TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #3

TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #3

Instructions

You will read a short academic passage (usually about a concept from psychology, biology, business, etc.), and then listen to part of a lecture in which a professor explains the same concept using one or more examples. After that, you will be asked a question that connects the reading and the lecture. You will have 30 seconds to prepare and 60 seconds to speak.

The question for TOEFL Speaking Task 3 typically asks you to explain how the example (or examples) from the lecture illustrate the concept described in the reading. In your response, briefly summarize the concept from the reading and explain how the professor’s example helps to clarify or demonstrate it. This format is consistent across tests.

Reading Passage

Task Partitioning

Insects employ various strategies to organize the essential tasks required for survival. One such strategy is task partitioning, where tasks are divided into distinct stages that are carried out in a specific sequence by different groups of workers. This method ensures that each group of workers specializes in a particular task, leading to greater efficiency. By focusing on a single stage of the process, the insects conserve both time and energy, ultimately enhancing their overall productivity.

Listening

Narrator: Now listen to two students discussing the letter.

Professor: OK, now a good example of this is leaf-cutter antsβ€”they use this kind of system when they need to get foodβ€”leavesβ€”to their nest. What happens is that they’re separated into three different groups, and each group has a different part in the process of transporting food back to the nest. So the first group, their job is to climb up a tree and start cutting off pieces of leaves. But instead of carrying the leaf pieces back down the tree, the ants just let go of the pieces so they fall down to the ground below. And after a while all these leaf pieces collect in a pile at the bottom of the tree. Then there’s a second group of ants waiting to help. This second group’s job is to cut the leaves down into smaller, more manageable pieces that are easier for them to carry. Then they take these smaller pieces of leaves to a place that’s partway back to the nest. Finally, the last group of ants takes over and they have the job of actually bringing the leaf pieces back from the trail to the nest. The system works wellβ€”since each ant has a specific job to do, the work gets done faster than if they were all working independently… and, since none of the ants has to keep climbing up and down a tree, they can all do their jobs without tiring out too soon.

TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Sample Questions [Reading Passages & Audio]

TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #1
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #1: Compound Nesting
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #2
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #2: Root Communication
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #3
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #3: Task Partitioning
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #4
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #4: Ecosystem Resilience
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #5
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #5: Systems Thinking
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #6
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #6: Chaining Behavior
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #7
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #7: Impression Management
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #8
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #8: Visual Advertisement
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #9
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #9: State-Dependent Memory
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #10
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #10: Procedural Memory
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #11
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #11: Optimal Foraging
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #12
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #12: Reactance
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #13
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #13: Warning Coloration
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #14
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #14: Method of Loci
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #15
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #15: Scope Creep
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #16
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #16: Population Changes
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #17
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #17: Habituation
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #18
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #18: Primacy Effect
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #19
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #19: Agnostic Behavior
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #20
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #20: Signaling
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #21
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #21: Phoresy
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #22
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #22: Communal Nutrition
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #23
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #23: Suspension of Disbelief
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #24
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #24: Integrated Farming
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #25
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #25: The Familiarity Principle
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #26
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #26: Carrying Capacity
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #27
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #27: Choice-Supportive Bias
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #28
TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Test #28: Emotional Intelligence
TOEFL & IELTS Speaking Practice
Complete List of TOEFL Speaking Task 3 Practice Tests
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