
Meet your TOEFL iBT instructor, from Boston, who will systematically cover the reading, listening, speaking, and writing sections through short, mobile-friendly videos for online and in-person study.
The lecture introduces the TOEFL iBT as an internet-based test taken on a computer with four sections and a total score up to 120.
Identify your target TOEFL iBT score based on your university or job goals. Check official school pages for minimum requirements, e.g., ASU 61 and Boston College 100.
Plan a one-month TOEFL study schedule by studying every day, track progress with a calendar and red X marks to stay prepared for test day.
Discover free TOEFL iBT practice tests and materials, including real former-exam questions with audio, transcripts, and MP3 audio across volumes 1–4, plus reading practice tests.
Explore the TOEFL iBT reading section, including four passages, a 60-80 minute duration, and the associated questions, plus practical tips to approach reading with pencil and paper.
Learn to read the passage by focusing on each of the four paragraphs, taking notes on paper, and recording the main idea of each paragraph in one to two sentences.
Learn why taking notes on every paragraph helps you remember long reading passages and avoids test-taker mistakes, boosting your TOEFL iBT score.
Practice reading and taking notes by annotating a four-paragraph passage, using a pencil and paper and one-minute intervals for each paragraph.
Practice reading and taking notes by capturing the main idea from notes on coral reefs, which have abundant marine life and grow slowly, to answer questions.
Practice reading and taking notes with pencil and paper; read paragraph three in one minute for main ideas, then paragraph four in thirty seconds to jot notes.
Practice reading and taking notes on coral reefs, noting that they are fragile and under threat from pollution, and identifying reefs found near the shore or in the deep sea.
Take concise notes by capturing four paragraphs on marine life and coral reefs, their age, importance, and pollution threats, and learn to answer questions using main ideas in English.
Learn how to use the process of elimination to tackle reading questions by removing wrong answers, aligning options with your own answer, and marking choices A through D.
Apply the process of elimination to reading questions by removing wrong answers, writing a, b, c on paper, and crossing out options that don’t match the text.
Use the process of elimination to pick the best answer when options are similar, write down incorrect choices to avoid confusion, and save time on long tests.
Explore the nine types of reading questions on the TOEFL iBT, including vocabulary, detail, main idea, reference, inference, and summary completion, with elimination strategies.
Practice identifying vocabulary question types in TOEFL reading passages and apply elimination to pick the closest meaning of promptly, recognizing hastily as meaning quickly.
Identify detail questions in a paragraph by reading carefully and using the process of elimination, illustrated with an arachnophobia example about panic attacks.
Identify the purpose of a TOEFL reading passage, including why the author mentions Bayard Rustin and Rosa Parks. Learn to answer purpose questions by reading the question.
Learn to tackle not and except questions on the TOEFL iBT using the process of elimination, reading the passage for details, and identifying choices not supported by the text.
Explore essential information questions on the TOEFL iBT, learning how to identify the sentence that best expresses the highlighted information and avoid choices that alter meaning or omit crucial details.
Practice reference questions by identifying what highlighted words or pronouns refer to in a passage. Examine how 'it' refers in the oceanic crust sentence to identify the reference.
Explore infer, imply, and suggest questions, learn to read paragraphs for implicit meaning, and analyze paracetamol history, including cancer fears and the 1947 research.
Learn to place sentences in reading passages by evaluating options A–D and eliminating wrong choices. The oak diversity example shows North America as largest, with China as second.
Learn to tackle the complete the summary question by selecting three main ideas from six options, using elimination to identify key points like warm blooded dinosaurs and egg laying.
practice science reading daily by using sites like science news.org, National Geographic science, and Mental Floss science, then take notes to simulate the TOEFL reading.
Practice reading online articles and take notes on each paragraph to reinforce understanding. Read three news articles daily for a month to build note-taking habits and prepare for vocabulary memorization.
Memorize vocabulary to boost the reading section and other sections by understanding terms and tones in passages. Use vocabulary to answer questions, including examples like 'Mars is a terrestrial planet'.
Enroll in the toefl vocabulary class that teaches vocabulary with pictures, helping busy learners master words such as altruism, convergence, and compassion.
Explore how the TOEFL iBT listening section is structured and scored, featuring 4–6 lectures, six questions per lecture, a single listen, and essential note-taking strategies.
Learn to take notes by identifying the main idea, listening actively, and recording only the key points to answer main idea questions on the TOEFL iBT.
Explore the four to six listening lectures in the TOEFL iBT, featuring teacher talks on science or history and two-person conversations—student-student or student-teacher—to practice academic listening.
Explore Sylvia Plath's life and work, tracing the publication of the Bell Jar and Aeriel, her posthumous collected poems, and the Pulitzer Prize, while examining women's writing.
Explore Sylvia Plath's intimate poetry and life, from her Boston upbringing and Smith College years to the posthumous Pulitzer Prize and ongoing debates on women writing about women's issues.
Engage in listening practice by using your notes to answer questions on the real TOEFL test. Complete each quiz question within 30 seconds, noting you can listen only once.
