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TOEFL Speaking: Strategies and Templates to Score 24+

TOEFL Speaking: Strategies and Templates to Score 24+
TOEFL Speaking Guide

TOEFL Speaking: Strategies and Templates to Score 24+

The Speaking section is the most anxiety-inducing part of the TOEFL - but it is also the most templatable. Learn exactly what the 4 tasks require, how raters score you, and the structures that turn 45 seconds of prep into a confident, scorable response.

Updated: April 2026 Reading time: 11 min Section score: 0-30
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Student practising TOEFL speaking skills

TOEFL Speaking lasts 16 minutes and contains 4 tasks. One is independent (your opinion, your experience), and three are integrated (you read and/or listen before speaking). All responses are recorded and rated by at least one human rater plus ETS's automated scoring system.

The biggest mistake test-takers make is treating Speaking like a conversation test. It is not. It is a structured performance test with specific rubric criteria. Understanding what raters look for - and practising the right templates - is the fastest route to a higher score.

Speaking Section at a Glance

4 tasks total - 16 minutes. Tasks scored 0-4 each, converted to 0-30 section score. Scored by human rater + AI (SpeechRater). Three rating criteria: Delivery, Language Use, Topic Development.

1. The 4 TOEFL Speaking Tasks Explained

1
Independent Speaking - Your Opinion
Prep time: 15 seconds Response time: 45 seconds Type: Independent

You are given a question asking for your personal preference, opinion, or recommendation on a familiar topic. No reading or listening involved - just your own ideas.

Example prompt: "Some people prefer to live in the city. Others prefer to live in a rural area. Which do you prefer and why? Use specific reasons and examples to support your answer."

Template:

I prefer [option] for two main reasons. First, [Reason 1]. For example, [specific example or detail]. Second, [Reason 2]. In my own experience, [personal detail or example]. For these reasons, I strongly believe that [restate your position].
Key Tip

Pick the option that gives you more to say, not the one you genuinely believe. You have 45 seconds - choose the position with two clear, easy-to-explain reasons and stick to it.

2
Integrated - Campus Announcement (Read + Listen + Speak)
Read: 45 seconds Listen: ~60-90 sec Prep time: 30 seconds Response time: 60 seconds

You read a short campus announcement (a new policy, facility change, or programme update), then listen to two students discussing it. One student has a strong opinion (usually positive or negative). You summarise the announcement and explain the speaker's reaction and reasons.

Template:

The university has announced that [summarise announcement in 1-2 sentences]. The [man/woman] in the conversation [agrees/disagrees] with this change. First, [he/she] says that [Reason 1 from the listening]. Additionally, [he/she] points out that [Reason 2 from the listening]. For these reasons, [he/she] thinks the announcement is [positive/negative].
Common Mistake

Do NOT give your own opinion in Task 2. Your job is to summarise what the speaker said. If you add "I think..." you are wasting time and ignoring the task instructions, which lowers your score.

3
Integrated - Academic Reading + Lecture (Read + Listen + Speak)
Read: 45 seconds Listen: ~60-90 sec Prep time: 30 seconds Response time: 60 seconds

You read a short academic passage introducing a concept or term. Then a professor gives a lecture with one or two specific examples illustrating that concept. You explain the concept using the professor's examples.

Template:

According to the reading, [concept name] refers to [brief definition]. The professor illustrates this with [an/two] example[s]. First, [he/she] describes [Example 1] to show how [connect to concept]. [He/She] also explains [Example 2], which demonstrates [connect to concept]. Together, these examples show that [concept name] occurs when [restate key idea].
4
Integrated - Academic Lecture Only (Listen + Speak)
Listen: ~90-120 sec Prep time: 20 seconds Response time: 60 seconds

You listen to a short academic lecture (no reading). The professor explains a concept and provides 2 supporting points, examples, or stages. You summarise the lecture.

