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OET Writing Module: A Complete Guide to Structured Success from an experienced trainer.

Written by Tiju's Academy | Mar 4, 2026 6:07:44 AM

If you’ve been preparing for the Occupational English Test (OET), let me ask you something honestly. Do you secretly feel that Listening Part B is “easy”? Most candidates do. They spend hours worrying about Part A note completion. They panic about spelling. They practice writing again and again. But when it comes to Part B, they think: “Six short recordings. One question each. Multiple choice. How hard can it be?”

And then results come. Part B quietly steals their B grade.

If you are preparing for OET, then this blog is not just strategy. It gives you clarity. Because Part B is not difficult. It is often misunderstood.

Let’s talk about it in a real, honest way. What is Listening Part B, Really?

In OET Listening Part B:

You hear 6 short workplace extract in which each recording lasts about 1 minute. You answer one multiple choice question per extract and each question has three options (A, B, C). The audio plays only once

The situations are realistic. You might hear:

  • A nurse giving a handover
  • A doctor explaining a procedure
  • A staff meeting discussion
  • A policy clarification
  • A workplace instruction

It feels simple because it is short. But here’s the truth:

Part B tests whether you can understand communication the way a real healthcare professional must understand it quickly, clearly, and accurately.

Why Do Students Lose Marks Here?

Let’s be honest about the common patterns.

Students lose marks in Part B because:

  • They rely on keyword matching.
  • They panic if they miss one sentence.
  • They get confused between similar options.
  • They overthink after choosing an answer.

They underestimate the importance of “purpose.”

  • It is rarely about English level.
  • It is about listening with awareness.

The Real Tips That Actually Work. I’m going to give you what genuinely changes your performance.

  1. Stop Listening for Words and start Listening for Meaning.
  2. Read the Question Like It Matters (Because It Does)
  3. Expect Distractors. They Are Designed to Trick You.
  4. Pay Attention to the Beginning and the End
  5. If You Miss a Sentence, Don’t Panic
  6. Trust Your First Logical Answer
  7. Practice Under Real Conditions
  8. Develop a Professional Listening Mindset
  9. Understand the Patterns of Questions
  10. Work on Concentration, Not Just Language

This is the biggest shift. Many students choose an option just because they hear the same word in the audio.

For example:

Audio:

“We’ve had a few medication errors recently, so we need to go over the safety protocol again.”

Option A: To introduce a new medication

Option B: To review safety procedures

Option C: To discuss patient complaints

If you only hear the word “medication,” you may choose A.

But the real purpose is reviewing safety procedures. So the answer is B.

OET loves paraphrasing. The exact words from the options are often not used in the audio.

Train yourself to ask:

What is the speaker really trying to do?

That question alone improves scores.

Before the audio starts, you get time to read. So don’t waste time and work attentively

Instead of just scanning, try this:

  • Identify what the question is asking.
  • Notice whether it focuses on purpose, concern, next step, or explanation.
  • Predict what kind of answer you expect.

If the question says:

What is the main purpose of the doctor’s call?

You already know you must focus on the reason behind the call — not side details.

Preparation reduces panic.

In many recordings, you will hear information related to all three options.

That’s intentional.

OET wants to see if you can separate:

  • Main idea
  • Supporting detail
  • Irrelevant comment

For example, a nurse might mention:

  • A patient’s history
  • A minor issue
  • The real reason for discussion

But the question will focus only on the central purpose.

When confused, ask:

If I had to summarize this in one sentence, what would it be? That summary usually contains the correct answer.

In many Part B recordings: The reason for speaking is introduced early. The key message is reinforced at the end. The middle may contain details that distract you.

Stay especially alert during the first 10 seconds and the final line. Many correct answers are hidden there.

This is very important. Some students mentally shut down if they miss one phrase.

They think: “I didn’t understand that. I’m finished.” And then they stop listening. Remember, you don’t need every word. You just need the main idea.

Even if you miss a line, keep listening calmly. Often, the speaker repeats or clarifies the key point later. Your emotional control matters as much as your listening skill.

This might surprise you. Most students’ first answer is correct. But self-doubt ruins it.

You choose B.

Then you think, “What if it’s C?”

Then you change it.

And C is wrong.

Unless you clearly misunderstood something important, trust your first strong impression.

Overthinking is dangerous in Part B.

Don’t pause the audio during practice. Don’t replay again and again. Simulate exam pressure.

Part B recordings are played once in the real test. Train your brain to function that way.

When you practice realistically, your confidence increases naturally.

This is something many students ignore.

OET is not testing academic English. It is testing workplace understanding.

When you listen, imagine:

You are the nurse in that hospital. You are receiving that instruction. You are responsible for understanding correctly.

When you shift into professional mode, comprehension becomes sharper.

Most Part B questions fall into predictable types:

  • What is the main purpose?
  • Why is the speaker calling?
  • What is the main concern?
  • What action is required?
  • What is being clarified?

If you recognize patterns, you respond faster.

You don’t panic because you’ve seen similar structures before.

Sometimes students blame vocabulary.

But the real issue is distraction.

Before Listening starts:

  • Take a slow breath.
  • Sit upright.
  • Clear previous mistakes from your mind.
  • Focus only on the current audio.

Part B is short. But it demands full attention for that one minute.

One distracted minute can cost one mark.

A Gentle Truth

Part B is not difficult.

It is delicate.

It requires:

  • Calmness
  • Sharp attention
  • Meaning-based listening
  • Confidence

If you treat it casually, it will surprise you. If you treat it seriously, it becomes one of the easiest sections to score full marks in.

Final Words for OET Candidates

If you are aiming for a B grade, remember this:

  • You don’t need perfect English.
  • You need controlled listening.

Every mark in Part B matters. Six recordings mean six opportunities. Don’t lose them because of overconfidence or panic.

  • Practice daily.
  • Listen actively.
  • Trust your reasoning.

And most importantly, believe that you are capable. Because often, the only thing standing between you and your B grade is not language. It’s self-doubt. You’re closer than you think.

If you’ve read this far, it means you truly care about your OET score, and that already tells me something. You’re serious about passing the OET exam and moving forward in your healthcare career.

Listening Part B is not about being perfect. It’s about being attentive, calm, and confident for just a few focused minutes. Small improvements in your OET listening strategy can create a big difference in your overall OET B grade.

If this blog made things clearer for you, don’t stop here. Start applying these tips in your daily OET Listening Part B practice. Even 20 minutes of focused preparation each day can sharpen your understanding of healthcare workplace communication and improve your exam performance.

And if you feel like you need structured guidance, real OET listening mock tests, exam-level practice materials, and clear explanation of distractors, ‘Tijus Academy’ is here to support you. At ‘Tijus Academy’, we focus on practical strategies, confidence building, and step by step training designed especially for nurses and healthcare professionals preparing for the Occupational English Test (OET).

You don’t have to figure this out alone.

With the right support, the right strategy, and consistent practice, your B grade is absolutely achievable.

Let’s work towards your OET success together — with clarity, confidence, and the right guidance at ‘Tijus Academy’.