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Yes No Not Given

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Yes No Not Given is a common question type in the Reading section of the IELTS exam.

Candidates read statements and decide whether they match the writer’s views, claims, or opinions in the passage.

The three possible answers are:

  • Yes – the writer agrees with the statement
  • No – the writer disagrees with the statement
  • Not Given – the writer’s opinion is not clearly stated

This question type focuses on opinions rather than simple facts.

Where It Appears

Yes No Not Given questions may appear in:

  • IELTS Academic Reading
  • IELTS General Training Reading

They are especially common in opinion-based or argumentative passages.

What It Tests

This task checks your ability to:

  • Recognize writer opinions
  • Understand attitude and stance
  • Identify paraphrasing
  • Distinguish disagreement from missing opinion
  • Read carefully for implied meaning

Meaning of Each Answer

Yes

The writer agrees with the statement.

Example

Passage: Online learning can be highly effective when well designed.
Statement: The writer believes online learning can work well.

Answer: Yes

No

The writer disagrees with the statement.

Example

Passage: Advertising rarely changes long-term consumer habits.
Statement: The writer thinks advertising strongly changes long-term habits.

Answer: No

Not Given

The writer does not clearly express that opinion.

Example

Passage: Public transport use has increased this year.
Statement: The writer believes public transport should be free.

Answer: Not Given

(No clear opinion about making it free.)

Difference from True False Not Given

True / False / Not Given

Usually about facts or information.

Yes / No / Not Given

Usually about opinions or views.

Why It Is Difficult

Many candidates mistake facts in the passage for the writer’s opinion.

You must ask:

Does the writer actually agree or disagree?

High-Scoring Strategy

Identify Opinion Language

Look for phrases such as:

  • I believe
  • it is clear that
  • should
  • must
  • seems likely
  • in my view

Find Relevant Section

Locate where the idea is discussed.

Compare Meaning

Use meaning, not matching words.

If No Clear Opinion

Choose Not Given.

Common Mistakes Candidates Make

Treating Facts as Opinions

Statistics alone may not show writer belief.

Confusing No and Not Given

No = opposite opinion stated.
Not Given = no clear view stated.

Using Personal Logic

Only the passage matters.

Missing Paraphrases

Different wording may express same opinion.

Example Mini Practice

Passage

The author argues that children should spend more time outdoors because physical activity improves concentration.

Statement 1

The writer believes outdoor time benefits children.

Answer: Yes

Statement 2

The writer thinks children should spend less time exercising.

Answer: No

Statement 3

The writer believes schools should shorten lunch breaks.

Answer: Not Given

Useful Language Signals

Watch for:

  • should / should not
  • beneficial / harmful
  • necessary / unnecessary
  • effective / ineffective
  • preferable / undesirable

Quick Tips

  • Yes = writer agrees
  • No = writer disagrees
  • Not Given = no clear opinion
  • Focus on writer stance, not facts alone

Why Strong Candidates Perform Well

Top scorers separate facts from opinions and look carefully for the writer’s real position.

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