Tip 1: Understand your questions
In Questions 1-6 of the Listening papers, you hear a series of short spoken items. The sentences are not connected. For each item, you answer one question as briefly as possible, often with just one or two words.
In Questions 7-10, you hear continuous, connected speech, and the questions may require you to complete a table of information, or complete some notes, or answer individual questions with short responses.
Tip 2: Read the questions and find keyword(s)
In the exam, you will be given time to read the questions before you hear the cassette/CD. Make sure you use this time well. Read all the questions and underline the keyword(s) in each one.
Decide what type of information each question requires; for example, a number, a place, a street name.
Tip 3: Notice the stress
Some time, you’ll hear how some words are changing with the stress on different part of the words. For example: notice how the word interviewer changes to interviewee.
When spoken, the stress on these two words is different: interviewer, interviewee.
Other examples are employer and employee.
There are a small number of other ‘person’ nouns in English which end in -ee.
Tip 4: Write clearly and precisely
The last question in the Listening papers usually requires you to answer questions based on a talk or an interview. The questions may ask you to identify people’s feelings and attitudes, as well as testing you on general comprehension.
Note: make sure that you write clearly and that you include all the necessary information.
Tip 5: Practice, practice, practice
Listening papers contribute 30% (15% for private candidates) on your overall scores for your English as Second Language certificate. Don’t make the assumption that Listening paper is not important thus not making any attempt to learn the tactics and skills.
In fact, Listening papers could determine either you score A* or not in your IGCSE E2L paper.
The average preparation needed for Listening skills is one year. Best is two years, from getting acquaintance to mastering.




72 responses
will the marks be deducted if there are spelling mistakes in hindi
Hi Asha,
Kindly refer to the marking scheme https://www.skolatis.com/cambridge-igcse-past-exam-papers/
Thank you for your help.
You’re welcome!
for english paper 2 (0500) in summary points ,we must give answers in short phrases and not full sentences,right?and the given line can be exceeded?or marks will be deducted for exceeding the lines?
Hi Catherine,
The important point in writing a Summary is to not go beyond the word limit. You must always use your own words when writing Summary. The points must be taken from the passage, but change them to your own words. Not all the words could be changed, for example, a chair is a chair, a hand is a hand? etc. You can?t possibly change all the words, just justify them. Lastly, do not write beyond the lines given, to avoid your answers not able to fit into the scanned screen.
Do refer to the syllabus: https://www.skolatis.com/cambridge-igcse-subjects-syllabuses/ to get a better idea of what is expected.
for english paper 2 (0500) in summary points ,we must give answers in short phrases right?and the given line can be exceeded?
Hi Catherine,
The important point in writing a Summary is to not go beyond the word limit. You must always use your own words when writing Summary. The points must be taken from the passage, but change them to your own words. Not all the words could be changed, for example, a chair is a chair, a hand is a hand? etc. You can?t possibly change all the words, just justify them. Lastly, do not write beyond the lines given, to avoid your answers not able to fit into the scanned screen.
Do refer to the syllabus: https://www.skolatis.com/cambridge-igcse-subjects-syllabuses/ to get a better idea of what is expected.
if i want to become a pilot which subjects should i take in IGCSE?
Hello Ibrahim,
The best place to find this out is to check with the college/university the you wish to apply to.
Hey, If you want to become a pilot, you have to choose Physics, Mathematics, Chemistry, English and any second language your like.
I have my physics paper on 1st and 7nt november and i am worried
any tips?
Hi Piyush,
With Physics, you?ll need a lot of practice. Start your revision as early as possible and spend at least 2 to 3 hours every day on revising:
1. Learn and understand the key concepts and formulas. Familiarise/memorise the key equations/formulas (refer to the latest syllabus on what is expected: https://www.skolatis.com/cambridge-igcse-subjects-syllabuses/ ).
2. Do revision based on the latest syllabus and practice with the latest past exam papers (https://igcsecentre.com/cambridge-igcse-past-exam-papers/ ). Pay attention to the most common mistakes you always seem to make. Make notes and revise them, so you can avoid making the same mistakes in your actual exam.
Tips:
Minimize your reference checks. Try solving a problem with the formula without looking it up. You MUST do this as many times as you can. You will be able to remember the formulas/key equations better when you repeat this step.