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Topic: How AI Agents and Google AI Mode Will Change Life and Work , IELTS

  • Writer: elenaburan
    elenaburan
  • May 28
  • 2 min read

Updated: Jun 16

IELTS

Part 1: Introduction & Interview (4–5 minutes)


Topic: Technology and Daily Routines


Examiner: Do you use search engines often?

Candidate: Yes, all the time. I use Google every day to find information for studies, work, or personal interests. It’s one of my main tools.

Examiner: Have you noticed any changes in how search engines work recently?

Candidate: Yes, definitely. There’s more AI involved now. Sometimes the answer appears instantly, even without clicking a link. I’ve also heard about Google’s AI Mode, which gives more direct and personalized results.

Examiner: Do you like when technology makes decisions for you?

Candidate: It depends. If the system understands what I really need — that’s great. But I still want to think for myself. I see AI as a helper, not as someone who replaces my thinking.


Part 2: Long Turn (3–4 minutes) IELTS


Task: Describe how daily life and work might change with the introduction of AI agents and AI-driven search like Google’s new AI Mode.

You should say:

  • What these technologies do

  • How they change the way we think or work

  • What benefits and challenges they bring


Candidate:The introduction of AI agents and AI Mode in search engines is a big shift in how we live and work. These technologies go beyond just giving results — they understand the intent, collect information from many sources, and sometimes even take actions on your behalf.


For example, if you ask: “Plan a weekend trip under $200,” the AI won’t just show you links. It might check travel sites, compare prices, and create a full plan for you — hotel, tickets, food.


In work, this means we’ll spend less time searching and organizing, and more time making decisions and creating. AI agents can write summaries, prepare documents, answer emails, or even run small business tasks.


The big benefit is time-saving and mental clarity. You don’t have to jump between tabs or sort irrelevant data. That’s especially helpful for students, researchers, and entrepreneurs.


But there are also challenges. We may become too dependent and forget how to ask deep questions. Also, we must be careful about bias — because the AI decides what’s “important” for you. People need to stay curious and critical, even with smart tools.


Part 3: Discussion (4–5 minutes)


Topic: The Future of Search and Decision-Making

Examiner: How do you think AI will change the way people learn?

Candidate: It will make learning faster and more personalized. AI can suggest topics, test your knowledge, and explain things in different ways. But we must still practice thinking, not just accepting answers.

Examiner: Will people become more passive if AI always helps them?

Candidate: That’s possible. If everything is done for us, we may lose motivation and depth. That’s why education and work culture must support active use of AI, where people use it to ask better questions and explore ideas.

Examiner: What advice would you give to someone starting their career in this new AI-driven world?

Candidate: I’d say: learn how AI works, but also focus on human skills — like communication, ethics, and creativity. In the future, the most valuable people will be those who can collaborate with AI, not just use it.

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