Skip to content

Hkdse 2013 English Paper 3 Recording New [patched] May 2026

HKDSE 2013 English Language Paper 3 – Listening & Integrated Skills: A Comprehensive Review

3. Part B – Integrated Tasks (2013 Context)

Students received a data file (brochures, emails, tables, news clippings) and listened to a second recording (e.g., a supervisor’s instructions, a team meeting, or a phone message). The 2013 scenario was likely organizing a school cultural festival.

Typical tasks:

Critical skill: Cross-referencing spoken instructions with written materials to avoid contradictions.

5. Scoring & Grade Boundaries (2013 HKDSE English Paper 3)

| Level | Approximate % correct (Paper 3 only) | |-------|--------------------------------------| | 5** | 85%+ | | 5 | 77–84% | | 4 | 68–76% | | 3 | 55–67% | | 2 | 45–54% | hkdse 2013 english paper 3 recording new

Part B carried double the weight of Part A in raw marks.

Modern Takeaways for the Hardest Questions

Let's synthesize new insights from the 2013 recording that apply to your upcoming mock exam.

Old Method: Listen for the exact keyword from the question. New Method (inspired by 2013): Listen for paraphrasing. HKDSE 2013 English Language Paper 3 – Listening

In the 2013 B2 recording, the question asked for "objections to the proposal." The recording never said "objection." It said:

If you only listened for the word "objection," you got zero points. You need to download a vocabulary set of synonyms for agreement/disagreement.

2. Part A – Listening Tasks (2013 Specifics)

Candidates listened to a single continuous recording with 4–5 short tasks. Topics from 2013 included: Write an email to a guest speaker confirming logistics

Key skill tested: Extracting specific factual details under time pressure.

2. The Map Madness (Part A, Q2)

Context: A security guard giving directions in a shopping mall (a common HKDSE trope). Challenge: The 2013 map used absolute directions ("north-eastern corner") mixed with relative directions ("to the right of the fountain, as you face the escalator"). New Strategy: Do not listen for left/right based on your paper. Draw a compass rose (N,S,E,W) on the map before the recording starts. Rotate your mindset into the speaker's shoes.

Task Example: Responding to a Conversation

If you're asked to respond to a conversation or a question based on a recording, consider the following: