IELTS · Speaking Part 2: The Cue Card (Long Turn) · Tamil Nadu, India
Speaking Part 2: The Cue Card (Long Turn) for the IELTS Exam — Tamil Nadu candidates
10% of the IELTS test plan. Part 2 is a 1-2 minute monologue based on a cue card. Candidates have 1 minute to prepare. Coherence, range of vocabulary, and grammatical control determine the band score. Calibrated for Tamil candidates.
Most exam coaching covers the curriculum at the same depth across all topics. That misses the asymmetry of high-stakes testing: a few topics carry disproportionate weight on the score. Speaking Part 2: The Cue Card (Long Turn) sits at roughly 10% of the International English Language Testing System content distribution — Part 2 is the highest-leverage speaking task because it isolates the candidate's ability to speak at length. A strong Part 2 (with structured introduction, body, conclusion) can lift overall Speaking by 0.5 band. A weak Part 2 (lasting under 90 seconds, hesitating, repeating) caps overall Speaking at 6.0. Pass rates for the IELTS are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Tamil Nadu candidates preparing for IELTS, the calibration of study to local context matters: Tamil Nadu uses 7.5% NEET government-school reservation and runs separate state-quota counselling. JEE Main and GATE candidate volumes are second only to Maharashtra.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Speaking less than 90 seconds — Part 2 must run a full minute minimum
- !Reading the cue card verbatim instead of using it as a prompt
- !Memorizing template answers — examiners detect and downgrade for unnatural delivery
- !Not using the 1-minute preparation effectively (writing single keywords is allowed and recommended)
Study tips
- 1Use the 1-minute prep to outline 4 buckets: introduction, two body points, conclusion. Write 1–2 keywords per bucket.
- 2Practice the "P-E-E" structure for each body point: Point, Example, Explanation. Examples lift band scores significantly.
- 3Develop 5 generic story templates (childhood memory, achievement, person, place, object) you can adapt to most cue cards.
- 4Record yourself, listen back, and count fillers (um, uh, like) — band 7 candidates use under 5 fillers per 2 minutes.
- 5NEET-UG is offered in Tamil (தமிழ்) at all TN centres. Many state-board students prefer Tamil-medium for biology questions but English-medium for physics and chemistry — you must choose one medium for the entire paper.
- 6For TN MBBS admission: register on TN Health website for the 7.5% government-school reservation if eligible — separate from MCC counselling.
- 7GATE Chennai and Coimbatore centres fill fastest; submit your GATE application within 72 hours of opening to secure your preferred centre.
Sample IELTS Speaking Part 2: The Cue Card (Long Turn) questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real IELTS questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
A cue card asks: "Describe a memorable journey you have taken. You should say where you went, who you went with, what you did, and why it was memorable." A Band-7 candidate would typically structure their response by:
- AListing each point briefly without elaboration
- BReading the card verbatim
- CIntroducing the journey, expanding each cue point with examples and reflection, and concluding with personal significanceCorrect
- DTalking only about the destination
Why this answer?
Band 7+ Part 2 responses follow a structured introduction-body-conclusion pattern. Each cue card bullet is expanded with specific details, sensory description, and personal reflection. The conclusion briefly explains why the experience matters to the speaker.
Frequently asked questions
Is the examiner allowed to interrupt me during Part 2?
What is the IELTS pass rate for Tamil candidates?
How long should Tamil candidates study Speaking Part 2: The Cue Card (Long Turn) for the IELTS?
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