{"id":5535,"date":"2026-06-17T00:09:21","date_gmt":"2026-06-17T00:09:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/toeic-preparation-taiwan-pros-2026\/"},"modified":"2026-06-17T00:09:21","modified_gmt":"2026-06-17T00:09:21","slug":"toeic-preparation-taiwan-pros-2026","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/fr\/toeic-preparation-taiwan-pros-2026\/","title":{"rendered":"\u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099: 9 Proven TOEIC Steps Taiwan Pros Use (2026)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Hitting \u591a\u76ca\u6eff\u5206 in Taiwan starts with one boring fact: ETS reports the global average TOEIC Listening &#038; Reading score sits around <strong>584<\/strong>, while Taiwan&#8217;s average hovers in the low 540s \u2014 meaning most candidates who walk into the test cold finish below the 550 cutoff their HR department actually cares about. Effective \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 is the difference between a 600 that gets ignored and a 750+ that lands the interview. This guide walks through 9 steps that Taiwan professionals \u2014 engineers, marketers, fresh graduates \u2014 use to push past 800, with the parts of the test most learners skip until it&#8217;s too late.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/toeic-preparation-taipei-skyline-r.jpg\" alt=\"Taipei skyline TOEIC preparation Taiwan job market\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><em>Taipei skyline \u2014 TOEIC scores still drive hiring across Taiwan&#8217;s white-collar sector. \u591a\u76ca\u5206\u6578\u4ecd\u662f\u53f0\u7063\u767d\u9818\u8077\u5834\u9304\u53d6\u7684\u95dc\u9375\u6307\u6a19.<\/em><\/p>\n<h2>1. Why a Smart \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 Plan Beats Brute Force [\u70ba\u4ec0\u9ebc\u7b56\u7565\u52dd\u904e\u786c\u80cc]<\/h2>\n<p>Most Taiwanese test-takers approach \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 the same way they once approached \u5927\u5b78\u6307\u8003: buy a thick book, grind chapters in order, hope for the best. That strategy stalls around 650 because TOEIC is not a knowledge test \u2014 it&#8217;s a pattern-recognition test. The question types repeat. The traps repeat. Knowing the patterns is worth more than knowing 5,000 extra words.<\/p>\n<p>The truth is, most candidates who score below 700 aren&#8217;t short on English; they&#8217;re short on test-format familiarity. Two months of structured \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 \u2014 diagnostic, vocabulary system, daily listening, weekly mocks \u2014 routinely beats six months of unstructured reading. Treat this article as the structure, not as another textbook to bookmark.<\/p>\n<h2>2. The TOEIC Test in Plain English [TOEIC \u8003\u8a66\u7d50\u69cb]<\/h2>\n<p>The TOEIC Listening &#038; Reading test runs 2 hours, 200 multiple-choice questions, 990 maximum score. The split is fixed and worth memorizing before you study anything else: 45 minutes of Listening (100 questions, Parts 1\u20134) followed by 75 minutes of Reading (100 questions, Parts 5\u20137). According to ETS, the test is delivered in over 160 countries, and Taiwan accounts for one of the largest TOEIC test populations in Asia.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/toeic-test-structure-exam-paper-r.jpg\" alt=\"TOEIC test structure 200 question multiple choice exam paper\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><em>200 questions, 7 parts, 120 minutes \u2014 TOEIC is a stamina test as much as an English test. \u591a\u76ca\u662f\u82f1\u6587\u529b\u8207\u8010\u529b\u7684\u96d9\u91cd\u8003\u9a57.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Here&#8217;s the part most \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 guides skim: each section weights equally toward your final score (495 Listening + 495 Reading), but the time pressure is brutal in Reading. You have roughly 75 seconds per question in Part 5 (single-sentence grammar), but only about 60 seconds per question across Part 7&#8217;s long passages. Whichever section you&#8217;re weaker in, that&#8217;s where your prep time should concentrate \u2014 not the section you enjoy more.