π IELTS β Reading: Matching Headings
Tutorial β’ Passage + Questions β’ Answer Key β’ Vocabulary β’ Phrases & Expressions β’ Vocabulary & Expression Quiz
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πΆ Part 1 β Tutorial & Strategy
How to Master Matching Headings: A Complete, Exam-Ready Playbook
Goal: Choose the heading that best captures the main idea of each paragraph (A, B, C, β¦). Ignore attractive details and focus on overall message.
Step 1 β Preview the Heading List Before Reading
Begin by scanning the headings carefully. In a topic like social media, headings may hint at psychological impacts, community changes, misinformation, or privacy. Note which headings sound broad (e.g., βWider cultural transformationβ) and which sound specific (e.g., βRise of online echo chambersβ). Expect broad headings to match synthesis paragraphs and specific ones to match focused descriptions. Group similar headings together so you can distinguish near-misses later. Remember: IELTS often repeats keywords in several places, so avoid word-spotting; you must detect the paragraphβs function and purpose.
Step 2 β Skim for the Gist of Each Paragraph
Read each paragraph quickly to capture its main argument. Look at opening and closing sentences: they often reveal whether the paragraph stresses positive effects (e.g., building communities), negative ones (e.g., mental health decline), or contrasts. Avoid over-focusing on examples such as a single study or statisticβthese are evidence, not the main idea. Reduce each paragraph to a single 5β7 word note like βOnline networks spread misinformationβ or βSocial media boosts activism.β These gist notes help you match headings later with confidence.
Step 3 β Analyse Heading Functions
Classify each heading: Is it describing a benefit, a harm, a cause, a solution, a contrast, or a trend? For instance, βMental health consequences of comparisonβ clearly signals a negative outcome, while βTools for political mobilisationβ indicates social benefit. Recognising function protects you from traps where the heading shares vocabulary but not purpose. Always ensure the whole paragraph fits the headingβnot just one sentence.
Step 4 β Shortlist, Eliminate, and Confirm
For each paragraph, shortlist two candidate headings. Test each against the paragraphβs emphasis: βDoes this heading cover all major points, or just part?β Eliminate those that ignore the concluding sentence or pivot. Cross off used headings to reduce confusion later. If unsure, leave a question mark and revisit after reading all paragraphs. Context from later paragraphs often clarifies earlier choices, especially in topics with overlapping themes like privacy, identity, and wellbeing.
Step 5 β Avoid Common Traps
Trap 1: Word-match illusion β e.g., a paragraph about online activism may contain the word βcommunity,β but the heading βEffects on family lifeβ would be wrong if activism is the core. Trap 2: Example magnet β case studies are vivid but only support broader claims. Trap 3: Background decoy β historical context (e.g., βearly 2000s chatroomsβ) may appear, but the key idea is in the conclusion. Trap 4: Synonym shuffle β headings may use paraphrases: βaddictionβ vs. βcompulsive use.β Train yourself to recognise meaning, not identical words.
Step 6 β Time and Final Review
Allocate about 1β2 minutes per paragraph. After finishing, check unused headingsβsometimes one leftover fits an uncertain paragraph. Re-read concluding sentences for doubtful matches. Ensure no two similar headings are applied side-by-side unless clearly supported. In the final minute, commit to your best guess: an attempted match scores better than leaving blanks.
Example Box 1 β Detail vs. Main Idea
Paragraph gist: βTeenagers spend long hours on platforms, but the author argues the central problem is anxiety from constant comparison.β
Correct heading: βMental health consequences of comparison.β
Why: The details (hours online) are secondary; the anxiety theme is the paragraphβs emphasis.
Example Box 2 β Positive vs. Negative
Paragraph gist: βMovements like #MeToo spread rapidly online, drawing global attention.β
Correct heading: βTools for political mobilisation.β
Why: The examples (hashtags) support the main idea: activism empowerment, not mental health effects.
Example Box 3 β Contrast Paragraph
Paragraph gist: βWhile platforms connect distant relatives, they also reduce face-to-face interaction.β
Correct heading: βConnections and their hidden costs.β
Why: The pivot βwhileβ highlights contrast, so a heading reflecting trade-off fits best.
