Expert-Curated Preparation

Master the IELTS with Confidence

Dive into our comprehensive knowledge base designed by IELTS examiners. From band 9 strategies to time-management hacks, we've got you covered.

Free Guide

Yes/No/Not Given Logic Trainer (Reading)

Train Yes No Not Given with a logic grid that targets the writer voice. Learn to detect stance, polarity, and scope, separate facts from claims, and turn hedges into clear decisions. Use fast anchors to locate sentences, then run three tests to mark Yes, No, or Not Given with proof. Includes contrast table, mini labs, timing targets, and a repeatable drill plan for steady gains.

4 Minute Read
Last Updated 3 months ago

What Y N NG Really Tests

  • Yes: The writer’s view matches the statement in meaning.
  • No: The writer’s view clearly opposes the statement.
  • Not Given: The writer’s view on the key part is missing or incomplete.

Tip: Y N NG is about the author’s opinion or claim. Facts from others do not count unless the author clearly supports them.

Fast Contrast with T F NG

FeatureT F NGY N NG
FocusFactual contentAuthor stance
Proof clueData, events, definitionsAttitude verbs, modals, hedges
Common trapKeyword echoQuoted view vs author view

The Three Tests Before You Decide

  1. Voice test
    Is this the author’s stance or someone else’s? Look for signals: argue, claim, maintain, contend, suggest, according to, researchers report.
  2. Polarity test
    Do the statement and the author push the same way? Track not, lack, hardly, doubt, unlikely, fail to.
  3. Scope test
    Do the strength and limits match? Check all, most, many, some, only, exactly, at least, more than, often, rarely.

Decision rule

  • Pass all three with matching meaning → Yes
  • Same voice but opposite polarity or scope → No
  • Missing author voice or missing key scope detail → Not Given

Anchor and Prove Workflow

  1. Mark anchors: names, dates, rare nouns.
  2. Land in the zone within 15 to 25 seconds.
  3. Read context two lines up and down.
  4. Underline the stance word or phrase.
  5. Write a 6 to 10 word paraphrase of the author’s view.
  6. Apply the three tests and decide.

Stance Signal Bank

  • Attitude verbs: argue, insist, reject, support, prefer, recommend.
  • Hedges and boosters: may, might, likely, tends to, generally, could, clearly, strongly.
  • Contrast cues: however, although, yet, in spite of.
  • Attribution: according to X, a survey found, researchers state.
    • If the author does not endorse it, the stance may be Not Given.

Decision Grid You Can Copy

Statement saysText saysVoicePolarity or scopeDecision
Many teachers oppose phones in classThe author argues phones improve focus with rulesAuthorOppositeNo
The writer supports a tax on sugarThe writer recommends a tax trialAuthorSame stance, softer scopeYes if statement is general support
Most cities have adopted the planThe passage reports some cities did, author silentUnknownScope unclearNot Given

Mini Labs with Keys

  1. Claim: The writer believes museum entry should be free.
    Text: The author argues free days widen access and should be expanded.
    Decision: Yes. Support aligns with the claim.
  2. Claim: The author rejects online learning for young children.
    Text: Experts warn about screen time. The author says policies must be flexible.
    Decision: Not Given for rejection. No clear author stance against it.
  3. Claim: The writer says subsidies rarely help small firms.
    Text: The writer states subsidies often trap firms in low growth.
    Decision: Yes. Rarely help equals often harmful in meaning.
  4. Claim: The author thinks the trial failed.
    Text: According to a company report, the trial failed. The author later calls the results contested.
    Decision: Not Given for author stance.

Timing Targets

  • Locate zone: 15 to 25 seconds
  • Context read and paraphrase: 20 to 30 seconds
  • If voice is unclear after 45 seconds, mark NG candidate and move on.

Error Pattern Fixes

  • Quoted view trap: Highlight attribution phrases. Decide only after you find the author’s own words.
  • Hedge blindness: Circle modals and adverbs. Hedges can turn No into NG or Yes into NG.
  • Scope creep: Draw a box around quantifiers. If scope does not match and the author is clear, it is No.

10 Minute Trainer Circuit

  • Minute 1: Build a mini paraphrase bank for stance words.
  • Minutes 2 to 4: Do four Y N NG items only to identify voice. No answers yet.
  • Minutes 5 to 7: Add polarity and scope, then decide.
  • Minutes 8 to 10: Review two wrong items, rewrite the author stance in your words.

Self Check Card

  • I marked whose view it is.
  • I tested polarity words.
  • I matched scope and time.
  • I can quote or point to a proof phrase.
  • I avoided outside knowledge.

Answer Log Template

  • Q no | Statement summary | Proof phrase | Decision | Reason tag
  • Reason tags: voice missing, polarity flip, scope mismatch, hedge misread, time shift.

Use this trainer daily. When the author’s voice is clear and your paraphrase matches in meaning, mark Yes. When it pushes the other way, mark No. When the voice or key detail is absent, mark Not Given.