<\/p>\n<h2>3. How Long Should \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 Take? [\u5099\u8003\u6642\u9593\u898f\u5283]<\/h2>\n<p>The most common question on Dcard and PTT&#8217;s TOEIC board: \u591a\u76ca\u8981\u6e96\u5099\u591a\u4e45? A realistic answer depends on baseline, not motivation. After a cold diagnostic test, work backward from your target score using these benchmarks pulled from cram-school internal data:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Baseline 400 \u2192 target 600:<\/strong> 2 months at 1 hour\/day, or 6 weeks at 2 hours\/day.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Baseline 550 \u2192 target 750:<\/strong> 3 months at 1 hour\/day, including 8 full mock tests.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Baseline 700 \u2192 target 860+ (\u91d1\u8272\u8b49\u7167):<\/strong> 6\u201310 weeks of targeted Part 7 drilling and high-frequency \u591a\u76ca\u55ae\u5b57 review.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Baseline 800 \u2192 target 990 (\u591a\u76ca\u6eff\u5206):<\/strong> Highly variable. Expect 4\u20136 months of full mocks every week and obsessive error-log review.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/toeic-prep-study-plan-notebook-r.jpg\" alt=\"TOEIC study plan notebook with pen for \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 schedule\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><em>Sketch your \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 schedule on paper before opening any textbook. \u958b\u59cb\u5ff5\u66f8\u524d\uff0c\u5148\u628a\u8a08\u756b\u5beb\u4e0b\u4f86.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>One detail Taiwanese learners under-estimate: <strong>register first, study second.<\/strong> The official Taiwan TOEIC website lists exam dates roughly monthly, and seats in Taipei fill 4\u20136 weeks ahead. Picking a date forces commitment. Without a date on the calendar, &#8220;I&#8217;ll study more first&#8221; turns into a year of nothing.<\/p>\n<h2>4. Build a \u591a\u76ca\u55ae\u5b57 Habit, Not a Word List [\u55ae\u5b57\u5b78\u7fd2\u6cd5]<\/h2>\n<p>\u591a\u76ca\u55ae\u5b57 has roughly 2,500 high-frequency words and another 1,500 mid-frequency words that appear in business contexts: meetings, invoices, schedules, project updates, travel logistics. Almost every published TOEIC vocabulary book covers the same core \u2014 what separates a 700 from a 900 isn&#8217;t more words, it&#8217;s faster retrieval under time pressure.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/toeic-vocabulary-student-studying-r.jpg\" alt=\"\u591a\u76ca\u55ae\u5b57 TOEIC vocabulary student studying English textbook\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><em>Daily \u591a\u76ca\u55ae\u5b57 reps beat marathon weekend cramming. \u6bcf\u5929\u80cc 30 \u5b57\u52dd\u904e\u9031\u672b\u585e 300 \u5b57.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The system that actually works is dull and unsexy: spaced-repetition flashcards (Anki, Quizlet) loaded with one new card stack every day, reviewed every morning, no exceptions. Pair that with example sentences from real TOEIC Part 5 questions, not isolated dictionary entries \u2014 the word &#8220;implement&#8221; appears in TOEIC almost exclusively as part of <em>implement the policy<\/em> or <em>implement the changes<\/em>, so the collocation is the actual unit of memory.<\/p>\n<p>For a broader system to anchor your daily vocabulary work, this <a href=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/how-to-build-english-vocabulary-proven-methods-2026\/\">8-method vocabulary building guide<\/a> is the closest companion piece to a TOEIC vocabulary routine. The categorized list in our <a href=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/topic-vocabulary-travel-food-tech-health-words\/\">topic vocabulary reference<\/a> also maps neatly to TOEIC&#8217;s business contexts.<\/p>\n<h2>5. \u591a\u76ca\u807d\u529b Training That Survives Daily Life [\u807d\u529b\u8a13\u7df4]<\/h2>\n<p>\u591a\u76ca\u807d\u529b is where most Taiwanese candidates pick up easy points \u2014 IF the daily training is built around exposure, not lectures. The single biggest mistake: studying listening in 90-minute weekend blocks. The TOEIC listening section runs 45 minutes straight at native speed; a brain trained on 90-minute weekend reps does not hold focus at minute 38 of the real exam.