IELTS Speaking for Success - 📱 Mobile Phones (Part 3) + Transcript
Episode Date: May 10, 2026Get access to our episode archive: https://www.patreon.com/ieltssfs Are selfies a waste of time? Can you have too many apps? Rory tackles tough questions about our digital lives, revealing Band 9 v...ocabulary you can use to talk about your own screen time habits and friendships. Tune in and have a great day! - Book a class with Rory here: https://successwithielts.com/rory Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/ Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2025 Podcourses Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello, lovely. Welcome into ILDSpeaking Part 3.
we are talking about smartphones and negative impacts of phones in general.
Rory is the authority here on the topic of smartphones.
Am I?
Yeah, you are.
You are an educated.
Well, first of all, you are educated.
Secondly, you are a native speaker.
Thirdly, you took IOTs and got bad nine.
And you do have a smartphone.
So Rory has all the authority to talk about smartphones or mobile phones.
Let's go.
Let's go.
Okay, let's go.
Do you think it's necessary to have laws on the use of mobile phones?
Well, I can think of a lot of parents who would love the thought of that.
but I'm not sure how on earth you might enforce that.
I mean, our police force seems to have enough on their plate as it is.
I think it would be maybe better to have layers of things like social conventions
and venue and family policies and agreements as to where and when they are appropriate to use
and when it's not allowed.
And people should be prepared to enforce them and back each other up when they do.
That seems more attainable and maybe practicable things.
getting the government involved.
Is it a waste of time to take pictures with mobile phones?
Well, surely that depends on what you ultimately do with them.
I mean, if you wind up with just a ton of pictures that you never do anything with,
then it's not a great use of time.
But if you photograph something that inspires you, like a piece of artwork or something,
and then you come back to it later on to help with your work,
then it's certainly been worth the effort.
What do you think of selfies?
Well, it's the same principle.
It's still a photograph, and it should be taken with a purpose if it's going to have some kind of value.
It's not being taken just because, or hopefully it's not.
So I don't distinguish what I said about pictures in general from what I'm going to say about selfies.
It's the same idea.
What positive impacts do mobile phones have on friendship?
I suppose they allow you to stay in touch with people over,
greater distances and times, so they might help people who rarely see each other maintain a sense
of connection, better, or at least they can do that better than just relying on some kind of social
inertia to keep things ticking over. They can also give you different ways to interact,
like on social media with different memes, so things are always fresh and they don't get boring
easily. And what about the negative impacts on friendship? Oh, I mean,
Well, a lot of people tend to mistake the medium for the message, don't they?
So they'll spend time on their phones to the detriment of real-life interaction.
And that could undermine friendships if people are seen to be getting ignored by their friends
who might be favoring their phones.
So they could also just be a distraction in general with notifications going off all the time
and interrupting people, which isn't very conducive to a good relationship, is it?
How do young and old people use mobile phones differently?
Well, if younger people are all about novelty and excitement,
then I imagine they'll be downloading different kinds of apps
that work in a variety of ways to cater to that.
So that could be getting ones for gaming in various forms
or just a ton of social media apps that have slight tweaks
to make them seem interesting.
Older people tend towards more practicality and stability.
so they're more likely to stick to work-related things like email or AI apps to increase productivity.
At least that seems to be the case.
Do you think it's a good idea to allow young children to use mobile phones?
Well, they should learn to use them responsibly,
so provided it's being done under the supervision of a responsible adult,
then why not?
I don't think that's perfectly acceptable.
Okay.
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Right, your listener.
So the examiner can call them like mobile phones, but today we usually say smartphones, right?
Because a mobile phone is not a smartphone.
Well, it's kind of that.
But we usually, when we talk about mobiles, we're usually referring to smartphones nowadays.
Exactly.
We can have laws on the use of phones.
Well, we could.
I don't think that will work.
We enforce laws.
The authorities enforce different laws.
People can enforce laws too.
In some countries at least.
Yeah, the things like citizens arrest, for example, that's enforcing the law on behalf of the government.
or the police?
Yeah, so when you enforce a law,
you make people follow the law.
Actually, C1.
Oh, wow.
I thought that would be lower.
For example, the police enforce speed limits.
Ideally.
Yeah.
And like we must follow speed limits, right?
So this rule is enforced.
So you can say that, yeah, I believe that it's useful to enforce laws on smartphones.
It's the responsibility of people because the police are too busy to do that.
