Rosie and Colin's Discussion on Human Geography Assignment — Cambridge IELTS 20 Academic 2025 TEST 2 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 20 Academic 2025 TEST 2

Rosie and Colin's Discussion on Human Geography Assignment

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(0:00) Part 3 You will hear two students, called Rosie and (0:06) Colin, discussing their Human Geography assignment. First, you have some time to look at questions (0:13) 21 to 25. Now listen carefully and answer questions 21 to 25.

(0:49) Colin, I'm really struggling to think of a topic for our Human Geography assignment. (0:53) Me too, Rosie. I'll tell you what, let's think about the different aspects of Human Geography (0:59) and see if we can narrow the topic down a bit to help us decide.

(1:04) OK. So one aspect is population. That would be all about population density and migration (1:09) and so on.

Lots of facts and statistics. Maybe a bit boring? (1:14) Yeah, but quite straightforward to find on the internet. (1:17) Suppose so.

How about health? I'd never thought about the links between that and geography (1:23) until Professor Lee gave us that lecture on cholera. How in the 19th century, a physician (1:28) used street plans and plans of water supplies to find the source of a cholera epidemic. (1:33) Yes, fascinating wasn't it? Or we could do something more general, like economies.

(1:40) So how financial and commercial factors are linked to the physical environment? (1:44) Yeah. I thought that had been taken off the syllabus (1:46) for this year. Has it? (1:48) I'm not sure, but it might be best to avoid it.

(1:51) OK. Maybe we could do something on culture. We had that lecture about culture and geography (1:58) last week.

I didn't get much out of that. (2:01) It was all so general and the lecturer didn't give any useful examples. (2:05) Yeah, I hardly took any notes.

It didn't seem worth it. (2:09) Me neither. We could focus on poverty.

(2:12) That's something that's a global problem. The trouble is, Dr Lee was saying, (2:16) that you have to be careful with some of the figures relating to poverty. (2:19) They're sometimes deliberately manipulated.

You mean the information gets changed for (2:25) political reasons? That sort of thing, yes. (2:31) Before you hear the rest of the discussion, you have some time to look at questions 26 to 30. (3:12) Now listen and answer questions 26 to 30.

(3:19) So what are we going to do our assignment on? I'll tell you what. One of the possibilities (3:24) we haven't discussed is urbanisation. And now over half the world's population lives in cities.

(3:31) That's really important. OK, good idea, Rosie. Let's do that.

(3:35) I love living in a big city, but of course there are problems. (3:38) Things like theft and robbery? Yes, but where I come from, that's linked (3:43) to another more serious issue, which is that a lot of people don't have jobs. That's getting worse (3:49) and worse.

And we also still have quite a lot of people who are homeless, though that's not quite (3:54) so bad as it was. It'd be nice to talk about some positive (3:57) developments, like some of the new developments on the outskirts of cities. (4:02) Yeah, they've opened some massive new shopping centres outside my city.

(4:06) Yeah, the same with mine, but it's meant a lot of the shops in the city centre are closing down. (4:12) But the outskirts are ideal for buildings that need a lot of space, like for conferences. (4:18) They've opened a couple of big ones.

Yes, we've got some too. (4:22) It'd be nicer to have more facilities for things like football too, (4:26) but that's not happening where I live. Same in my area.

(4:30) We could include something about developing disused industrial sites. (4:34) It seems like a good idea because you're not doing any harm to the natural environment. (4:38) Yeah, but aren't the buildings architecturally significant? (4:42) Not really.

And what people forget is that they often used quite dangerous materials, (4:48) chemicals and things, which haven't been properly cleared away, (4:51) so the whole site has to be made safe. (4:54) That can't be cheap, and I bet it's often not budgeted for. (4:58) You're right.

Have you read about Mazdar City? (5:01) In Abu Dhabi? Yes, it was designed to be a green city, wasn't it? (5:06) That might be a good example of a city which set out to depend entirely on renewable energy. (5:11) Yes, we should say something about that. It was designed to be totally pedestrianised too, (5:17) wasn't it? With the transport underground.

(5:20) Yes, and they had big plans for recycling to reduce waste to the lowest possible level. (5:26) But let's stick to talking about power sources. (5:28) Then there's that eco-town in England, Greenhill Abbots.

(5:33) It set out to conform to the usual principles, sustainability and so on. (5:38) A lot of people were against it at first. They said the plans were unrealistic.

(5:43) I'm not sure how far they've got with it. I'll check. (5:47) Right, so it looks as if we have a sort of plan.

(5:55) That is the end of part three. You now have 30 seconds to check your answers to part three.

Part 3 of 4

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