Template:

In the lecture, the professor discusses [topic/concept]. [He/She] explains that [main point from lecture]. The professor makes two key points. First, [Point 1 with specific detail]. Second, [Point 2 with specific detail]. [He/She] concludes that [main takeaway if applicable].
Note-Taking in Task 4

Task 4 is note-taking intensive because there is no reading to fall back on. Write down the lecture topic (usually stated in the first sentence), the two main points or examples, and any specific numbers, names, or terms the professor emphasises. These are the details that separate a 3 response from a 4.

2. How TOEFL Speaking Is Scored

Each response is scored 0-4 on three criteria. Understanding these criteria is essential for targeted improvement.

Criterion What Raters Assess Weight
Delivery Pronunciation clarity, speech rate (not too fast/slow), natural rhythm, absence of long pauses or fillers ~33%
Language Use Grammar accuracy, vocabulary range and precision, sentence variety (not just simple sentences) ~33%
Topic Development Task completion, logical structure, sufficient detail and elaboration, coherence and cohesion ~33%

Score Descriptors

Score (per task) Section Score Equivalent Description
4 26-30 Fully addresses the task, easy to understand, effective language use throughout
3 20-25 Generally addresses the task with some lapses in fluency, vocabulary, or completeness
2 14-19 Limited response: task partially addressed, frequent errors or difficult to understand
1 0-13 Minimal response, largely incomprehensible or off-task
0 0 No response or completely unrelated to the task
The Fastest Way to Move from 3 to 4

Most test-takers plateau at score 3 because they address the task but lack detail and cohesive language. To move to 4: use transition phrases (Furthermore, In contrast, This illustrates that...), include at least one specific detail per point, and eliminate long pauses. Recording yourself and listening back is the single most effective practice technique.

3. Delivery: Pronunciation and Pace

Delivery is the most immediately noticeable criterion. Raters hear hundreds of responses - a clear, appropriately-paced response stands out immediately.

Pace

Most non-native speakers make one of two pace mistakes: speaking too fast (running words together, dropping word endings) or speaking too slowly (excessive pausing, losing the thread). Aim for a natural conversational pace - roughly 130-150 words per minute for a timed response.

  • Record a 45-second response and count your words. A score-4 response typically contains 90-120 words for Task 1, 110-140 for Tasks 2-4.
  • Pause at punctuation points (after sentences, before new points) rather than mid-sentence.
  • Avoid filler sounds (uh, um, er). Replace with a brief pause - silence is better than filler.

Pronunciation Priorities

You do not need a native-sounding accent. You need to be clearly understood. Focus on these three elements:

  • Word stress: English words have one stressed syllable. PRE-sent (noun) vs pre-SENT (verb). Record yourself saying content words and check stress against a dictionary.
  • Final consonants: French and Arabic speakers frequently drop final consonants. "Wan'" instead of "want", "nex'" instead of "next." Practise finishing words completely.
  • Vowel distinctions: ship/sheep, full/fool, bed/bad. These matter more than accent.
🎧

Practice resource: TOEFL Listening Guide - listening to academic English daily improves your own spoken output. The patterns you absorb become the patterns you produce.

4. Language Use: Grammar and Vocabulary

You do not need perfect grammar to score 4 - you need consistent, accurate grammar at an appropriate level. Raters notice patterns: if you make the same error repeatedly, it suggests a systemic gap rather than a slip.

Grammar Targets for Speaking

  • Use a mix of simple and complex sentences. "The professor says that..." should sometimes become "According to the professor, who explains that..."
  • Use the correct tense consistently. Present tense for general concepts; past tense when summarising the reading or listening.
  • Subject-verb agreement: "The students argue..." not "The students argues..."
  • Article use (a/an/the): A rule of thumb - use "the" when referring back to something already mentioned, "a/an" for first mention.

