TCF Canada · Expression Orale
TCF Canada speaking practice
The three speaking task types, section timing, scoring considerations, and a free way to rehearse aloud with Canadian French neural audio. No signup.
The TCF Canada speaking section at a glance
The Expression Orale section is a recorded interview that lasts about 12 minutes and contains three tasks, each a little harder than the last. You speak with an examiner; your audio is rated later by certified raters. There are no "right" opinions — they score your French, not your ideas.
Task 1 — Directed interview (no preparation)
About 2 minutes. The examiner asks general questions about you and familiar topics — your work, your city, your routine, your interests. You answer naturally, with no prep time.
What scores well: full sentences instead of one-word answers, a range of tenses (present, past, future), and a little detail on every answer. Treat each question as an invitation to say three sentences, not one.
Task 2 — Obtain information (you ask the questions)
About 2 minutes of preparation, then a few minutes speaking. You're given a scenario — say, you want to sign up for a gym, rent an apartment, or join a class — and you must ask the examiner questions to gather the information you need. This task is unusual: most exams make you answer, here you interview.
What scores well: varied question forms (est-ce que…, quel/quelle…, combien…, est-il possible de…), polite register, and following up on the answers instead of reading a fixed list.
Task 3 — Express and defend an opinion
Use the preparation time to choose a position, two reasons, and one example. During the response, prioritize a clear structure, relevant support, and sustained interaction.
What scores well: a clear structure — state your view, give two or three reasons, acknowledge the other side, conclude — held together with connectors (d'abord, de plus, en revanche, par conséquent, en conclusion). Fluency and linking matter more than fancy vocabulary.
Free speaking practice
Rehearse all three tasks out loud
The free course has accountable shadowing, all three TCF speaking task types, 50 Canadian-life role-plays, and connector practice—all with Canadian French neural audio. Practise aloud, record yourself, and use qualified human feedback to judge proficiency.
Practise TCF speaking free→Frequently asked questions
What are the three TCF Canada speaking tasks?
Task 1 — a no-prep directed interview about you. Task 2 — you ask the examiner questions to obtain information from a scenario. Task 3 — express and defend an opinion. About 12 minutes total.
How is it scored?
Recorded and rated by certified examiners on a level scale that converts to NCLC/CLB — assessing range, accuracy, fluency, and pronunciation.
How do I practise speaking alone?
Drill each task format aloud, record yourself, compare to a model, and do one weekly tutor hour for real feedback — the one thing self-study can't replace.
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