Explore Sylvia Plath's life and work, from The Bell Jar and her poetry to the father figure theme, her Pulitzer Prize recognition, and her lasting influence on modern poetry.
Fertility rate is the average number of children a woman has in her lifetime, with UK rates near 1.9 and declines linked to delayed childbearing and costs.
Examine how population growth relates to fertility and birth rates, noting UK's fluctuations, Europe's low fertility, rising childlessness since the 1960s, and China's one child pattern.
Engage in targeted listening practice with a quiz designed to reinforce comprehension for the TOEFL iBT. Practice focuses on listening skills and quiz-style questions to boost test readiness.
Practice listening for quiz answers on birth rate and fertility rate, UK trends, delayed childbirth, and a note about a gold medal for eight children.
Explore traditional 2D faceprints, 3D facial models, and skin biometrics, highlighting accuracy, limitations, and conditions that affect recognition across lighting, angles, and expressions.
Analyze real-world facial recognition challenges, comparing 2D image measurements with 3D model matching, and examine skin biometrics like patches and moles, including lighting, glare, and identical twins.
Participate in listening practice quizzes, provide three quiz answers, and review the next videos in the TOEFL iBT course.
Identify two problems with facial recognition, and explain how faceprint works. Note the Las Vegas show setting and compare 3D technology limitations like distinguishing identical twins.
Practice active listening in short two-minute conversations between students, teachers, or office workers; identify who has the problem, how they plan to solve it, and take notes.
Practice listening to an accommodation office conversation about moving out of a dorm, finding private housing with shared rooms, map to bus routes, and YMCA beds as a backup.
Practice listening to a conversation about accommodation options, including dorms, private houses, and YMCA beds, plus tips on maps, bus routes, and booking a room in advance.
Practice listening with conversation questions and prepare for the next video question answers in the TOEFL iBT course.
Practice conversation question answers for TOEFL iBT, exploring housing scenarios such as dorms, YMCA, and private houses, and identify what the accommodation officer provides, shared rooms, meals, and bus information.
Practice listening with pencil and paper, design a university facilities questionnaire, and prepare a 1000–1300 word report with a group presentation, using quantitative data and photos.
Practice conversation notes by planning an investigation of university facilities, including transport options, cycling facilities, questionnaires, data collection, and photography for a presentation.
practice conversation questions and prepare concise answers for the next video questions, strengthening spoken fluency and readiness for the toefl iBT speaking practice.
Practice conversation question answers through group presentation and individual reports (1000–1500 words) with questionnaires, while analyzing cafeteria, cycling facilities, and bike shelter at the university.
Explore the TOEFL iBT speaking section, a 20-minute segment with six questions. Learn to give opinions, summarize lectures and conversations, and articulate others' opinions.
Speak slowly and in short, easy-to-understand sentences, and enunciate clearly by moving your mouth for better clarity. Practice speaking into a microphone to prevent technical problems during the test.
Discover practical ways to find people to practice English, using Meetup and local English groups to schedule regular speaking sessions and improve communication with others.
Are you worried about your test? Do you feel lots of pressure to get a good score? Do you have no time to study?
I’ll make the TOEFL easy, so you won’t be worried or pressured, even if you don’t have a lot of time!
Don't worry if your English is bad.
No matter how bad your English, this class has short videos (under 3 minutes) that teach you 1 subject per video.
I break down the TOEFL test into little bits, so that you learn only 1 thing at a time.
"I don't know where to start! I don't have time!"
You can start right here.
You don't have to be overwhelmed. You just have to take very small steps.
I know you think that the test is big and scary, but this class will break down the test into understandable pieces.
I teach from the very basics, so by the time we finish, you will have lots of practice and experience with the TOEFL.
"How is this class different from the other classes?"
You will learn with pictures.
You will hear me speak "easy to understand English". I speak slowly, but clearly.
You will learn from someone who has more than 4 years of experience teaching TOEFL.
You will learn from someone who has taught over 10,000 students online.
I won't be repetitive and boring.
Are the videos good quality?
Yes, I use the best technology to record the videos.
The sound and videos are good quality, so you don't have to worry about technical problems.
I make sure that the questions, quizzes, and reading are clear and easy to read in the video.
Three reasons why you should take this class:
The Videos are short. most videos are less than 3 minutes long. Each video teaches you 1 thing, so it's easy to remember.
This entire class is short. I don't talk about useless things. I only talk about things that appear on the TOEFL that will help you.
You can see me (the teacher) in the video. I make sure that you continue to learn and not be bored.
"But it's expensive!"
Yes, because this is a good class.
You get what you pay for.
It's better to take this class than paying $200 USD to take the TOEFL, and fail.
Then you have to spend another $200 USD to take the TOEFL for a second time.
Why not invest in this class, and then take the TOEFL test only ONCE?
How the class is structured:
There are 110 videos.
Most videos are less than 3 minutes long. (So you won't get bored!)
We cover every section of the TOEFL (Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing)
You will get practice questions.
You will also get the answers, and an explanation of answers.
You will learn how to take notes on every section.
You will also get a list of things you should memorize.