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IELTS: IELTS Speaking Section Structure Scoring
Managing Mistakes While Speaking

Speaking is extemporaneous, unlike writing where you can go back and make corrections, so you must prepare your statements in your mind and be comfortable with them well before speaking. So you must practice speaking aloud to yourself until you are fluent in any topics that might come up in conversations with others.

Managing Mistakes While Speaking

The 12 Mistakes of Public Speaking

Public Speaking Mistake #1 Lack of Preparation

Too many presenters don’t spend enough time preparing.That means hours of strategizing, structuring the message, planning and editing the visuals, and practicing and timing the delivery until it’s seamless and natural.

Public Speaking Mistake #2 Lateness

Arriving 10 minutes before the presentation means you’re late.

Public Speaking Mistake #3 Not Knowing the Audience

The more you know about the audience, the greater chance to rock the crowd.

Public Speaking Mistake #4 Projecting the Wrong Image

Your presentation begins the moment you enter the room and first impressions are visual.

Public Speaking Mistake # 5 Using Visual Aids Ineffectively

Slides are overused in public speaking today. but they serve a purpose. The keyword in Visual Aid is Aid. Don’t let the slides overtake you like so many speakers tend to do.

ublic Speaking Mistake #6 Including Too Much Material

Public speakers who give too much information will overwhelm the audience.

Public Speaking Mistake #7 Using Inappropriate Humor

Humor can be a landmine in a politically correct and multicultural environment.

Public Speaking Mistake #8 Speaking in a Monotone

Use more hand gestures. Highlight keywords and emphasize them with your voice.

Public Speaking Mistake #9 Not Building an Audience Relationship

When you profile your audience you’ll be able to build in stories that resonate with them.

Public Speaking Mistake #10 Lack of Focus

If you’ve ever heard a speaker who was talking in circles and wondering where he was going, you can bet he wasn’t clear either. That’s because there was a lack of focus.

Public Speaking Mistake #11 Starting with Details

Public speakers who dive into details at the start of the presentation are doing a data dump. This will confuse the listener because they won’t have a context.

Public Speaking Mistake #12 Being Speaker-Centered.

The best public speakers are listener-centered. They begin with the self-interests of the audience. Find a hook, grabber, or benefit statement to begin the presentation. Then show understanding of their needs and issues. Finally, introduce your idea which will solve their problem. You’ll have an attentive audience and you’ll be a lot more persuasive.

5 reasons why mistakes shouldn’t stop you from speaking English

1. Everyone Makes Mistakes

Yes, everyone – even native speakers make mistakes. So, shouldn’t it be completely normal that it happens when you are speaking in a foreign language too?

2. You’re not Being rated on your Grammar

Don’t get too focused on avoiding mistakes. Focus on being understood!

3. Even the wrong word can work

You’re reaching for a specific word, an exact term or industry-specific jargon but you can’t recall it, no matter how you try. The awkward pause in the conversation is getting longer, and you know it would be easier to say it in your own language.

4. Everyone has an accent– for some, It’s simply more pronounced

But sometimes you encounter people who speak English with such a heavy accent that if feels like an entirely different language.

Remember, a master has failed far more times than a novice has even tried!

5. Good Discussions foster confidence

The key to becoming more fluent in spoken English is to get those good discussions under your belt to bolster your confidence. The more you use English (or any foreign language, for that matter), the easier it becomes.

The key to becoming more fluent in spoken English is to get those good discussions under your belt to bolster your confidence. The more you use English (or any foreign language, for that matter), the easier it becomes.

However, if you don’t have a readily available conversation partner, or you don’t want to jump in at the deep end right away, you can get an excellent head start on improving your English skills with our language coaching services.

How Successful People Recover After Making a Mistake

Your mouth is dry, your stomach is in knots, your palms are clammy, and you suddenly feel short of breath. Why? You just had the gut-wrenching realization that you've made a major mistake.

We've all been there. And, while that moment of sheer panic is likely enough to inspire you to cower under your desk, you already know that's not your best course of action.

Instead, follow these five steps to bounce back even better than before:

1. Own It

After you've made a slip-up, the worst thing you can do is attempt to sweep it under the rug and cross your fingers that nobody notices. Respectable, ethical people instead own up to their mistakes--immediately.

Accept fault right away, and don't attempt to make futile excuses or drag other people down with you. Any attempts to save face will only make your ownership seem halfhearted, forced, and disingenuous.

2. Apologize

Nobody operates in a vacuum. So, it's likely that your blunder had an impact on someone else--whether that's an employee, colleague, supervisor, client, or even friend.

Owning your mistake is one thing. But, it's really only half the equation. When your misstep had negative consequences for the people around you, you also need to apologize. No, a flippant, "Whoops, sorry!" comment in passing doesn't cut it. You need to be genuine and sincere.

Yes, everybody makes mistakes. But, that doesn't mean we don't need to apologize to them.

3. Accept Consequences

When you've made your apologies to the others involved, your next step is to see what you need to do in order to patch things up and remedy your error. While your mistake might have impacted numerous other people, it's still up to you to shoulder the majority of the fallout.

That might mean some late nights in the office or a lot of extra work on your plate. But, apologizing without accepting your own consequences is pointless--and even a little condescending.

4. Learn From It

Now that you've done damage control, it's time to focus on how you can use this experience to improve.

Take a magnifying glass to your slip up and determine where things went wrong. Were you working too fast? Did you neglect to check in with other members of your team? Were you just being lazy?

Get specific with what exactly caused your error, and then develop a plan for how you'll avoid committing the same oversight in the future. Stick a post-it note on your computer monitor if you have to!

After all, making a mistake once is understandable. But, doing so repeatedly? Not so much.

5. Let It Go

The final step of recovering from your goof-up? Letting it go and moving on.

Yes, this can be easier said than done. However, continuing to obsess over your failures and shortcomings won't do you any favors. In fact, it'll likely just distract you from being productive everywhere else.

So, when you've done what you needed to in order to smooth things over, take a deep breath and move on with a clear head.

Nobody likes that "stomach in your shoes" feeling when you know you've just made a major mistake. But, it's not what you did that matters most--it's how you bounce back from it.

Use these five steps, and you'll not only recover from your slip-up, but learn from it as well.

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