So you can say our police forces have enough on their plate.
If you have enough on your plate, you are too busy to do something else.
Because you're busy, right?
I have enough on my plate.
I have a lot of things to do.
Do you have a lot on your plate?
I have a lot on my plate, like chicken,
salad, pizza, you know, different vegetables.
Quite a lot.
Oh my gosh.
I'm about to have a lot on my plate as well
because I've just realized that someone has signed up for...
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten,
eleven.
Classes with me.
Classes with Rory.
So I'm definitely going to have a lot on my plate in the future.
So you can say that we should have social conventions.
like kind of social rules, not laws, but rules, family policies.
So in a family, we have a policy that nobody uses a smartphone during dinner, for example,
or at night.
Like, we should have family agreements or agreements between friends that when we meet together,
kind of we don't use our smartphones.
I don't know, for example, for five minutes.
Yeah.
Well, that's not, we're laughing about this, but that's not unreasonable.
I had a similar rule with my family and whenever we had friends over.
My mom always gets annoyed like, oh, like, stop, stop.
Like, put your phone down.
But, yeah, I work, all right.
You work at the dinner table, Maria.
And I scroll, yeah, I scroll Instagram endlessly when I'm bored.
Oh, you scroll Instagram when you're with your mother.
Oh, you have, like, you should be a shit.
I do exactly the same thing, but that's not the point.
Oh, I do so.
I'm horrible.
Oh, yes.
So welcome into our family.
Welcome into our family.
Now excuse me while I go and doomscroll.
We are just useless doom scrollers.
Oh my God.
Okay.
So, right, policies, family policies,
rather than government laws.
We take pictures.
We don't make pictures.
Please say take pictures, take selfies,
take photos.
And it depends on the number of photos.
You take if you wind up with millions of pictures,
then it's not a good idea.
So wind up, end up.
If you take millions of pictures,
and you just end up having so much stuff on your phone, you know?
The end result to talk about winding up with something.
If you wind up with a ton of pictures, a ton of pictures, a lot of pictures.
So if you end up with a ton of pictures on your phone or if you wind up with a ton of pictures
on your phone, well, that's not a great use of your time and space on your phone.
Yeah, if you just don't use these photographs or photos.
But if your photos inspire you, inspire, you know, like they give you inspiration,
you look at them once in a while.
They make you feel nice, you know.
They make you want to do something for society.
Or if your photos are like a piece of art, if it's like artwork, then, okay, why not?
Yeah, but usually, dear listener, we just have a ton of pictures that we never look at again.
I know. Look at the pictures on your phones. Like, what are the pictures of? Maybe share them.
Yeah, but sometimes actually, I do take screenshots. You see, it's like we take screenshots of something useful.
So you can say, yeah, like having useful screenshots of a recipe or, I don't know, a place, a film.
For example, I take, like many people take screenshots of films that they want to see, play.
they want to go to, you see, so screenshots, right?
Maybe your family photos are useful photos from your holiday.
People usually look at them in the middle of winter when it's cold and lonely and boring.
Yeah.
Or maybe you don't.
I don't know.
Well, that's what I plan to do this winter.
Later on this year, I'll be looking through all my old photos and reminiscing.
Reminiscing must be a C2 level word.
Come on.
Yeah, yeah, it is, it is it.
Is it? Have you just decided that?
Yeah, I've just decided that. Reminis, if I can spell it out.
Yeah, Reminis is like talk or write about past experiences that you remember with pleasure.
So it's like a good one.
It's a formal word, you're listening.
Reminis.
Like, my grandfather usually reminisces about his years, I don't know, in the army.
Chat GPD says it's C1, but chat GPD is wrong.
It's C2, exactly.
We just don't believe chat GPD.
Don't believe chat GPD.
Believe Maria, the dictionary of Maria.
Mobile phones could have a positive impact on friendship or a negative impact on friendship.
Impact is the same as influence.
If you're tired of using influence, oh, impact C2.
Yes, finally.
Oh, wow.
According to Cambridge online dictionary, we believe Cambridge.
All right.
So if Cambridge says it's C2, we believe it.
But feel free to check with chat GPT.
What was the word impact?
Impact, yeah.
Hold on, let's see.
What about the word impact?
Oh, well, according to chat GPT, oh, wait, hold on.
It says it could be B1 if it's a noun.
Impact is B2.
Oh.
When you mean an effect.
