In one line: Rehearse the IO out loud, from notes, to time — several times — and practise likely discussion questions, so the real oral is fluent, analytical, and finishes within ten minutes.
The IO is the one assessment you can fully rehearse — so the difference between a good grade and a great one is often just practice.
🔄 Don't just READ your notes silently. Say the oral out loud, from bullet notes, with a timer, and do it several times — each run gets tighter and more fluent. Then have someone ask you the kind of questions the examiner might, so the discussion doesn't catch you cold.
How to rehearse
Out loud, from notes
Speak it aloud from bullets — not silent reading, not a memorised script.
Time every run
Use a timer; aim to land close to ten minutes with a conclusion.
Repeat and refine
Each run gets tighter — cut what doesn't fit, smooth the signposting.
Rehearse the discussion
Have someone ask likely follow-up questions; practise answering them.
The key move: Rehearse out loud, from notes, to time, several times — and practise the discussion questions — so the IO is fluent, analytical, and finishes within ten minutes.
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Why it matters in the exam: The IO rewards fluent, controlled, well-timed analysis — and unlike a written paper, you can rehearse it fully. Practice improves every criterion: clearer structure (C), smoother language (D), and more confident, deeper analysis (A, B).
A student ‘prepares’ their IO by reading their notes through silently twice the night before. Why is this poor preparation, and how should they rehearse instead?
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Watch out: Silent reading is not rehearsal, and memorising a word-for-word script is fragile. Practise out loud, from notes, to time — and don't skip rehearsing the discussion.