IELTS Speaking for Success - 📝 Planning (Part 3) + Transcript
Episode Date: April 10, 2026Get access to our episode archive: https://www.patreon.com/ieltssfs Do you think it’s important to plan ahead? What activities do we need to plan ahead? Do you think children should plan their fu...ture careers? Is making study plans popular among young people? Should children ask their teachers and parents for advice when making plans? Do you think choosing a college major is closely related to a person’s future career? 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
Transcript
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Hello, hello, dear listener and welcome into the world of IOT speaking part three.
We are discussing plans, planning and organization.
And Rory is the super authority here because Rory is the most organized person I know.
I've ever known, actually.
His organization is like, wow.
Wow.
So you will hear lots of expert comments.
Seriously, like everything is organized, everything is planned out, everything is in advance, like super organizational skills.
Do you think it's important to plan ahead?
In the main, yes, it's good to at least have an outline of what you need to do.
Then there's less stress in deciding what to do in the moment, doesn't there?
I know people talk a lot about living in the moment, but some things are definitely
foreseeable and you can plan around them.
What activities do we need to plan ahead?
All kinds of things. Usually the ones involving other people so you can anticipate what they
might need or like and how best to get it to them or how to cope when those things aren't
available or possible. I think the best example is for things like birthdays and birthday parties.
You need to make sure you have enough food and drink and space for everyone involved
and you need to get a good gift.
If you leave all that to the last moment, then it could all go horribly wrong.
Do you think children should plan their future careers?
Well, they're the ones who will be following those particular career paths.
So they should have some say, at least, shouldn't they?
I suppose all of this depends on how young the children are too,
since young children are prone to flights of fancy
and maybe cannot anticipate all the pros and cons of a different career.
but adults can help with that too, so they can make an informed choice.
Is making study plans popular among young people?
Having taught them for the better part of a decade, I'm going to say that is a hard no,
which makes sense since the prefrontal cortex as I haven't finished developing yet,
so none of the executive functions needed to make study plans are there.
Of course, some young people might develop faster than others,
but that is a rarity in my experience.
Even if it was commonplace,
that still doesn't mean it would be popular.
I think they'd rather be out and having fun
than sat at home making plans.
Should children ask their teachers and parents
for advice when making plans?
I don't see why not.
Older people tend to have more experience
and, I don't know, wisdom to draw on
compared to younger people
and teachers and parents
the most obvious sources of that. Of course, they're not perfect, since they might be coloured by
their own bias and experiences, but it's better than asking no one and flying completely blind.
Do you think choosing a college major is closely related to a person's future career?
It certainly used to be, but it seems like nowadays, unless it's a profession requiring a lot
of technical knowledge like a doctor or an engineer, many degrees in courses have transferable
or soft skills that could be useful for anyone. So you could choose to focus on anything and still come
out with a lot of relevant experience. As you know, we now release all of our premium content
for free and it's available for one month. After one month, it goes into our super secret archive.
Sign up for the archive.
Click the link in the description below.
See you soon.
Right.
So we plan ahead.
Ahead.
A head.
A head.
A head.
Plan in advance.
And we usually have an outline of what you need to do.
An outline.
Like a basic plan.
A basic plan.
To have an outline of what you need to do.
Because there's less stress.
so no stress or less stress
some things are foreseeable
you can see them in the future
and that is related to planning ahead
foreseeable things
an event or situation
that can be known about or guessed
before it happens
we plan certain activities
ahead
so we usually plan
all kinds of things
birthdays, birthday parties, weddings.
So any activities where other people are involved,
so we can anticipate what can go wrong, for example.
So we can anticipate.
Anticipate is also like about the future.
We anticipate, we imagine or accept that something will happen.
C1 again, Sydney listener, Band 8,8.5.
anticipate something.
So we plan ahead to anticipate what other people need, what can go wrong, anticipate problems.
And if you give an example, you just use things like holidays, birthdays, birthdays.
We plan things like da-t-ta and da-t-ta.
And also use model verbs to sound less direct like people might like, not like people
like, but people might like, it could go wrong, not just it will go wrong, it could go wrong,
it might go wrong to sound more academic and professional. Children plan their future career,
or maybe not, they should not do this. What do you think? Well, they can try. Why not let them try?
There's no harm in this. Follow their career paths. So children will,
follow their career path. Path like a road and the expression is to follow your career path,
to follow your career road. And it depends on the age of children. Young children are prone
to something. So to be prone. If you're prone to something, it means that you're more likely
to do it or it's expected of you. Yeah.
be prone to do something, to show a particular characteristic, usually negative one, or be affected
by something bad. For example, he was prone to depression as a teenager. So he was always usually
depressed. And that's C2. That's a phrase, which is C2, Ben 9, to be prone to something.
Or, for example, she is prone to bad behavior. She behaves bad. She behaves bad.
mentally, usually. And here Rory says, young children are prone to flights of fancy.
Yeah, but that just means like excessive daydreaming or fantasizing about how things could be
or not having realistic expectations. Yeah, like children are prone to flights of fancy.
So ideas with a lot of imagination, not practical ideas, so they're just imagining things.
So that's why they can't make decisions about their future career because, yeah, I want to be an astronaut, I want to be, you know, a dinosaur.
And adults can make an informed choice.
Adults can make an informed choice which is not a flight or fancy.
So it's not like we're just making this choice without any reasons.
We're just, well, not we're just, we are using evidence and thinking about things before we do anything.
Young people make study plans.
And then Rory uses this.
