TOEFL Integrated Speaking Practice: How to Combine Reading, Listening, and Speaking
A practical guide to TOEFL integrated speaking practice based on official task skills, with note-taking and response review advice.

TOEFL Speaking practice is not only about giving opinions. Some TOEFL speaking tasks require you to combine information from reading and listening, then speak clearly under time pressure.
Use official ETS resources for current test content and actual practice tasks:
This article does not copy official prompts. It explains how to train the skill.
The real challenge
Integrated speaking is hard because you must do several things at once:
- understand the reading or situation
- listen for the speaker's main point
- take fast notes
- organize the response
- speak clearly before time runs out
If your notes are weak, your speaking becomes weak.
Take notes for structure
Do not try to write every word. Write:
- topic
- speaker opinion
- reason 1
- example
- reason 2
- contrast or change
Use arrows, symbols, and short words. Your notes are for speaking, not for display.
Build a response frame
A simple frame:
- State the topic or situation.
- Say the speaker's main point.
- Give the first reason or detail.
- Give the second reason or detail.
- End clearly.
Do not add your own opinion unless the task asks for it.
Review your recording
After answering, listen once and ask:
- Did I include the main idea?
- Did I miss one key detail?
- Did I speak too slowly or too fast?
- Did I repeat filler words?
- Was the answer organized?
Then answer again using the same notes.
Where Gotostudy fits
At gotostudy.net, you can turn TOEFL speaking notes, transcripts you are allowed to use, and mistake logs into a study guide. Then you can ask an AI Tutor to quiz you on structure and save weak patterns as flashcards.
Bottom line
TOEFL integrated speaking improves when you train the whole chain: understand, note, organize, speak, review, repeat.
