KET · Listening — Short Recordings · Nigeria
Listening — Short Recordings for the KET Exam — Nigerian candidates
10% of the KET test plan. Understanding short conversations, monologues, and announcements in everyday A2 settings. Calibrated for Nigerian candidates.
High-stakes exams reward two skills equally: knowledge and test-craft. This page focuses on both for one of the most failure-prone areas. Listening — Short Recordings sits at roughly 10% of the Cambridge Key English Test (A2) content distribution — A2 Key Listening tests understanding of short recordings (dialogs, monologues, announcements) on everyday topics. Candidates answer multiple-choice or matching questions. Listening is played twice for most parts, giving candidates a second chance to confirm answers. Pass rates for the KET are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Nigerian candidates preparing for KET, the calibration of study to local context matters: Nigeria has West Africa's largest exam-prep market. WAEC, JAMB, and NECO are the high-stakes national tests; IELTS and PTE are dominant migration credentials.
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.
- !Writing down what they hear literally instead of identifying the answer to the specific question asked
- !Missing the answer on the first playing and panicking instead of listening calmly on the second playing
- !Not reading the question and options before the audio begins
Study tips
- 1Read the questions and options before each audio begins — know what you are listening for.
- 2Practice distinguishing similar-sounding words: fifteen/fifty, live/leave, ship/sheep.
- 3Listen to BBC Learning English Elementary and A2-level English podcasts for exposure to natural speech.
- 4In Nigeria, internet stability during KET computer-based testing varies by centre — booking centres in Lagos, Abuja, or Port Harcourt typically delivers the best test-day experience.
Sample KET Listening — Short Recordings questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real KET questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
You hear: "The train to Brighton leaves from platform 4 at 10:15, not 10:30 as shown on the board." When does the train leave?
- A10:00
- B10:15Correct
- C10:30
- DPlatform 4
Why this answer?
The announcement explicitly corrects the departure time from 10:30 to 10:15. The question tests whether the candidate caught the correction. "Platform 4" is location, not time.
Frequently asked questions
How many times are the recordings played in A2 Key Listening?
What is the KET pass rate for Nigerian candidates?
How long should Nigerian candidates study Listening — Short Recordings for the KET?
Practice Cambridge KET (A2) free with Koydo.
Reading & Writing, Listening, and Speaking practice tasks.
Related study guides
- Reading & Vocabulary for KET (Nigeria)Another KET topic for Nigerian candidates
- Grammar Basics for KET (Nigeria)Another KET topic for Nigerian candidates
- Speaking — Interaction & Personal Information for KET (Nigeria)Another KET topic for Nigerian candidates
- Writing — Notes & Short Messages for KET (Nigeria)Another KET topic for Nigerian candidates
- Everyday Vocabulary for KET (Nigeria)Another KET topic for Nigerian candidates
- Listening — Short Recordings for KET — U.S. candidatesSame Listening — Short Recordings topic, different locale framing
- Listening — Short Recordings for KET — U.K. candidatesSame Listening — Short Recordings topic, different locale framing
- Listening — Short Recordings for KET — Indian candidatesSame Listening — Short Recordings topic, different locale framing