Well, because the prefrontal cortexes haven't finished developing yet.
Everybody knows this about young people.
Your prefrontal cortex is the part of your brain.
It's at the front.
And it doesn't fully develop until you're 25 years old.
And that's good to know or important to know,
because that's the part of your brain that is for making,
really complex decisions.
Okay.
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Yes, dear listen. Prefrontal cortex.
Okay.
Children's prefrontal cortex isn't developed yet.
That's why they are not able to make study plans.
The brain isn't developed yet.
Isn't developed or hasn't developed yet.
Oh, both.
Because one is like,
an adult looking back through time and the other is talking about how they are in the moment.
So both are okay.
So it's not commonplace that children can make informed decisions.
Like commonplace, it's something like common.
Happening often, like electric cars are commonplace.
Well, maybe not the same.
Commonplace just means lots of people are doing it.
Popular means lots of people are doing it and they enjoy it or like it.
Yeah, that's true. So common or commonplace are synonyms.
Very important for your IELTS exam, especially in writing part one, where people write the word popular to describe something that has done frequently, but there is no information about whether the people enjoy it or not.
Yeah, the safest way is to use common, not popular.
Children ask their teachers or parents for advice, to ask someone for advice.
When they make plans. So we make plans.
We plan ahead and we make plans.
So older people tend to have more experience.
Again, we see, we don't say older people have more experience.
Because again, not always.
We say older people tend to have more experience, usually have.
And teachers and parents are the most obvious sources of experience, to be a source of experience.
but their advice might be colored by their own bias.
Again, we are very soft here, cautious, careful, might be colored, so maybe colored, maybe not.
To be colored by their own bias.
Bias is like when a person doesn't like something, they will say negative things about it.
Bias is C2, like preferences.
usually political bias
and different newspapers
are negative about certain things
or a person could be biased
against somebody or something
that's why teachers and parents
if they don't like something themselves
their opinion, their advice might be
colored by their own bias
so they may not be objective
they will tell you only one side of the story
they'll say yes that's a great
decision to become a lawyer, even though they know nothing about that. And if you do that and you know
nothing about what you are doing, then you are flying blind, or flying completely blind.
To fly blind? Just to do something and you don't know what you're doing. Could you give us another
sentence with fly blind? Yes, absolutely. When I started to go to the gym, I was flying blind because
I had no idea what was going on. Exactly. When you choose your main subject to study,
It's called a major.
So my major was English.
Rory's major was literature, was it?
At university.
No, it was politics.
Oh, politics.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
So Rory's main subject was politics.
And here Rory gave us an example.
Like a profession requires a lot of technical knowledge,
like a doctor and engineer, a specialist knowledge,
technical knowledge.
then your major is important.
But if not, then your major is not really important
because you can transfer soft skills to other subjects.
And if you can transfer the soft skills, they are transferable.
Transferable.
Soft skills can be transferable.
So you learn soft skills.
You develop soft skills at university,
you know how to plan, how to write, how to cheat,
how to communicate with people, you know.
Hard to use AI to write your essays.
Yeah, you know, all these things
and they can be transferable to other spheres of your life.
Time management, communication skills, computer skills,
chat GPT skills.
Using AI to manage for time.
Yeah, but seriously, using AI is an important skill.
Yep.
Right, you listen, how are you doing?
Are you okay?
Are you fine?
Yes, good, lovely.
Do you feel more informed about the subject of planning?
Thank you very much for listening.
We'll get back to you in our next episode.
Bye.
Do you think it's important to plan ahead?
In the main, yes.
It's good to at least have an outline of what you need to do.
Then there's less stress in deciding what to do in the moment, doesn't there?
I know people talk a lot about living in the moment,
but some things are definitely foreseeable
and you can plan around them.
What activities do we need to plan ahead?
All kinds of things.
Usually the ones involving other people
so you can anticipate what they might need or like
and how best to get it to them
or how to cope when those things aren't available or possible.
I think the best example is for things like birthdays and birthday parties.
You need to make sure you have enough food and drink
and space for everyone involved
and you need to get a good gift.
If you leave all that to the last moment, then it could all go horribly wrong.
Do you think children should plan their future careers?
Well, they're the ones who will be following those particular career paths.
So they should have some say, at least, shouldn't they?
I suppose all of this depends on how young the children are too,
since young children are prone to flights of fancy
and maybe cannot anticipate all the pros and cons of a different career.
but adults can help with that too, so they can make an informed choice.
Is making study plans popular among young people?
Having taught them for the better part of a decade, I'm going to say that is a hard no,
which makes sense since the prefrontal cortex as I haven't finished developing yet,
so none of the executive functions needed to make study plans are there.
Of course, some young people might develop faster than others,
but that is a rarity in my experience.
Even if it was commonplace,
that still doesn't mean it would be popular.
I think they'd rather be out and having fun
than sat at home making plans.
Should children ask their teachers and parents
for advice when making plans?
I don't see why not.
Older people tend to have more experience
and, I don't know, wisdom to draw on
compared to younger people
and teachers and parents
the most obvious sources of that. Of course, they're not perfect, since they might be coloured by
their own bias and experiences, but it's better than asking no one and flying completely blind.
Do you think choosing a college major is closely related to a person's future career?
It certainly used to be, but it seems like nowadays, unless it's a profession requiring a lot
of technical knowledge, like a doctor or an engineer, many degrees.
in courses have transferable or soft skills that could be useful for anyone.
So you could choose to focus on anything and still come out with a lot of relevant experience.
