LanguageCert Academic Listening Part 1: Dialogue Completion | Complete Guide
What is Dialogue Completion? Dialogue Completion is Part 1 of the LanguageCert Academic Listening test. In …
Group Discussion is Part 4 of the LanguageCert Academic Listening test. In this task, you listen to a discussion or debate involving multiple speakers (typically 3-4) who share different perspectives on a topic. You then answer questions about the speakers’ views, arguments, and interactions.
This task simulates participating in or observing an academic seminar, panel discussion, or debate. It tests your ability to follow multiple voices, distinguish between different viewpoints, and understand how speakers interact with each other’s arguments.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Part Number | Part 4 of 4 |
| Number of Questions | 6 questions |
| Number of Speakers | Typically 3-4 speakers |
| Audio Type | Group discussion or debate |
| Audio Length | Approximately 4-5 minutes |
| Question Format | Multiple choice and matching |
| Audio Plays | Once only |
| Skills Tested | Identifying speakers’ views, understanding arguments, tracking agreement/disagreement |
At the start of the discussion, speakers are usually introduced. Quickly note:
This framework helps you attribute opinions correctly throughout.
Pay close attention to how speakers respond to each other:
| Markers of Agreement | Markers of Disagreement |
|---|---|
| “I agree with…” | “I disagree…” |
| “That’s a good point…” | “I’m not sure about that…” |
| “Exactly…” | “But on the other hand…” |
| “Building on what X said…” | “I see it differently…” |
| “I think you’re right…” | “That’s not quite accurate…” |
Speakers signal their personal views with specific language:
For each speaker, capture:
Discussions move through subtopics. Notice when the conversation shifts:
Strategy: Match the opinion to the specific speaker who expressed it.
Strategy: Track interactions between speakers throughout the discussion.
Strategy: Create a clear system in your notes to track who says what.
Strategy: Listen not just to what is said, but how it’s said—tone matters.
Strategy: Note specific examples and evidence mentioned by each speaker.
Group Discussion questions test sophisticated listening skills. Scoring factors include:
All 6 questions contribute to your Listening score. There is no penalty for incorrect answers.
Listen to panel discussions and podcasts with multiple speakers. BBC Radio 4, NPR, and academic podcasts often feature multi-speaker formats perfect for practice.
Practice speaker tracking by listening to discussions and writing down who said what. Check your accuracy against transcripts if available.
Focus on disagreements during practice—these are frequently tested. Note exactly where speakers differ and why.
Expand your topic awareness by following current affairs and academic discussions. Familiarity with common debate topics helps you follow arguments more easily.
Practice with transcripts first, then without. Initially, read along while listening to train your ear for multiple voices, then progress to listening-only practice.
Discuss topics yourself with study partners. Experiencing discussions from the inside helps you understand how speakers build and counter arguments.
The most common error is attributing an opinion to the wrong speaker. Use consistent notation in your notes (A, B, C or names) and verify who is speaking before noting their view.
In natural discussion, speakers interrupt or respond quickly. Train yourself to notice voice changes and not assume the same person is still speaking.
Not every discussion is a debate. Sometimes speakers agree on fundamentals and only differ on details. Listen for nuance rather than assuming opposition.
Speaker tone and attitude matter as much as their words. Someone might say “That’s an interesting point” sarcastically (disagreeing) or genuinely (agreeing). Context and tone are crucial.
If you lose track of a complex argument, note the speaker and their general position (for/against/neutral on X) rather than trying to capture every detail. This gives you a foundation for answering questions.
Before the audio starts, prepare a simple grid:
| Speaker | Position | Key Arguments | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| A: (name) | |||
| B: (name) | |||
| C: (name) |
Use symbols to show relationships between speakers:
Sometimes knowing who spoke first or who responded helps answer questions:
Topic: Climate policy
A: For carbon tax (economic efficiency)
B: Against → unfair to lower income ≠ A
C: Compromise → gradual implementation = B's concern + A's goal
Use emphasis markers for strongly held views:
Group Discussion is the most complex listening task, requiring you to track multiple speakers while understanding their arguments and interactions. Our practice platform provides:
Practice following group discussions and build the advanced listening skills needed for LanguageCert Academic Part 4.
Train your listening skills with our comprehensive practice materials.