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/toeic-listening-headphones-practice-r.jpg\" alt=\"\u591a\u76ca\u807d\u529b TOEIC listening practice headphones training\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><em>Headphones-on daily reps are the fastest path to \u591a\u76ca\u807d\u529b gains. \u6bcf\u5929 20 \u5206\u9418\u8033\u6a5f\u7df4\u7fd2\u6bd4\u9031\u672b\u585e\u984c\u66f4\u6709\u6548.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>A working drill set: 20 minutes daily of slow-then-normal-speed practice. Listen once at 0.75x without subtitles, once at 1.0x without subtitles, then check the transcript and listen again at 1.0x while reading. The third listen is where retention actually forms. Source material doesn&#8217;t need to be TOEIC-branded \u2014 BBC 6 Minute English, NPR&#8217;s Up First, and ETS&#8217;s free TOEIC sample audio all train the same comprehension muscle. Pronunciation matters: a quick <a href=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/kk-phonetic-chart-41-symbols-taiwan-2026\/\">KK\u97f3\u6a19 refresher<\/a> closes the gap between hearing and recognizing a word in time to answer.<\/p>\n<p>For Part 1 (photo descriptions), train yourself to predict what could be said before the audio plays. Look at the picture, name the objects in English in your head, run through the verbs that could describe the action. That 8-second pre-load is worth 3\u20134 points on its own.<\/p>\n<h2>6. \u591a\u76ca\u95b1\u8b80 Drills That Beat the Clock [\u95b1\u8b80\u6280\u5de7]<\/h2>\n<p>\u591a\u76ca\u95b1\u8b80 is the section that breaks 700-level candidates. The reading is not hard; the timing is. Part 7 alone is 54 questions across 15+ passages, including dreaded triple-passage sets where you cross-reference an email, a schedule, and a memo for one answer. Most Taiwanese test-takers run out of time and bubble in the last 8\u201312 answers blind.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/toeic-reading-section-book-r.jpg\" alt=\"\u591a\u76ca\u95b1\u8b80 TOEIC reading section Part 7 practice book\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><em>Part 7 timing drills decide whether you finish the \u591a\u76ca\u95b1\u8b80 section. Part 7 \u5beb\u4e0d\u5b8c\u5c31\u662f\u5206\u6578\u5929\u82b1\u677f.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The fix is non-negotiable: time every reading drill from day one. Aim for Part 5 in 10 minutes (75 questions in your head \u2014 that&#8217;s about 8 seconds per question), Part 6 in 8 minutes, Part 7 in 55 minutes. Read the question first, then scan the passage for the answer, then verify. Linear top-to-bottom reading is what kills the clock. For triple-passage sets, locate the question&#8217;s keyword in passage 1, then chase the cross-reference into passage 2 \u2014 never read all three passages before looking at the questions.<\/p>\n<p>Skipping is a skill, not a failure. If a Part 5 question stalls past 30 seconds, mark it, bubble a guess, move on. Every minute spent on a stuck question is a minute stolen from a question you could have answered correctly.<\/p>\n<h2>7. Part-by-Part Strategy for All 7 Sections [Part 1\u20137 \u89e3\u984c\u6280\u5de7]<\/h2>\n<p>Each TOEIC part has its own traps. A quick map of the strategies that move scores the fastest:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Part 1 (Photos, 6 Qs):<\/strong> Eliminate options with the wrong tense first. &#8220;Is being repaired&#8221; vs &#8220;has been repaired&#8221; decides half the answers.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Part 2 (Question-Response, 25 Qs):<\/strong> The right answer is rarely the obvious echo word. If a question contains &#8220;where,&#8221; the answer with the place-name is often a trap.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Part 3 (Conversations, 39 Qs):<\/strong> Read the three questions <em>before<\/em> the audio starts. The 8 seconds between sets matter.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Part 4 (Short Talks, 30 Qs):<\/strong> Speaker, purpose, location \u2014 these are the three question types that repeat. Pre-tag each set in your mind.