So impact on something.
And effect on, it's B2.
So it's what band is it, B2?
7.5.
But if you use impact...
What?
Oh, B2 is 6.5.
No, B2 is like upro intermediate, so it could be 6.557.
Okay, fine. Compromise.
Yeah, compromise. All right.
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servicenow.com. But if you use impact in the meaning of the force or action of one object
hitting another. Ooh, the force is like a Jedi. The impact of the
crash, reduce the car.
No, it's so difficult, Deleisna, forget it.
You could.
You could talk about the impact of the use of mobile phones.
There we go.
Yeah, so B2 is, okay.
ChatGPT says it can be B1, B2 or C1, depending on how it's used.
However, I'm going with Maria's, it's C2.
Use it all over the place.
No, it's C2 only in one meaning, which is strange.
So, de Lesina, you say that mobile phones,
allow you to stay in touch with people.
Stay in touch with people.
So chat to people, contact people.
If people rarely see each other in real life, rarely, like hardly ever, almost never,
they maintain, keep a sense of connection via mobile phones.
And people interact with each other on social media, on social media, on Instagram,
like share different memes, doom scroll, later.
night. However, mobile phones might have some negative influence on friendship. So might have a
negative impact on friendship. If the examiner uses the word impact, say influence. Don't repeat
the examiner's words. Absolutely not. It is forbidden. People spend too much time on their phones
instead of real-life interaction, real-life communication, real-life, you know, like face-to-face
communication, and people might ignore each other.
Also, mobile phones could be a distraction when you kind of meet your friends and then you are
on your phone all the time.
So it's a distraction.
And notifications are annoying.
So instead of talking to your friends, instead of having quality time with your friends, you are on your
phone. Young people and old people use mobile phones differently. So younger people are about novelty.
Novelty is something new. Like we have an adjective, novel, new. Novelty, C2. There we go.
Oh, finally. Are you sure? Perfect. Yeah, Band 9. Well, Cambridge on like Dictionary is very sure.
The quality of being new and unusual. Okay, so younger people, enjoy.
novelty. The novelty of these toys. So younger people are all about novelty and excitement. So they are
excited when they use their mobile phones. They download different apps. They use mobile phones for
gaming. They have a ton of social media apps. Again, a ton of, a lot of. If you're bored of a lot of, a lot of
many, many, many, many, many, many, many, too many. So just say, oh, a ton of social media apps, a
of apps, like a ton of gaming apps.
Or a million apps, maybe.
How many apps do you have on your phone?
Oh, a ton.
I have...
20, maybe.
20? Oh, you're boring.
Boring.
Well, hold on. Let's do a rough average.
Let's nine times five. I have 45 apps, roughly.
45 apps.
Maybe, yeah. Roughly 45.
I have them grouped and organized, which no one will be surprised.
by because I'm so ridiculously organized.
Wow. Wow.
I have them grouped into files and stuff, yeah.
I have a mess.
You know what, Maria, you will live longer because of that.
It took me ages to organize them and I was just like,
why am I doing this to myself?
Rory is Ben 9.
In terms of organization.
A band 9 organized, yeah, person.
You have missed other words, though.
Oh, I'm so not annoyed.
I'm gutted that you've missed them, but I'm not going to allow you to skip over them.
Because we said they could undermine friendships if they have a negative impact.
Undermine is a C2 level word.
I remember you saying that.
Undermine.
Yes.
C2, yes.
It's just a word difficult to explain and use.
It is not.
Undermine means damage or lower the quality of something.
Phones can undermine a friendship if you focus only on the phone and not your friend.
Criticism.
undermines our confidence.
So it makes criticism makes our confidence
less powerful and confident.
Talking about undermining,
the phones could work to the detriment
of real life interaction.
So if something is done to the detriment of something,
it means it undermines it.
Detriment.
The detriment.
Come on, that's got to be C2.
Detriment means harm or damage.
Okay?
So without detriment,
to our health without damage to our health.
Cambridge Online dictionary doesn't say anything about the level of this word, but it's very cool.
Because we have detrimental, detrimental, meaning bad.
Oh, detrimental, C2, there we go.
So you can say that mobile phones could be quite detrimental to friendship, Band 9.
Detrimental, you see, causing harm or damage.
Oh, there you go. Mobile phones could have a detrimental effect on friendship or impact.
There's another one that you've missed actually, thinking about it now, because I said that you would just rely on social inertia to keep things ticking over.
