What listening strategies are: Listening strategies are the overarching techniques that lift every Paper 2 Listening question type — multiple choice, true/false, gap-fill or short answer. The four big ones are: active prediction (predict before you listen), the two-listen strategy (gist first, then detail), inferring unknown words from context, and using inference (mood, opinion, purpose) when the answer isn't said word-for-word.
- la strategia
- the strategy / technique
- prevedere
- to predict — guess the vocabulary before you listen
- l'idea generale
- the gist — the general idea
- il dettaglio
- the detail — the specific information
- dedurre
- to deduce / work out from context
- l'inferenza
- inference — what's meant but not said outright
Strategies beat vocabulary: You will never know every word in a recording — nobody does. What separates strong candidates is strategy: they predict, they use both listens, and they deduce meaning instead of freezing on one unknown word.
Every strategy, one table: Map each moment of a recording to the right strategy. English explains what each moment is for; the Italian prompts are what you actually do at the desk.
| Momento | Che cosa fare |
|---|---|
| Prima | leggi le domande e prevedi il vocabolario |
| Primo ascolto | cogli l'idea generale |
| Secondo ascolto | caccia i dettagli e conferma |
| Parola sconosciuta | deducila dal contesto, non bloccarti |
| Inferenza | deduci il tono/l'opinione anche se non è detto con quelle parole |
The two facts students forget: 1) The second listen exists for a reason — use it to catch detail and confirm, not just to re-hear the gist. 2) A single unknown word is not a wall: deduce it from the words around it and keep going.
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One routine for every recording: These strategies combine into a single routine you run on every recording. Read, predict, listen for the gist, listen for the detail, and infer what isn't said outright.
The master listening routine
Read the questions
Before the audio, read the questions so you know exactly what each one is asking for.
Predict the vocabulary
From the questions, predict the words you'll hear (numbers, places, opinions) so they stand out when they come.
First listen — the gist
On the first play, listen for the general idea — who, where, and what it's about. Don't write much yet.
Second listen — the details
On the second play, hunt the specific details the questions need, and write your answers.
Infer what isn't said & check
Where the answer isn't word-for-word, infer the mood, opinion or purpose from the clues — then check every answer is filled in.
Read → Predict → Gist → Detail → Infer
Don't freeze on one word: If you hit a word you don't know, don't stop — the rest of the recording keeps playing. Deduce its meaning from the words around it and stay with the audio; one unknown word rarely costs you the answer.
When the answer isn't word-for-word: This clip needs inference — the answer isn't stated with the obvious word. Read the question, play the audio, and deduce how the speaker feels from the clues before you reveal the transcript. In the real exam you'd hear it twice.
Comprensione orale — il trasloco di Sofia
Listen to Sofia talk about moving to a new city. She never says exactly how she feels — you have to INFER it from the clues. Read the question first, then play the clip and answer before you reveal the transcript.
- Come si sente Sofia adesso? (How does Sofia feel now?) Deduci il suo stato d'animo dagli indizi.
Ciao, sono Sofia. Il mese scorso mi sono trasferita in una città nuova per il lavoro dei miei genitori. All'inizio non conoscevo nessuno e mi mancavano tanto i miei amici. Ma questa settimana ho cominciato nella mia nuova scuola, ho già conosciuto tre compagne molto simpatiche e domani andiamo al cinema insieme. Finalmente sorrido di nuovo.
Hi, I'm Sofia. Last month I moved to a new city because of my parents' job. At first I didn't know anyone and I missed my friends a lot. But this week I've started at my new school, I've already met three really nice classmates and tomorrow we're going to the cinema together. At last I'm smiling again.
- Contenta / rincuorata (molto meglio che all'inizio).
Read the clues, not just the words: When no word states the answer, infer it from the clues — what she does, the contrast with «all'inizio», and «finalmente sorrido di nuovo». Inference questions reward reading the mood, not matching a single word.
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Where strategy breaks down: Most lost marks come from abandoning the strategy under pressure. Compare what strong listeners do with the panic habits that cost marks.
Buone pratiche
- Listen for meaning and the gist, not every single word.
- Deduce an unknown word from context and keep going.
- Use the second listen for detail and to confirm.
- Infer the tone, opinion or purpose when it isn't said outright.
Errori tipici
- Try to catch and write down EVERY word.
- Freeze on one unknown word and miss what follows.
- Waste the second listen by re-hearing only the gist.
- Ignore tone and inference — only accept word-for-word answers.
Meaning over words: You don't need every word — you need the meaning. Catching the gist plus the key details beats transcribing the whole clip, and many answers are an inference, not a word you can hear directly.