Universal βFill-in-the-Gapβ Answer Template
- βFor Paragraph [__], I choose Heading [__] because the paragraph mainly [describes / contrasts / explains / evaluates].β
- βThe topic sentence introduces [key subject], framing the discussion around [main idea].β
- βSignal words like [however / while / therefore] show a [contrast / causeβeffect] structure.β
- βExamples such as [case] illustrate the main claim, not replace it.β
- βThe concluding line emphasises [key outcome], which aligns with the headingβs focus on [phrase].β
- βThe scope of the heading [matches / is broader than] the paragraphβs boundaries.β
- βAlthough [detail] appears, it is secondary; the main point is [gist].β
- βThe paragraphβs word [term] corresponds to the headingβs paraphrase [phrase].β
- βTherefore, Heading [__] best summarises Paragraph [__] by capturing its [dominant idea].β
Quick Warm-Up
Micro-paragraph: βDespite offering connection during isolation, many users report higher loneliness after extended scrolling.β
Choose: A) βA paradox of digital connectionβ β’ B) βRising online activismβ β’ C) βEducational benefits of media.β
Model justification: The paragraph contrasts connection with loneliness, so the correct heading is A, reflecting the paradox.
π· Part 2 β Reading Passage + Questions
[IELTS Academic] [Reading: Matching Headings] β Task
Instructions: Match the headings (iβxii) to the paragraphs (AβH). Write the correct Roman numeral next to each paragraph. There are more headings than paragraphs. Focus on the main idea of each paragraph.
β³ Countdown Timer
List of Headings
- The paradox of digital connection
- How social media shapes political activism
- The rise of online echo chambers
- Mental health effects of constant comparison
- Changing the way we consume news
- Family life under the influence of screens
- Opportunities for education and learning
- Concerns over privacy and personal data
- Influencer culture and digital identity
- Cyberbullying and its consequences
- The global reach of local voices
- Shifts in friendship and community bonds
There are more headings than paragraphs. Use each heading once at most.
Reading Passage β The Social Effects of Social Media
Paragraph A β Social media platforms were originally celebrated for connecting people across long distances, yet researchers have documented a paradox: while they offer unprecedented opportunities for communication, many users report heightened loneliness. Studies suggest that scrolling through feeds creates a sense of being surrounded by others without genuine interaction. The feeling of βalways connected but often aloneβ captures the contradiction of the digital era. Social media, instead of fully reducing isolation, often amplifies it by replacing quality conversations with superficial exchanges.
Paragraph B β Perhaps the most widely acknowledged effect of social media is its role in shaping activism. Movements that might once have taken years to gather attention can now reach millions in days. Campaigns such as #MeToo or climate strikes show how online platforms mobilise support, coordinate protests, and spread messages globally. Social media lowers barriers for entry into activism, giving individuals with limited resources the power to influence discourse and policy. Yet, the ease of participation has also sparked debates about βclicktivismβ and whether online gestures translate into lasting social change.
Paragraph C β A growing concern is the tendency for social media to create echo chambers, where users encounter only information that confirms their beliefs. Algorithms prioritise content similar to what people have already liked, inadvertently reinforcing biases and polarisation. As a result, individuals may become less tolerant of differing opinions, contributing to social division. This phenomenon not only affects political debates but also cultural and scientific discussions, narrowing the range of perspectives available to each user and diminishing the potential for constructive dialogue.
Paragraph D β Social mediaβs influence on mental health is complex. On the one hand, platforms can provide support communities for people facing challenges such as illness or discrimination. On the other hand, the same platforms encourage constant comparison. Users often showcase idealised versions of their lives, leading others to experience feelings of inadequacy, anxiety, or depression. Psychological studies show a correlation between heavy use and reduced self-esteem, especially among teenagers. The pressure to curate a perfect digital self often overshadows authentic self-expression.
Paragraph E β Beyond social interactions, platforms have transformed how news is produced and consumed. Traditional media outlets now compete with millions of independent accounts. While this democratises information, it also accelerates the spread of misinformation. Algorithms prioritise speed and engagement over accuracy, making false stories travel faster than corrections. For many users, social media has become the primary news source, raising concerns about the reliability of information and the challenges of distinguishing between credible journalism and misleading narratives.
Paragraph F β Within households, the omnipresence of screens has reshaped family dynamics. Parents and children often sit in the same room, each absorbed in their devices. Meal times once reserved for conversation are increasingly interrupted by notifications. While families can share experiences online, such as posting holiday photos, critics warn that the constant digital presence fragments attention and reduces meaningful interaction. The balance between digital connectivity and family cohesion remains a contested issue in contemporary life.
Paragraph G β Another hallmark of the social media age is the rise of influencer culture. Ordinary individuals can achieve celebrity status by building large followings, shaping trends in fashion, beauty, and lifestyle. While this creates new opportunities for entrepreneurship and self-branding, it also fosters pressures to maintain a curated identity. Followers, in turn, may measure their self-worth against influencersβ seemingly perfect lives. The phenomenon blurs the line between authentic expression and commercialised self-presentation, reinforcing the commodification of identity.