Social inertia is just when you just allow things to continue without making any effort.
And to keep things ticking over is just to keep things going forward or to continue things.
For example, social inertia.
Social inertia, like an example of that would just be you have a group of friends that hang out with each other just because you don't really have anything in common.
However, to keep things ticking over would be imagine you go away on holiday and someone looks after your business, for example, while you are away.
They keep things ticking over. They continue the functions.
Inertia, lack of activity.
lack of activity or interest
unwillingness to make an effort to do anything
for example bureaucratic inertia
kind of the tendency not to change what is happening
for example like many teachers
don't use AI
simply out of inertia
see what I mean it's a gold mine of band nine vocabulary
but instead we just spend time talking
about how we doomscrawl when we're ignoring our family
it's amazing.
The quality of this podcast is like unsurpassed.
Top notch.
Yeah, doom scrolling.
Well, Doom scrolling was the word of the year in 2025, the listener.
So, Doom scrolling.
Doom scrolling.
What level is this?
It's just the word of the year.
Doom scroll.
Doom scroll.
Yeah, it doesn't say what level.
Oh, actually, it is a humorous Doom scroll.
To spend a lot of time looking at your phone or computer.
computer also, and reading bad on negative news stories. So usually bad. Like, I was awake
half the night, doom scrolling. So doom scrolling is usually about something like negative.
Yeah, like we constantly doomscroll social media. Like, do you doomscroll? I doom scrolled
Instagram last night. But now I think people use it for everything. Like if we scroll through Instagram,
like stupid reels.
So that's also doom scrolling.
Okay.
Right, you've got a 25 minute episode.
Come on.
Thank you very much for listening.
We love you.
We hug you.
No doom scrolling.
We can do doom scrolling for you,
dear listener, all right?
Just leave it to us.
Leave it to the expert.
We do the doom scrolling.
You do the learning.
Okay.
Bye.
Bye.
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Do you think it's necessary to have laws on the use of mobile phones?
Well, I can think of a lot of parents who would love the thought of that,
but I'm not sure how on earth you might enforce that.
I mean, our police force seems to have enough on their plate as it is.
I think it would be maybe better to have layers of things like social conventions
and venue and family policies and agreements.
as to where and when they are appropriate to use and when it's not allowed.
And people should be prepared to enforce them and back each other up when they do.
That seems more attainable and maybe practicable than getting the government involved.
Is it a waste of time to take pictures with mobile phones?
Well, surely that depends on what you ultimately do with them.
I mean, if you wind up with just a ton of pictures that you never do anything with,
then it's not a great use of time.
But if you photograph something that inspires you, like a piece of artwork or something,
and then you come back to it later on to help with your work, then it's certainly been worth the effort.
What do you think of selfies?
Well, it's the same principle. It's still a photograph, and it should be taken with a purpose
if it's going to have some kind of value. It's not being taken just because, or hopefully it's not.
So I don't distinguish what I said about pictures in general from what I'm going to say about selfies.
It's the same idea.
What positive impacts do mobile phones have on friendship?
I suppose they allow you to stay in touch with people over greater distances and times.
So they might help people who rarely see each other maintain a sense of connection,
or at least they can do that better than just relying on some kind of social.
inertia to keep things ticking over. They can also give you different ways to interact, like on social
media with different memes, so things are always fresh and they don't get boring easily.
And what about the negative impacts on friendship? Oh, I mean, well, a lot of people tend to mistake
the medium for the message, don't they? So they'll spend time on their phones to the detriment of
real-life interaction. And that could undermine friendships if people are seen to be getting ignored by
their friends who might be favoring your phones. So they could also just be a distraction in general
with notifications going off all the time and interrupting people, which isn't very conducive to a
good relationship, is it? How do young and old people use mobile phones differently?
Well, if younger people are all about novelty and excitement, then I imagine they'll be downloading
different kinds of apps that work in a variety of ways to cater to that. So that could be getting
ones for gaming in various forms or just a ton of social media apps that have slight tweaks to
make them seem interesting. Older people tend towards more practicality and stability. So they're
more likely to stick to work-related things like email or AI apps to increase productivity.
At least that seems to be the case. Do you think it's a good idea to allow young children to use mobile?
phones. Well, they should learn to use them responsibly, so provided it's being done under the supervision
of a responsible adult, then why not? I don't think that's perfectly acceptable.
