Interview Preparation

Start on time

Being called for a job interview is the second step towards an individual’s aspiration of getting a dream job. Preparing to face the interview panel with confidence and self belief is the first step. A lot of experienced people and freshers often make the mistake of interchanging the order of the first two steps. In today’s dynamic and volatile corporate environment we must always be well prepared to face an interview panel.

Importance of preparation

Failing to prepare for an interview is as good as preparing to fail in an interview. Preparations for an interview include learning to maintain a positive body language, researching about the company, practicing mock interviews. The quality of what and how a candidate speaks is more important than how much he/she speaks in an interview. After an unsuccessful interview a lot of individuals think that they spoke so much but still did not succeed. This happens majorly because in absence of preparation under professional supervision candidates tend to focus on quantity and not quality.

Everyone must prepare

Interview to a person seeking a job is just like an important competition to a professional sportsman. World’s best players who are masters of their respective sport practice relentlessly under the supervision of coaches before important competitions. Champions like Roger Federer, Usain Bolt and Cristiano Ronaldo spend hours of practice before a competition. So it is obviously very important for a job seeker to prepare for an interview with a professional trainer.

In a tough competitive environment it is imperative for individuals to be well prepared and stand out from the crowd. If you have the will to succeed in an interview Touchstone Educationals can show you the way to success. At Touchstone we cover every aspect of interview preparation leaving no stone unturned in assisting you to be ready.

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Speaking

The IELTS Speaking test assesses your pronunciation, grammar, accuracy, fluency and lexical resources while speaking English. There are three (3) parts to this test, with each part fulfilling a specific function in terms of task input, interaction pattern and the test taker’s output.

Part 1: Introduction & Interview This part includes general questions about the test taker like residence, work,family, interests, etc.

Part 2: Long Run Cue cards are shared on a particular topic and one (1) minute will be given to prepare to speak for upto two (2) minutes on the topic.

Part 3: Discussion This part gives you the opportunity to discuss the topic from the cue card in further detail, in a more general and abstract way

Total time: 11-14 minutes

Reading

The IELTS Reading test is designed to test a wide range of reading skills including reading for skimming, details, gist, understanding arguments and writer’s opinions,attitude and purpose

IELTS Academic Reading – It includes three (3) reading passages (with a variety of questions) ranging from descriptive and factual to discursive and analytical. These passages are of general interest dealing with interesting and recognizably appropriate issues, with at least one passage containing a detailed logical argument

Note: The reading texts may contain non-verbal materials as well like graphs, diagrams or illustrations.

IELTS General Reading – It includes three (3) daily passages (with 2-3 short texts in the first passage, 2 texts in the second passage and 1 long text in the third passage), based on an English-speaking environment, from notices, newspapers, magazines or advertisements.

Reading passage 1: texts based on social survival, like advertisements, notices and timetables

Reading passage 2: texts based on workplace survival, like contracts, job descriptions, staff development & training material

Reading passage 3: texts based on general reading, involving more extended prose and a complex structure.

No. of questions: 40

Marks: each question is worth one (1) mark

Total time: 60 minutes (no additional transfer time)

Note: Please note that the question types in the Listening & Reading sections can include multiple choice answers, true or false answers, matching information/headings or sentence, table & flow-chart completion.

Listening

The IELTS Listening test consists of four recordings (four parts) from native English speakers with ten (10) questions in each recording (part).

Recording 1: an everyday social conversation between two people

Recording 2: a monologue set in an everyday social context

Recording 3: an educational conversation with upto four people

Recording 4: a monologue on an academic subject

Listening test scores will be based on your ability to understand the main ideas,
factual information, opinions, attitude and purpose of the speaker and your ability
to follow the development of ideas.

No. of questions: 40 Marks:

Each question is worth one (1) mark

Total time:
Paper Based IELTS: 30 minutes (+10 minutes transfer time)

CD-IELTS: 30 minutes (+2 minutes review time)