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7.0 Band

Band 7.0 Sample — Describe a Piece of Technology You Find Useful

Speaking Part-2
Sample Answer
The thing that's probably made the biggest difference to my daily life is my noise-cancelling headphones — I bought them about a year ago and honestly I'm not sure how I managed before that. I use them almost every day, mostly when I'm working from a coffee shop or commuting on public transport. They work by using small microphones on the outside that pick up surrounding noise — like traffic or chatter — and then producing the opposite sound wave inside the headphone to cancel it out. So instead of just blocking sound with the cushioning, they actively remove it. It sounds a bit like magic the first time you try them. The main reason they're so useful for me is that I find it really hard to focus in noisy places. I'm easily distracted by background conversations, and before I bought these headphones I used to lose hours of work just because I couldn't concentrate. Now I can sit in almost any environment, switch them on, and immediately get into a kind of bubble where it's just me and what I'm working on. Apart from work, they're also great for travel. Long flights used to leave me exhausted because of the constant engine noise, but with these I arrive feeling fresh. I'd genuinely recommend them to anyone who works on a laptop or travels a lot.
Examiner Notes
Solid and accurate — the technical explanation of how noise cancellation works is well handled without sounding rehearsed. All four prompts are covered, and the travel bonus at the end is a natural addition rather than padding. What limits the score at Band 7 is vocabulary range: "kind of bubble" is the only genuinely idiomatic phrase, and the rest of the language, while correct, is fairly standard. The structure is also a bit mechanical — "the main reason", "apart from work" are functional connectors rather than natural ones. To push toward Band 8, vary the sentence openings and find more precise alternatives to phrases like "really hard to focus" and "leaves me exhausted".
Part 3 — Follow-up Questions & Sample Answers

The examiner will ask follow-up questions extending the topic into a broader discussion.

Q1 Would you say technology has made communication richer or shallower?
Q2 Are people too dependent on technology today?
Q3 Do older people benefit from modern technology?

Key Vocabulary

Hover any word to see how it is used in this answer.

noise-cancelling "The thing that's probably made the biggest difference to my daily life is my noise-cancelling headphones — I bought them about a year ago and honestly I'm not sure how I managed before that." pick up surrounding noise "They work by using small microphones on the outside that pick up surrounding noise — like traffic or chatter — and then producing the opposite sound wave inside the headphone to cancel it out." cancel it out "They work by using small microphones on the outside that pick up surrounding noise — like traffic or chatter — and then producing the opposite sound wave inside the headphone to cancel it out." kind of bubble "Now I can sit in almost any environment, switch them on, and immediately get into a kind of bubble where it's just me and what I'm working on." genuinely recommend "I'd genuinely recommend them to anyone who works on a laptop or travels a lot."

More Answers

9.0 Band
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8.5 Band
Speaking
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The goal I want to talk about is learning to swim properly as an adult — which I finally managed last year, at twenty-eight, after avoiding it for most of my life. My reasons for wanting it were mixed — some of it practical, some more personal. I'd always felt genuinely uncomfortable around water, at beach trips, hotel pools, anywhere like that. But the deeper thing was that I'd been carrying around a quiet sense of failure about it since I was a child. Most of my cousins learned to swim before they were ten, and somehow I'd missed that window and accepted that I just wouldn't be a swimmer. The process was slow, and I had to be deliberate about it. I signed up for adult beginner classes twice a week at a local pool — the instructor there was used to nervous adults, which helped. The first month was almost entirely about getting comfortable putting my face in the water, which sounds trivial but was genuinely hard. Then we moved to floating, kicking, and finally proper strokes. By month four I could swim a full length without panicking, and by month six I was doing laps. The way I felt afterwards was honestly disproportionate to the achievement. From the outside it's a fairly ordinary thing — millions of people can swim. But for me, it was the first time I'd taken something I'd genuinely been afraid of for two decades and just dismantled it methodically, week by week. What I took away from it had nothing to do with swimming, not really. It was more that the fears you've quietly accepted as just part of who you are — the ones you've stopped questioning — turn out to be a lot less permanent than you assumed.

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8.0 Band
Speaking
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About two years ago I was waiting for a visa for a study programme abroad — and it turned into one of the longer, more stressful waits of my life. I had submitted all the documents in early March and was told the outcome would come within six weeks. Six weeks came and went with no word. I followed up twice by email and got standard automated replies. By week ten I was genuinely anxious — I had already deferred my current job by two months, paid a non-refundable tuition deposit, and arranged accommodation. Everything depended on a decision that seemed to be completely out of my hands. What got me through it was keeping myself busy. I continued working part-time, used the extra time to improve my language skills, and made a point of not checking my inbox more than once a day, because I found that constantly refreshing it made the anxiety much worse. I also told myself that worrying about something I couldn't control was simply a poor use of energy, which sounds obvious but actually took real effort to believe. The decision eventually came through in week fourteen — approved. But what stayed with me wasn't the relief. It was more that I stopped believing patience is something you either have or you don't. You get through a long wait by staying busy — not by sitting with it and hoping you feel okay.

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