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Part 5 (Incomplete Sentences, 30 Qs):<\/strong> 60% grammar (verb tense, prepositions, agreement), 40% vocabulary. Identify type at a glance.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Part 6 (Text Completion, 16 Qs):<\/strong> Don&#8217;t pick the local answer \u2014 pick the one that fits the surrounding paragraph context.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Part 7 (Reading Passages, 54 Qs):<\/strong> Inference questions (&#8220;What is most likely true about&#8230;&#8221;) are the hardest. Save them for last in each set.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>One position worth defending: drilling Parts 2, 3, 5 returns more points per study hour than any other section. They have the cleanest patterns and the smallest reading load. If your timeline is tight, weight those three heavily and accept slightly lower Part 7 returns.<\/p>\n<h2>8. Mock Tests Done Right [\u6a21\u8003\u65b9\u6cd5]<\/h2>\n<p>A mock test you don&#8217;t review is just wasted time. The standard advice \u2014 &#8220;take one full mock per week&#8221; \u2014 is correct but incomplete. The actual rule is <strong>1 mock = 1 day to take + 2 days to review<\/strong>. The error log is where the score gain comes from, not the test itself.<\/p>\n<p>Build a one-page error log per mock: question number, part, correct answer, your answer, error type (grammar gap, vocab gap, misread question, timing pressure, careless). After 4 mocks, the pattern becomes obvious \u2014 almost everyone has 2 or 3 dominant error types. Fixing those 2 or 3 patterns is worth more than another 20 hours of fresh practice.<\/p>\n<p>Take mocks under real conditions: full 2 hours, no pauses, no phone, in the morning if your real exam is in the morning. Your brain rehearses what you train, including the stamina curve.<\/p>\n<h2>9. \u591a\u76ca\u81ea\u5b78 vs Cram School: Real Cost vs Real Time [\u88dc\u7fd2\u8207\u81ea\u5b78]<\/h2>\n<p>The honest answer most cram schools won&#8217;t tell you: \u591a\u76ca\u81ea\u5b78 works perfectly well for candidates above a 500 baseline who can stay disciplined for 8 weeks. Cram school adds value mainly for candidates below 500, or for anyone whose self-discipline reliably collapses after week 3.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/toeic-cram-school-classroom-taiwan-r.jpg\" alt=\"\u591a\u76ca\u81ea\u5b78 vs cram school Taiwan classroom TOEIC\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><em>Cram school vs \u591a\u76ca\u81ea\u5b78 \u2014 the right call depends on baseline, not budget. \u88dc\u7fd2\u8207\u81ea\u5b78\u7684\u9078\u64c7\u8981\u770b\u7a0b\u5ea6\uff0c\u4e0d\u662f\u9810\u7b97.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Cram school in Taipei runs roughly NT$15,000\u201335,000 for a 3-month intensive course. The same money buys you 2 official ETS workbooks, an Anki Pro subscription, 6 mock test books, and 12 official TOEIC exam registrations. For a self-motivated learner, that&#8217;s a year of high-quality \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099. The decision isn&#8217;t budget \u2014 it&#8217;s whether you&#8217;ll show up at your own desk on Sunday morning without someone calling roll.<\/p>\n<p>One more career angle: TOEIC scores still gate promotions and pay bumps in many Taiwanese companies. The internal jump from a 600 to an 800 often correlates with a 5\u201315% salary lift on the next role change, particularly in industries that emphasize <a href=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/presentation-english-40-phrases-taiwan-pros-2026\/\">presentation English<\/a> \u2014 finance, tech, foreign trade. The investment pays back fast.