- Description
- Curriculum
- FAQ
- Notice
- Reviews
Many non-native speakers often struggle to understand English audios because spoken language is very different from written text. Native speakers tend to speak quickly, use connected speech, contractions, and slang, which makes words blend together and harder to recognize. Accents and pronunciation variations also add difficulty, since learners may have studied “textbook English” but not been exposed to diverse accents. Background noise, fast pace, and unfamiliar vocabulary further reduce comprehension. In short, listening requires not just knowing words but also training the ear to catch natural rhythm, intonation, and cultural references, which takes time and practice.
- Listen daily: short practice every day.
- Start with slow audios: easy pace builds confidence.
- Use subtitles: read while listening.
- Repeat listening: play the same audio again.
- Focus on accents: train ear for different styles.
- Learn common phrases: recognize patterns quickly.
- Shadow speaking: repeat after the speaker.
- Take notes: write key words you hear.
- Practice with short clips: avoid long, complex audios.
- Stay patient.
Course materials
OET Introduction
Starting Course
Part A
Part B
Part C
Answer Keys
Dictionary
FAQ 1
Faq Content 1
FAQ 2
Faq Content 2
Productivity Hacks to Get More Done in 2018
— 28 February 2017
- Facebook News Feed Eradicator (free chrome extension) Stay focused by removing your Facebook newsfeed and replacing it with an inspirational quote. Disable the tool anytime you want to see what friends are up to!
- Hide My Inbox (free chrome extension for Gmail) Stay focused by hiding your inbox. Click "show your inbox" at a scheduled time and batch processs everything one go.
- Habitica (free mobile + web app) Gamify your to do list. Treat your life like a game and earn gold goins for getting stuff done!
Please, login to leave a review