Paragraph H β Among the darker effects of social media is cyberbullying. Unlike traditional bullying, which is limited to specific places and times, cyberbullying can reach victims anywhere, at any time. The anonymity of the internet emboldens aggressors, while the permanence of digital messages magnifies harm. Victims often report severe emotional consequences, including anxiety, isolation, and in extreme cases, self-harm. Despite awareness campaigns, platforms struggle to police harmful content, leaving significant challenges for educators, parents, and policymakers.
Answer Sheet
Your Selections
π£ Part 3 β Answer Key
[IELTS Academic] [Reading: Matching Headings] β Sample Answer
Model Answer Key (AβH)
Paragraph A β I β The paradox of digital connection
Paragraph B β II β How social media shapes political activism
Paragraph C β III β The rise of online echo chambers
Paragraph D β IV β Mental health effects of constant comparison
Paragraph E β V β Changing the way we consume news
Paragraph F β VI β Family life under the influence of screens
Paragraph G β IX β Influencer culture and digital identity
Paragraph H β X β Cyberbullying and its consequences
Justification β Paragraph A
Choice: Heading I.
The topic line introduces a contradiction: unprecedented connection with rising loneliness. Signal words like βyetβ and βwhileβ cue contrast as the paragraphβs structure. Examples (endless feeds, superficial exchanges) supportβnot replaceβthe main claim. The concluding idea (βalways connected but often aloneβ) restates the paradox, aligning precisely with the heading. Near-miss headings about community bonds or friendship shifts are too broad; the paragraphβs emphasis is the contradiction itself. Scope and function therefore match Heading I.
Justification β Paragraph B
Choice: Heading II.
The paragraph highlights mobilisation: movements scale quickly via platforms. Case labels (#MeToo, climate strikes) are evidence for the function βpolitical activism.β A brief caveat about βclicktivismβ refines the claim but does not change the main focus. Headings on global reach or news consumption are adjacent but secondary here. Function = how activism is shaped β Heading II is the precise fit.
Justification β Paragraph C
Choice: Heading III.
Core idea: algorithmic personalisation fosters echo chambers and polarisation. Wording such as βprioritise content similar to what people have already likedβ signals mechanism. Effects span politics, culture, and scienceβevidence of breadth but one main function: entrenchment of like-minded views. Other headings (news, privacy) miss this emphasis. Hence Heading III matches the paragraphβs function and scope.
Justification β Paragraph D
Choice: Heading IV.
The paragraph weighs support communities versus harms of comparison, but the emphasis settles on anxiety, low self-esteem, and curated perfection. Signal phrases (βon the other handβ) mark a contrast, yet the conclusion centres on comparison-driven distress, especially for teens. This aligns with βmental health effects of constant comparison.β Near-miss options (influencers) overlap, but the paragraph discusses general users, not the influencer economy specifically.
Justification β Paragraph E
Choice: Heading V.
Function: transformation of news production/consumption and the rise of misinformation. Mechanism: algorithms reward speed/engagement over accuracy. The heading that mentions βconsume newsβ captures both cause and effect. Headings about echo chambers are related but already used for C; here the angle is news ecology itself. Therefore Heading V is the best summary.
Justification β Paragraph F
Choice: Heading VI.
Focus: household routines and attention fragmentationβscreens at meals, parallel scrolling, reduced conversation. The paragraphβs scope is family life (parents/children, shared spaces). Headings about friendship or community bonds are too broad; activism/news/influencers are off-topic. Emphasis and boundaries align with βfamily life under the influence of screens.β
Justification β Paragraph G
Choice: Heading IX.
Main idea: influencer culture and self-branding pressures; followers compare themselves to polished identities. Terms like βcurated identityβ and βcommodification of identityβ signal digital identity as the organising concept. Alternatives (mental health, privacy) touch similar vocabulary but miss the commercialised identity angle. Thus Heading IX is a precise functional match.
Justification β Paragraph H
Choice: Heading X.
Defining traits: anonymity, permanence of messages, any-time reach β specific harms of cyberbullying. The paragraph lists consequences (anxiety, isolation, self-harm) and governance difficulty, all consistent with the heading. Other headings (privacy, community) are background themes at best; the dominant idea is cyberbullying. Hence Heading X fits fully.
Why This Answer Is Strong β Step-by-Step Rationale
- Function-first matching: Each choice was made by identifying the paragraphβs rhetorical function (contrast, mechanism, evaluation) before vocabulary overlap.