<\/p>\n<h2>Watch: \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 Strategy Overview<\/h2>\n<p>This Taiwanese-language overview from \u82f1\u6587\u6613\u958b\u7f50 walks through the test structure, scoring, and a baseline study plan in under 15 minutes \u2014 a good companion to the steps above:<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align:center;\"><iframe width=\"800\" height=\"450\" src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/hVfjnZf5X3o\" title=\"\u65b0\u624b\u5fc5\u770b\uff01\u591a\u76ca\u5168\u65b9\u4f4d\u8003\u8a66\u6280\u5de7\" frameborder=\"0\" allow=\"accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture\" allowfullscreen><\/iframe><\/p>\n<h2>10. Mistakes That Stall \u591a\u76ca\u6eff\u5206 Attempts [\u5e38\u898b\u932f\u8aa4]<\/h2>\n<p>The error patterns that keep candidates stuck at 800\u2013860, just short of the \u91d1\u8272\u8b49\u7167 mark, are remarkably consistent. The first is over-studying vocabulary while under-practicing Part 7 \u2014 \u591a\u76ca\u6eff\u5206 candidates are typically vocabulary-saturated and reading-bottlenecked, not the other way around. The second is treating mock tests as proof of progress instead of as diagnostic tools; a 900 on a mock that wasn&#8217;t timed properly tells you nothing.<\/p>\n<p>The third \u2014 and the one ETS examiners point out most often \u2014 is letting one bad section sabotage the next. A rough Listening section produces a defensive Reading attempt; a stuck Part 7 passage poisons the four sets that follow. Recover by treating every section as independent. The test doesn&#8217;t care how the last 45 minutes went.<\/p>\n<p>A small final detail: bring a watch with a clear second hand. Taiwan TOEIC test rooms restrict phones, and the clock at the front isn&#8217;t always visible from every seat. A NT$200 plastic Casio buys you 15 minutes of pacing certainty during Part 7.<\/p>\n<h2>Your Next Move<\/h2>\n<p>Pick a TOEIC date in the next 60\u201390 days. Register today. Take a cold diagnostic this weekend. Then come back to step 4 (\u591a\u76ca\u55ae\u5b57) and step 5 (\u591a\u76ca\u807d\u529b) with a real score to anchor every decision. Without those three actions, every other step in this guide is theory. With them, \u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 stops being a vague intention and starts being a deadline-driven project \u2014 which is the only kind that actually delivers a \u591a\u76ca\u6eff\u5206 result.<\/p>\n<h2>Sources<\/h2>\n<ol>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ets.org\/toeic.html\" rel=\"noopener\" target=\"_blank\">ETS TOEIC Official Site<\/a> \u2014 test structure, scoring scale, and global score distribution data.<\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.toeic.com.tw\/\" rel=\"noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Taiwan TOEIC (Chun Shin)<\/a> \u2014 official Taiwan TOEIC registration, exam dates, and venue information.<\/li>\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ets.org\/toeic\/test-takers\/listening-reading\/prepare.html\" rel=\"noopener\" target=\"_blank\">ETS Official TOEIC L&#038;R Preparation<\/a> \u2014 free sample tests, official guide, and practice question sets.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u591a\u76ca\u6e96\u5099 guide for Taiwan: 9 proven TOEIC steps \u2014 diagnostic, \u591a\u76ca\u55ae\u5b57 system, \u591a\u76ca\u807d\u529b drills, \u591a\u76ca\u95b1\u8b80 timing, Part 1\u20137 strategies \u2014 to hit \u591a\u76ca\u6eff\u5206.<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":5527,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_kad_blocks_custom_css":"","_kad_blocks_head_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_body_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_footer_custom_js":"","_kadence_starter_templates_imported_post":false,"_kad_post_transparent":"","_kad_post_title":"","_kad_post_layout":"","_kad_post_sidebar_id":"","_kad_post_content_style":"","_kad_post_vertical_padding":"","_kad_post_feature":"","_kad_post_feature_position":"","_kad_post_header":false,"_kad_post_footer":false,"_kad_post_classname":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[23],"tags":[207,632,645,828,1543,731,1031,634,1545,644,1546,1544],"class_list":["post-5535","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-article-posts","tag-business-english","tag-toeic","tag-toeic-listening","tag-toeic-preparation","tag-toeic-reading","tag-toeic-tips","tag-1031","tag-634","tag-1545","tag-644","tag-1546","tag-1544"],"taxonomy_info":{"category":[{"value":23,"label":"Articles"}],"post_tag":[{"value":207,"label":"Business 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