Vocabulary for Academic Speaking

Higher-band vocabulary signals academic readiness. Practise replacing everyday words with more precise alternatives:

Everyday Word Academic Alternative Context
says argues, contends, maintains, explains Reporting what was said
shows demonstrates, illustrates, reveals Evidence and examples
good beneficial, effective, advantageous Evaluating options
bad problematic, detrimental, counterproductive Evaluating options
because since, given that, due to the fact that Giving reasons
also furthermore, in addition, moreover Adding points

5. The 5 Most Common TOEFL Speaking Mistakes

  • Going silent during prep time. Those 15-30 seconds are for outlining, not panicking. Write 3-5 key words (not full sentences) immediately when prep begins.
  • Running out of time. Know your template. If you are mid-point when 10 seconds remain, stop and deliver your conclusion. An unfinished response is penalised; a shorter clean response is not.
  • Summarising only without analysing. For Tasks 3 and 4, you need to connect the example back to the concept. Don't just say what happened - say why the professor uses it.
  • Repeating the question back as the opening. "The question asks me whether I prefer..." wastes 5-8 seconds. Start directly with your position or the topic.
  • Over-memorised responses. ETS raters are trained to spot memorised templates. Use templates as structure, not as word-for-word scripts. Your specific content should always be generated on the spot.

6. Daily Practice Plan (4 Weeks)

Week Focus Daily Activities
Week 1 Task 1 fluency Record 2 x Task 1 responses per day. Listen back. Note pace, fillers, vocabulary range. Repeat with corrections.
Week 2 Tasks 2-3 integration Practice note-taking from announcements and lectures. Write 3-5 bullet notes per listening. Build template responses from notes.
Week 3 Task 4 + vocabulary Daily Task 4 lecture notes. Focus on academic vocabulary substitution (replace "says" with "argues" etc.) in all responses.
Week 4 Full section simulation Complete full Speaking section (all 4 tasks, timed) 3 times this week. Listen back, compare against rubric, target weak criterion.
📝

Read also: TOEFL Practice Tests - ETS's free practice materials include scored Speaking responses with rater commentary. This is the gold standard for understanding what 4-level responses sound like.

7. Speaking Preparation with Direct English Live

The core challenge of TOEFL Speaking is that it requires both linguistic accuracy and real-time task management under time pressure. Live sessions with qualified teachers give you something no app or recording tool can: immediate, specific feedback on exactly what is lowering your score.

DE Live teachers are familiar with the TOEFL Speaking rubric and can identify whether your score is being pulled down by Delivery, Language Use, or Topic Development - and target your practice accordingly. Students from Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Egypt who train for Speaking with live teacher feedback consistently outperform self-study approaches in Delivery and Language Use scoring.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Each Speaking response is rated by at least one certified human rater plus ETS's AI scoring system (SpeechRater). Scores are given on a scale of 0-4 per task and then converted to a section score of 0-30. Raters assess three areas: Delivery (pronunciation, pace, fluency), Language Use (grammar, vocabulary range), and Topic Development (content, coherence, task completion).
A score of 24-30 is considered 'Good' to 'Advanced' and meets the requirements of most universities. A score of 20-23 is 'Fair' and may satisfy minimum requirements but is below competitive threshold. Scores below 20 may require intensive speaking preparation. Many graduate programmes, especially for teaching assistants, require a minimum of 23-26 in Speaking specifically.
Task 1 (Independent): 15 seconds to prepare, 45 seconds to respond. Tasks 2, 3, 4 (Integrated): After reading and/or listening, you get 30 seconds to prepare and 60 seconds to respond. These time limits are strict and non-negotiable, so practising within these exact time constraints is essential.
Yes. TOEFL raters are trained to understand a wide range of accents. Your score is not penalised for having a North African, French-influenced, or any other accent. What matters is whether your speech is clear and easy to understand - not whether you sound American or British. Focus on clear articulation, appropriate pace, and correct word stress rather than eliminating your accent.
The recording stops automatically when time is up. An incomplete response receives a lower score because task completion is part of the rubric. To avoid this: practice with a strict timer, know your template well enough to pace yourself, and if you are running short, skip to your conclusion rather than rushing details. A clean 50-second response is better than an unfinished 60-second one.

Build Speaking Confidence with Live Feedback

Recording yourself only goes so far. Our qualified teachers give you the specific, rubric-based feedback that accelerates your TOEFL Speaking score faster than self-study alone.

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