- Topic vs. detail control: Vivid examples (hashtags, dinner notifications) were treated as evidence serving a larger claim, not as the claim itself.
- Opening/closing emphasis: Topic and concluding sentences were prioritised, ensuring the heading reflects the paragraphβs final emphasis (e.g., Aβs paradox; Dβs comparison harm).
- Scope alignment: Headings chosen neither over-generalise nor under-state the paragraph (e.g., F stays within βfamily,β not all βcommunityβ).
- Trap rejection: Near-miss headings were eliminated when they matched only a sub-idea (e.g., news vs. echo chambers in E vs. C).
- Synonym awareness: Conceptual paraphrases were mapped (e.g., βcurated identityβ β βdigital identityβ).
- Non-duplication discipline: Overlapping themes (mental health vs. influencers) were separated by checking which heading captured the paragraphβs governing idea.
- Signal words used: βYet,β βwhile,β βon the other hand,β and mechanism terms (algorithms, personalisation) guided contrast/cause-effect identification.
- Distribution check: Headings represent a sensible variety across the passage (paradox, activism, echo chambers, mental health, news, family, identity, safety).
- Evidence role clear: Specific cases (#MeToo) validated Heading II without hijacking the main function.
- Boundary policing: Privacy/education/global-reach headings were intentionally left unused because no paragraphβs main idea centred on them.
- Consistency with task brief: The answers use Roman-numeral headings exactly as listed, one per paragraph, with surplus headings left over.
- Resilience to synonym traps: For C, βecho chambersβ encompasses polarisation and intoleranceβbroader than mere βnews filters,β preventing mis-match with E.
- Audience cues considered: Teen references in D support mental-health emphasis but do not shift to βeducationβ or βfamilyβ headings.
- Mechanism vs. symptom: E focuses on how news is produced/consumed (mechanism), not only the symptom of polarised feeds (C).
- Contrast paragraphs handled: A and D include both sides; headings reflect the side the author finally underscores (paradox; comparison harms).
- Contextual coherence: Choices form a logical arc of social effects: personal (A, D), civic (B, C, E), domestic (F), identity economy (G), safety (H).
- IELTS best practices: Every paragraph received one definitive heading; uncertain overlaps were resolved by final-sentence emphasis checks.
- Time-efficiency: The method supports rapid elimination in exam conditionsβuseful for maintaining pace across the section.
π’ Part 4 β Vocabulary
[IELTS Academic] [Reading: Matching Headings] β Vocabulary Builder
Twenty key words from The Social Effects of Social Media. Each entry shows BrE/AmE IPA, part(s) of speech, patterns, a concise definition, an example with a gloss, synonyms, and common learner mistakes.
Paradox /ΛpΓ¦r.Ι.dΙks/ (BrE), /ΛpΓ¦r.Ι.dΙΛks/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: a paradox of X and Y
Definition: A situation with two seemingly opposite truths that coexist.
Example: βBeing always connected yet feeling lonely is a social media paradox.β (Means: connection and loneliness happen together.)
Synonyms: contradiction, inconsistency.
Mistakes: β Writing βparadoxeβ; β using it for a simple problem rather than a true contradiction.
Activism /ΛΓ¦k.tΙͺ.vΙͺ.zΙm/ (BrE), /ΛΓ¦k.tΙΛvΙͺ.zΙm/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: activism for/against cause
Definition: Actions to support political or social change.
Example: βHashtags helped turn online activism into street protests.β (Meaning: posts enabled real-world action.)
Synonyms: advocacy, campaigning.
Mistakes: β Confusing with βactivityβ; β assuming it is only offline.
Mobilise / Mobilize /ΛmΙΚ.bΙͺ.laΙͺz/ (BrE), /ΛmoΚ.bΙͺ.laΙͺz/ (AmE)
Verb β pattern: mobilise people/resources to do sth
Definition: To organise and move people to take action.
Example: βThe campaign mobilised thousands within a day.β (Meaning: it gathered people to act.)
Synonyms: rally, galvanise.
Mistakes: β Using only for the military; β spelling βmobiliseβ/βmobilizeβ inconsistently within one text.
Echo chamber /ΛekΙΚ ΛtΚeΙͺm.bΙ/ (BrE), /ΛekoΚ ΛtΚeΙͺm.bΙ/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: an echo chamber of views
Definition: An environment where similar opinions are repeated and opposing views are rarely seen.
Example: βFeeds can become an echo chamber that confirms our beliefs.β (Meaning: we mostly see ideas we agree with.)
Synonyms: filter bubble.
