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CELPIP Listening Task 2: The Invisible Question Trap
The audio track begins with a conversation about a broken heater or a hiking trip. As you listen, you jot down a few notes and feel confident. Then, the audio stops, and a voice asks a question.
Then, the audio stops. A voice asks a question.
Suddenly, you panic. The question is not on the screen. You have to rely entirely on your memory of what the voice just asked. If you didn’t hear it perfectly, or if you forgot it while looking at the answers, you are guessing blindly.
This is the unique challenge of CELPIP Listening Task 2 (Answering Questions). It is the only part of the test where the question itself is invisible.
To hit CLB 9, you need to stop relying on your eyes and start trusting your “Audio Memory.” Below is the Echo Strategy to ensure you never forget the question.
First, understand why this is hard. In other tasks, you can re-read the question while you think. In Task 2, the question exists only for three seconds in the air.
Consequently, many students hear the question, look down at the four options (A, B, C, D), and in that split second of reading the options, they forget the specific detail asked in the question.
If you mix up “Where” and “When,” you will pick the wrong answer because the test often includes distractors for both.
Next, use the Echo Strategy to bridge the gap between hearing and answering.
The Rule: Do not look at the answers immediately.
When the voice asks the question, repeat it silently in your head (Echo it) before you look at the options.
This 2-second loop locks the question into your short-term memory so the text on the screen doesn’t distract you.
Furthermore, your notes need to change for this section. Since you don’t know the questions, you must capture the Main Points of the dialogue.
Use the Q&A shorthand:
You are not just writing words; you are writing the reasoning. The test almost always asks about the reasons (Why), not just the facts (What).
Finally, sometimes the answer is hidden in the speaker’s emotion, not their words.
Even if you didn’t understand every word, think back to her voice. Was it high and fast (Excited)? or slow and low (Hesitant)? In Task 2, the intonation is often the biggest clue.
Admittedly, practicing this is hard because most books show you the question. This destroys the purpose of the exercise. You need to practice Blind Listening.
Unfortunately, reading a transcript won’t help your short-term memory.
This is where Exam Hero helps you win.
[Stop guessing what you heard. Master the Invisible Question with the Smart AI Coach.]