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Stay Calm IELTS Listening Reading Practice

Last updated on September 7, 2019 by in Listening Practice in English Category with 5 Comments on Stay Calm IELTS Listening Reading Practice, 73 Views and Reading Time: 8 minutes

Stay Calm IELTS Listening Reading Practice

Stay Calm IELTS Listening Reading Practice

Lecturerauthor or publisher: Noa Kageyama and Pen-Pen Chen on TED-Ed

Stay Calm IELTS Reading Practice

Your favorite athlete closes in for a victorious win. The crowd hold its breath, and at the crucial moment, she misses the shot. That competitor just experienced the phenomenon known as “choking” where despite months, even years of practice, a person fails right when it matters most.

What is choking?

Choking is common in sports where performance often occurs under intense pressure and depends on key moments, and yet, performance anxiety also haunts public speakers, contestants in spelling bees, and even world-famous musicians. Most people intuitively blame it on their nerves, but why does being nervous undermine expert performance?

What causes choking?

There are two sets of theories which both say that primarily choking under pressure boils down to focus. First, there are the distraction theories. These suggest that performance suffers when the mind is preoccupied with worries, doubts and fears, instead of focusing its attention on performing the task at hand. When relevant and irrelevant thoughts compete for the same attention, something has to give. The brain can only process so much information at once. Tasks that challenge working memory, the “mental scratchpad” we use to temporarily store phone numbers and grocery list, are especially vulnerable to pressure.

The Effect of Anxiety on Working memory

In a 2004 study, a group of university students were asked to perform math problems, some easy, others more complex, and memory-intensive. Half the students completed both problem types with nothing at stake, while the others completed them when calm and under pressure. While everyone did well on the easy problems, those who were stressed, performed worse on the more difficult, memory-intensive tasks.

Explicit monitoring theories make up the second group of explanations for choking under pressure. They’re concerned with how pressure can cause people to overanalyze the task at hand. Here the logic goes that once a skill becomes automatic, thinking about its precise mechanics interferes with your ability to do it. Tasks we do unconsciously seem to be most vulnerable to this kind of choking.

A study on competitive golfers compared the performance when instructed to simply focus on putting as accurately as possible versus when they were primed to be acutely aware of the mechanics of their putting stroke. Golfers usually perform this action subconsciously. So those who suddenly turned into the precise details of their own moves also became worse at making accurate shots.

How to Avoid Choking?

Choking may not be inevitable for everyone though. Research suggests that some are more susceptible than others, especially those who are self-conscious, anxious, and afraid of being judged negatively by others. So, how can we avoid choking when it really counts? First, it helps to practice under stressful conditions.

In a study on expert dart players, researchers found that those who hadn’t practiced under stress, performed worse when anxious, compared to those who had become accustomed to pressure. Secondly, many performers extol the virtues of a pre-performance routines, whether it’s taking a few deep breaths, repeating a cue word, or doing a rhythmic sequence of movements. Studies on golfing, bowling and water polo find that short rituals can lead to more consistent and accurate performance under pressure. 

And thirdly, researchers have shown that having an external focus on the ultimate goal works better than an internal focus where someone is turned into the mechanics of what they’re doing. A study of experienced golfers revealed that those who hit chip shots while focused on the flight of the ball performed significantly better than those who focused on the motion of their arms.

So, perhaps we can modify the age-old saying: practice, under pressure, with focus, and with that glorious end goal in sight makes perfect.


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Stay Calm IELTS Listening Practice


About Dr. Mohammad Hossein Hariri Asl

Dr. Mohammad Hossein Hariri Asl is an English and Persian instructor, researcher, inventor, author, blogger, SEO expert, website developer, and the creator of LELB Society. He's got a PhD in TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language). Study our guest posting guidelines for authors.

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5 comments on “Stay Calm IELTS Listening Reading Practice”

  1. Hi
    This topic is really useful, I have an idea that how to control the bad feeling in any competition, In during of any competition we just focus on doing not the result of it .

    • Yes, that could bring about positive results because, in so doing, you can compete with yourself and your previous version. Competing with others again and again can increase the negative feelings of anxiety, jealousy, self-doubt and the like.

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