Mistakes: β Treating it as a physical room; β hyphenating randomly (βecho-chamberβ) in formal writing.
Algorithm /ΛΓ¦l.Ι‘Ι.rΙͺΓ°.Ιm/ (BrE), /ΛΓ¦l.Ι‘ΙΛrΙͺΓ°.Ιm/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: an algorithm for ranking/recommending
Definition: A set of instructions used by platforms to decide what content to show.
Example: βThe algorithm prioritised engaging posts over accurate ones.β (Meaning: it ranked by reactions, not truth.)
Synonyms: formula, procedure (context-dependent).
Mistakes: β Writing βalgorismβ; β assuming all algorithms are neutral.
Polarisation / Polarization /ΛpΙΚ.lΙ.raΙͺΛzeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /ΛpoΚ.lΙ.ΙΛzeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: political/cultural polarisation
Definition: The process by which opinions move to the extremes with little middle ground.
Example: βEcho chambers can intensify polarisation.β (Meaning: they push people to extremes.)
Synonyms: division, partisanship.
Mistakes: β Using only for magnets/science; β spelling mix (βpolarizationβ within BrE text).
Bias /ΛbaΙͺ.Ιs/ (BrE & AmE)
Noun β pattern: bias toward/against X
Definition: Unfair preference or prejudice.
Example: βRecommendation systems may show bias against minority views.β (Meaning: unfairly downrank them.)
Synonyms: prejudice, partiality.
Mistakes: β Using βbiasβ as a verb where βbias againstβ is needed; β pluralising as βbiasesβ incorrectly in formal tone (though it exists).
Misinformation /ΛmΙͺs.Ιͺn.fΙΛmeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /ΛmΙͺs.Ιͺn.fΙΛmeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: spread/dissemination of misinformation
Definition: False or inaccurate information spread without necessarily intending to deceive.
Example: βMisinformation often travels faster than corrections.β (Meaning: false news outpaces fact-checks.)
Synonyms: falsehoods, inaccurate claims.
Mistakes: β Confusing with βdisinformationβ (which implies intent to deceive).
Engagement /ΙͺnΛΙ‘eΙͺdΚ.mΙnt/ (BrE & AmE)
Noun β pattern: user engagement with content
Definition: The level of interaction (likes, comments, shares) with content.
Example: βThe platform optimised for engagement, not accuracy.β (Meaning: it valued reactions more than truth.)
Synonyms: interaction, participation.
Mistakes: β Using only for βmarriage engagement.β
Curate /kjΚΙΛreΙͺt/ (BrE), /kjΚΛreΙͺt/ (AmE)
Verb β pattern: curate a feed/profile/collection
Definition: To select and organise content carefully.
Example: βUsers curate profiles to show ideal lives.β (Meaning: they choose only the best parts.)
Synonyms: arrange, select, assemble.
Mistakes: β Pronouncing like βcure-eightβ; β using only for museums.
Self-esteem /Λself ΙͺΛstiΛm/ (BrE & AmE)
Noun β pattern: high/low self-esteem; impact on self-esteem
Definition: A personβs confidence in their own value.
Example: βConstant comparison can reduce self-esteem in teens.β (Meaning: they feel less confident.)
Synonyms: self-worth, confidence.
Mistakes: β Writing βselfsteamβ; β hyphen usage inconsistent (βself esteemβ).
Comparison /kΙmΛpΓ¦r.Ιͺ.sΙn/ (BrE), /kΙmΛpΓ¦r.Ι.sΙn/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: comparison with/to others
Definition: Examining how things or people are similar or different.
Example: βFeeds encourage comparison with idealised images.β (Meaning: users measure themselves against filtered posts.)
Synonyms: contrast, benchmarking.
Mistakes: β Using βcompareβ as a noun; β missing prepositions (βcomparison to/ withβ).
Influencer /ΛΙͺn.flu.Ιn.sΙ/ (BrE), /ΛΙͺn.flu.Ιn.sΙ/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: influencer in niche/industry
Definition: A person who can shape opinions or buying choices because of their large online following.
Example: βInfluencers monetise attention through brand deals.β (Meaning: they earn from promoting products.)
Synonyms: creator (context), tastemaker.
Mistakes: β Using as a verb (βto influencerβ); β spelling βinfluancer.β
Identity /aΙͺΛden.tΙͺ.ti/ (BrE), /aΙͺΛden.tΜ¬Ι.ti/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: digital/social identity; identity formation
Definition: Who someone is, including the image they present online.
Example: βPlatforms shape how young people construct identity.β (Meaning: they build who they are/appear to be.)
Synonyms: self, persona.
