1. The format
You see a prompt asking your opinion or preference. You have 15 seconds to plan, then 45 seconds to speak. Recorded only — no human conversation.
The scoring rubric considers:
- Delivery: pace, clarity, pronunciation
- Language use: grammar, vocabulary
- Topic development: clarity of answer + supporting reasons + specific examples
2. The 3-part template (45 seconds)
Part 1 — Position (10 seconds)
State your answer clearly. One sentence, no hedging.
"I would rather work for a small company than a large one."
Part 2 — Reason 1 + example (15 seconds)
"First, small companies offer more flexibility — for example, when I interned at a 10-person startup, I rotated through marketing, customer support, and even product design within three months."
Part 3 — Reason 2 + example (15 seconds)
"Second, you have a direct impact on the business. At that startup, a single feature I designed brought in seven new clients within a month — something that wouldn't happen at a 10,000-person corporation."
Part 4 — Closing (5 seconds)
"That's why I'd choose a small company."
Total: 45 seconds. Clean architecture.
3. The four mistakes that drop your score
Mistake 1 — Vague example
"Working at a small company would be interesting" is content-free. Mention a specific name, number, or concrete event.
Mistake 2 — Hedging the position
"I think small companies might be a bit better, but maybe big companies are also good" reads as no opinion. The scoring rubric explicitly rewards stance clarity.
Mistake 3 — Running out of time
Pacing for 45 seconds means about 110–130 words. Practice with a stopwatch.
Mistake 4 — Reading robotically
Recorded delivery picks up monotone. Practice with natural stress on content words.
4. Three days of drill before the test
Day 1: Take 5 prompts, record yourself answering each one, listen back, identify which part of the template you dropped.
Day 2: Take 5 new prompts; aim for 90+ words in 45 seconds.
Day 3: Take 5 prompts at exam pace with the official 15-second prep timer (use our speaking timer). Record and self-score on a 0–4 rubric.
5. Prompt categories to expect
TOEFL Independent rotates through:
- Personal preference (live in city vs countryside)
- Hypothetical decision (if you had a year off)
- Recommendation (advice for a younger student)
- Opinion on a statement (agree/disagree with X)
For each category, prepare one ready-made example you can adapt.
6. What "26+" looks like
A 26 response distinguishes itself by:
- Specific, concrete examples (not "generally" or "people")
- Natural sentence rhythm with appropriate pauses
- A vocabulary upgrade or two: "I'd argue that..." instead of "I think"
- Time used fully (43–45 seconds, no silence at the end)
7. The leverage
Independent Speaking is 1 of 4 speaking tasks. But because it's the only one without integrated content (no reading or listening to summarize), it's the easiest place to practice the template-and-stance pattern. Once you nail it here, the integrated tasks become much easier — they layer summary on top of the same speaking foundation.