Strategy Guide For The OET Reading Test - Part A: Get A Very Quick Overview of The 4 Texts (Max 20 Seconds)
Strategy Guide For The OET Reading Test - Part A: Get A Very Quick Overview of The 4 Texts (Max 20 Seconds)
Strategy Guide For The OET Reading Test - Part A: Get A Very Quick Overview of The 4 Texts (Max 20 Seconds)
Strategy Guide for the OET Reading Test - Part A
This
method
is
foolproof,
provided
that
you
have
enough
experience
reading
in
English.
Following
this
guide
effectively
requires
mental
discipline
and
focus.
You
will
need
to
monitor
your
own
mental
processes
and
make
sure
you
are
performing
these
steps
without
any
other
steps
in
between.
If
you
are
unsure,
one
of
our
tutors
can
help.
Now
you
have
found
a
word/phrase
in
the
text
that
either
matches
one
of
your
guesses,
or
is
the
same
grammatical
word
type
that
you
expected.
Eliminate
the
actual
answer
word
from
the
sentence
in
the
text.
Then
eliminate
all
of
the
other
concepts
in
the
text
that
have
equals
in
the
summary
sentence,
to
make
sure
that
both
have
the
same
overall
meaning.
The
words
will
not
usually
be
identical.
Often
the
sentences
in
the
summary
will
use
synonyms
of
the
words
in
the
text.
That’s
why
it’s
important
to
not
search
the
text
for
specific
words
in
the
summary,
unless
you
are
sure
that
they
will
appear
in
the
text,
like
names
or
numbers.
In
the
actual
exam,
this
“elimination”
of
the
concepts
to
achieve
a
balanced
equasion
should
be
done
mentally.
But
as
a
practice
exercise,
try
actually
crossing
out
the
words
that
match
in
meaning.
Try
it
with
this
example
below:
Summary:
60% of the world’s older people live in low to middle income countries, and this
will increase to (12) … by (13) …. .
Text:
Of the 35 million deaths in 2005 from NCDs, 80% will have been in low and
middle-income countries. This is partly because most of the world's older people
live in these regions - 60% now rising to 80% by 2050.
Conclusion
If
you
worked
through
this
process
slowly
and
carefully,
with
no
extra
steps
in
between,
you
would
be
able
to
complete
a
Part
A
containing
30
questions
in
10
minutes
and
30
seconds,
leaving
4
minutes
and
60
seconds
of
spare
time,
which
you
could
use
to
check
your
answers.
Overview
of
the
texts
=
20
seconds
Answering
each
question
=
20
seconds
x
30
=
600
seconds
Total
time
taken:
620
seconds
Time
remaining
to
complete
Part
A:
280
seconds
(4
minutes
and
60
seconds)
You
may
also
be
interested
to
know
that
I
tried
one
of
the
official
OET
Reading
Part
As
and
completed
it
in
4
minutes.
My
score
was
24
out
of
25.
So
if
there
are
less
than
30
questions,
and
if
you
are
particularly
experienced
in
English
and
Reading
exams,
you
may
be
able
to
complete
it
in
less
than
10
minutes.
Anxiety
is
the
biggest
problem
that
causes
candidates
to
forget
the
process
and
repeat
steps
without
thinking.
If
you
are
anxious,
you
will
want
to
work
faster,
and
this
will
slow
down
your
results.
Some
signs
of
anxiety
include
rereading
the
same
part
of
the
text
more
than
once,
or
repeatedly
flipping
from
the
summary
to
the
text
for
one
answer.
You
may
notice,
like
many
candidates
who
have
asked
us
for
help,
that
simply
making
your
own
guesses
before
searching
in
the
text
is
enough
to
double
your
speed
and
accuracy.
If
you
find
it
hard
to
understand
or
use
this
process,
just
book
a
Reading
Strategy
Lesson
with
one
of
our
tutors.
It
would
be
our
pleasure
to
make
this
work
for
you.
John
O’Loughlin
Principal,
Online
English
Tutors