Mistakes: β Confusing identity with βidenticalβ; β writing βidentitty.β
Commodification /kΙΛmΙd.Ιͺ.fΙͺΛkeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /kΙΛmΙΛ.dΙ.fΙΛkeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: commodification of identity/attention
Definition: Turning something (e.g., attention, image) into a product to be bought and sold.
Example: βInfluencer culture drives the commodification of identity.β (Meaning: identity becomes a marketable product.)
Synonyms: commercialisation, monetisation.
Mistakes: β Spelling drift (βcommoditizationβ in BrE text) unless style requires it.
Cyberbullying /ΛsaΙͺ.bΙΛbΚl.i.ΙͺΕ/ (BrE), /ΛsaΙͺ.bΙΛbΚl.i.ΙͺΕ/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: cyberbullying of target/group
Definition: Bullying that happens via digital devices and platforms.
Example: βCyberbullying can follow victims everywhere, anytime.β (Meaning: it is not limited by place/time.)
Synonyms: online harassment, digital abuse.
Mistakes: β Writing βcyber-bullyβ for the act instead of βcyberbullying.β
Anonymity /ΛΓ¦n.ΙΛnΙͺm.Ιͺ.ti/ (BrE), /ΛΓ¦n.ΙΛnΙͺm.Ι.ti/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: anonymity of users/posters
Definition: The state of not being identified by name.
Example: βAnonymity can embolden abusive behaviour online.β (Meaning: hidden identity increases risk of abuse.)
Synonyms: namelessness, obscurity.
Mistakes: β Confusing with βautonomyβ; β misplacing stress in pronunciation.
Permanence /ΛpΙΛ.mΙ.nΙns/ (BrE), /ΛpΙΛ.mΙ.nΙns/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: the permanence of posts/records
Definition: The quality of lasting or remaining accessible.
Example: βThe permanence of messages can magnify harm.β (Meaning: posts endure and continue to hurt.)
Synonyms: durability, persistence.
Mistakes: β Thinking deletions erase all copies; β writing βpermanancy.β
Moderation /ΛmΙd.ΙΛreΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /ΛmΙΛ.dΙΛreΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: content moderation of platform/space
Definition: The process of reviewing and managing posts to enforce rules.
Example: βEffective moderation reduces harmful content.β (Meaning: rule-enforcement lowers risks.)
Synonyms: oversight, governance (contextual).
Mistakes: β Confusing with βmoderationβ = not extreme (different sense); rely on context.
Discourse /ΛdΙͺs.kΙΛs/ (BrE), /ΛdΙͺs.kΙΛrs/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: public/online discourse about topic
Definition: Serious discussion or communication of ideas, especially in public.
Example: βPlatforms reshape public discourse on science and culture.β (Meaning: they change how society talks about them.)
Synonyms: debate, dialogue.
Mistakes: β Pronouncing as βdis-courseβ with equal stress; β using it for a short casual chat.
π Part 5 β Phrases & Expressions
[IELTS Academic] [Reading: Matching Headings] β Phrases & Expressions
Twenty high-utility expressions from The Social Effects of Social Media. Each item shows BrE/AmE IPA, part(s) of speech, patterns, a clear definition, an example + gloss, synonyms (where useful), and common learner mistakes.
go viral /Ι‘ΙΚ ΛvaΙͺ.rΙl/ (BrE), /Ι‘oΚ ΛvaΙͺ.rΙl/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: content/post + goes viral
Definition: To spread extremely quickly online.
Example: βThe clip went viral overnight.β (Meaning: millions saw it very fast.)
Synonyms: explode online, blow up (informal).
Mistakes: β βbe viralβ for events; use go/went viral.
doomscrolling /ΛduΛmΛskrΙΚ.lΙͺΕ/ (BrE), /ΛduΛmΛskroΚ.lΙͺΕ/ (AmE)
Noun/gerund β pattern: engage in/avoid doomscrolling
Definition: Compulsively scrolling through negative news.
Example: βLate-night doomscrolling made her anxious.β (Meaning: the habit increased her anxiety.)
Synonyms: doom-surfing (less common).
Mistakes: β βdoom scrollingβ (prefer closed compound in formal style).
signal-boost (something) /ΛsΙͺΙ‘.nΙl buΛst/ (BrE/AmE)
Verb β pattern: signal-boost a cause/message
Definition: To amplify a message by sharing it widely.
Example: βUsers signal-boosted the fundraiser.β (Meaning: they shared to reach more people.)
Synonyms: amplify, promote.
