually asks why it was important, memorable, useful, enjoyable, etc.

Example Cue Card Prompt

Describe a person who has helped you.

You should say:

  • who the person is
  • how you know them
  • what they helped you with

and explain why their help was important to you.

Common Cue Card Prompt Topics

You may be asked to describe:

People

  • Friend
  • Teacher
  • Family member
  • Leader

Places

  • City
  • Park
  • Restaurant
  • Country

Objects

  • Book
  • Gift
  • Technology item

Experiences

  • Journey
  • Celebration
  • Competition
  • Skill you learned

Activities

  • Hobby
  • Sport
  • Volunteer work

What You Must Do

When given the cue card prompt, you should:

  • Understand the topic quickly
  • Use the bullet points as a guide
  • Plan ideas during one minute preparation
  • Speak for up to two minutes

Why It Matters

A good response to the cue card prompt helps show:

  • Fluency
  • Coherence
  • Vocabulary range
  • Grammar control
  • Pronunciation

This section strongly influences your Speaking score.

High-Scoring Strategy

Focus on the Main Topic First

Choose a clear example quickly.

Use Every Bullet Point

They help you stay organized.

Add Extra Detail

Do not stop after answering only prompts.

Include Feelings or Opinions

This enriches your response.

Keep Speaking Naturally

Do not memorize.

Example Quick Plan

Prompt: Describe a useful skill you learned.

Notes:

  • cooking
  • learned from mother
  • age 16
  • saves money
  • enjoyable

This is enough to begin speaking.

Common Problems Candidates Face

Choosing Complicated Ideas

Simple examples are often better.

Ignoring Bullet Points

Can create weak structure.

Finishing Too Early

Need more development.

Trying to Be Perfect

Natural speaking is better than forced complexity.

Useful Language for Cue Cards

  • I’d like to talk about…
  • One thing I remember is…
  • What made it special was…
  • Another point worth mentioning is…
  • Overall, it was memorable because…

Quick Tips

  • You may use real or realistic examples.
  • Notes should be keywords only.
  • If topic feels unfamiliar, adapt it simply.
  • Stay calm and organized.

Why Strong Candidates Perform Well

Top scorers understand that the cue card is a guide, not a trap. They use it to build a clear, confident two-minute answer.

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