Toeic | Test Training

The TOEIC is not a test of your best English. It’s a test of your average English under suboptimal conditions.

So train the pressure. Train the fatigue. Train the strategy.

Let’s break down what the TOEIC actually measures—and how to train differently.

The TOEIC Listening & Reading lasts 2 hours. By question 120, your brain is running on fumes. The easy mistakes happen here: mishearing a number, skipping a word, second-guessing a correct answer. Toeic Test Training

If you always do medium-difficulty questions and get 80% right, you aren’t improving. You’re rehearsing.

The worst thing you can do is try to write everything down. By the time you finish a word, the speaker is two sentences ahead.

Most people prepare for the TOEIC backward. The TOEIC is not a test of your best English

Deep training means doing full 200-question simulations—with the same timing, same answer sheet, no breaks. You aren’t just training English. You’re training your attention span.

The grammar will follow.

Most people train in 20-minute sprints. That’s a mistake. Train the fatigue

Not because they don’t know English. But because they’ve trained for knowledge—not for performance.

But when exam day comes, they freeze.

You don’t rise to the level of your hopes. You fall to the level of your training.

They buy a vocabulary book. They memorize "despite vs. although." They take 20 practice tests hoping the answers will eventually stick.