Mistakes: β Using only as noun; treat as a verb here.
call to action (CTA) /ΛkΙΛl tuΛ ΛΓ¦k.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /ΛkΙΛl tΙ ΛΓ¦k.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Noun phrase β pattern: a call to action to do sth
Definition: A prompt that urges people to take a specific step.
Example: βThe post ended with a clear call to action: donate today.β (Meaning: it asked readers to donate.)
Synonyms: rallying cry, prompt.
Mistakes: β βcall of actionβ (incorrect preposition).
filter bubble /ΛfΙͺl.tΙ ΛbΚb.Ιl/ (BrE), /ΛfΙͺl.tΙ ΛbΚb.Ιl/ (AmE)
Noun phrase β pattern: live in a filter bubble
Definition: A personalised info-space that hides opposing views.
Example: βHe realised he was inside a filter bubble.β (Meaning: he saw only similar opinions.)
Synonyms: echo chamber.
Mistakes: β Random hyphenation (βfilter-bubbleβ).
clicktivism /ΛklΙͺk.tΙͺΛvΙͺz.Ιm/ (BrE), /ΛklΙͺk.tΙΛvΙͺz.Ιm/ (AmE)
Noun β pattern: criticised as mere clicktivism
Definition: Online activism limited to low-effort actions (likes, shares).
Example: βCritics called it clicktivism rather than real change.β (Meaning: actions were superficial.)
Synonyms: slacktivism (informal).
Mistakes: β βclick activismβ (prefer single word).
curate a feed /kjΚΙΛreΙͺt Ι fiΛd/ (BrE), /kjΚΛreΙͺt Ι fiΛd/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: curate your feed/profile
Definition: Select what appears on your profile or timeline.
Example: βShe curated her feed to look professional.β (Meaning: chose posts to fit a brand.)
Synonyms: organise, tailor.
Mistakes: β Using βcreate a feedβ when selection is meant.
compare oneself to others /kΙmΛpeΙ wΚnΛself tΙ ΛΚΓ°.Ιz/ (BrE), /kΙmΛpΙr wΚnΛself tΙ ΛΚΓ°.Ιz/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: compare oneself to/with people
Definition: Judge your value by other peopleβs posts.
Example: βHe kept comparing himself to others online.β (Meaning: their posts made him feel worse.)
Synonyms: measure oneself against.
Mistakes: β Missing reflexive (βcompare himselfβ).
under the influence of screens /ΛΚn.dΙ Γ°i ΛΙͺn.flu.Ιns Ιv skriΛnz/ (BrE), /ΛΚn.dΙ Γ°i ΛΙͺn.flu.Ιns Ιv skriΛnz/ (AmE)
Prepositional phrase β pattern: family life under the influence of screens
Definition: Strongly affected by device use.
Example: βMeals were under the influence of screens.β (Meaning: phones disrupted conversation.)
Synonyms: dominated by screens.
Mistakes: β βinfluence of the screensβ (article usually dropped).
shape public opinion /ΚeΙͺp ΛpΚb.lΙͺk ΙΛpΙͺn.jΙn/ (BrE/AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: shape public opinion on issue
Definition: Influence how society thinks about a topic.
Example: βHashtags helped shape public opinion on policy.β (Meaning: they influenced attitudes.)
Synonyms: sway, mould.
Mistakes: β βshape the publicβs opinionsβ (awkward pluralisation).
spread misinformation /sprΙd ΛmΙͺs.Ιͺn.fΙΛmeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /sprΙd ΛmΙͺs.Ιͺn.fΙΛmeΙͺ.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: spread / combat misinformation
Definition: Circulate false information without proven intent.
Example: βThe rumour spread misinformation rapidly.β (Meaning: false claims travelled fast.)
Synonyms: circulate false claims.
Mistakes: β Confusing with disinformation (intentional).
fact-check a claim /ΛfΓ¦kt ΛtΚek Ι kleΙͺm/ (BrE/AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: fact-check + statement/claim
Definition: Verify whether a statement is true.
Example: βJournalists fact-checked the viral post.β (Meaning: they tested its truth.)
Synonyms: verify, corroborate.
Mistakes: β βfact checkβ as two words inconsistently in formal writing.
online harassment /ΛΙnΛlaΙͺn hΙΛrΓ¦s.mΙnt/ (BrE), /ΛΙΛnΛlaΙͺn hΙΛrΓ¦smΙnt/ (AmE)
Noun phrase β pattern: be targeted by online harassment
Definition: Aggressive or abusive behaviour on digital platforms.
Example: βOnline harassment escalated after the post.β (Meaning: abuse increased.)
Synonyms: cyber-abuse, trolling (contextual).
Mistakes: β Stressing the first syllable (*ΛhΓ¦r.*) in BrE; use hΙΛrΓ¦s-.
digital footprint /ΛdΙͺdΚ.Ιͺ.tΙl ΛfΚt.prΙͺnt/ (BrE/AmE)
Noun phrase β pattern: leave/erase a digital footprint
Definition: The trace of data you leave online.
Example: βJob recruiters checked her digital footprint.β (Meaning: they reviewed her online record.)
Synonyms: data trail.
Mistakes: β Assuming deletions remove all traces.
build a following /bΙͺld Ι ΛfΙl.ΙΚ.ΙͺΕ/ (BrE), /bΙͺld Ι ΛfΙΛ.loΚ.ΙͺΕ/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: build/grow a following of N
Definition: Gain many regular viewers or fans.
Example: βShe built a following through tutorials.β (Meaning: attracted steady supporters.)
Synonyms: grow an audience.
Mistakes: β βmake a followingβ (use build/grow).
monetise / monetize attention /ΛmΙn.Ιͺ.taΙͺz ΙΛten.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /ΛmΙΛ.nΙ.taΙͺz ΙΛtΙn.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: monetise attention through ads/sponsorships
Definition: Turn peopleβs focus into money.
Example: βCreators monetise attention via brand deals.β (Meaning: they earn from viewersβ interest.)
Synonyms: commercialise, cash in on.
Mistakes: β Inconsistent BrE/AmE spelling within one document.
give local voices global reach /Ι‘Ιͺv ΛlΙΚ.kΙl ΛvΙΙͺ.sΙͺz ΛΙ‘lΙΚ.bΙl riΛtΚ/ (BrE), /Ι‘Ιͺv ΛloΚ.kΙl ΛvΙΙͺ.sΙͺz ΛΙ‘loΚ.bΙl riΛtΚ/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: give X global reach
Definition: Allow local messages to be heard worldwide.
Example: βPlatforms gave local voices global reach.β (Meaning: small groups gained a world audience.)
Synonyms: amplify globally.
Mistakes: β βglobal reachesβ (use uncountable noun).
always-on connectivity /ΛΙΛl.weΙͺz Ιn ΛkΙn.ekΛtΙͺv.Ιͺ.ti/ (BrE), /ΛΙΛl.weΙͺz ΙΛn kΙΛnΙkΛtΙͺv.Ιͺ.tΜ¬i/ (AmE)
Noun phrase β pattern: live with always-on connectivity
Definition: Being connected to the internet all the time.
Example: βAlways-on connectivity blurs work and home.β (Meaning: no clear break from being online.)
Synonyms: constant connection.
Mistakes: β βalways on-connectivityβ (misplaced hyphen).
tighten privacy settings /ΛtaΙͺ.tΙn ΛpraΙͺ.vΙ.si Λset.ΙͺΕz/ (BrE), /ΛtaΙͺ.tΙn ΛpraΙͺ.vΙ.si ΛsΙ.tΜ¬ΙͺΕz/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: tighten / review privacy settings
Definition: Make your account less accessible.
Example: βShe tightened privacy settings after the spam.β (Meaning: restricted who could see her.)
Synonyms: lock down, restrict visibility.
Mistakes: β βprivacies settingsβ (privacy is uncountable).
prioritise / prioritize meaningful interaction /praΙͺΛΙr.Ιͺ.taΙͺz ΛmiΛ.nΙͺΕ.fΙl ΛΙͺn.tΙΛrΓ¦k.ΚΙn/ (BrE), /praΙͺΛΙΛr.Ι.taΙͺz ΛmiΛ.nΙͺΕ.fΙl ΛΙͺn.tΜ¬ΙΛrΓ¦k.ΚΙn/ (AmE)
Verb phrase β pattern: prioritise meaningful interaction over X
Definition: Give more value to deep conversation than to surface engagement.
Example: βApps should prioritise meaningful interaction over clicks.β (Meaning: focus on quality, not numbers.)
Synonyms: favour substantial engagement.
Mistakes: β βpriorityβ as a verb; use prioritise/prioritize.
πΊ Part 6 β Vocabulary & Expressions Quiz
[IELTS Academic] [Reading: Matching Headings] β Interactive Exercise
Youβll get 10 random MCQs from a 50-question pool based on the passage, the tutorial strategies, vocabulary, and expressions. Choose an option to see an immediate, detailed explanation (β10 sentences). Retake to get a fresh set.
Attempt Summary
Review your choices and the key takeaways. Retake the quiz for a new random set of questions.