Description
Discover proven TEF Canada strategies to improve your speaking and writing scores with clear answer patterns, common mistakes, and exam tips for A1–B2 learners.
As Your French Mentor: What You Must Understand First
Listen carefully.
The TEF exam is not testing perfection.
It is testing:
- your ability to communicate
- your ability to react
- your ability to be understood
Many students fail not because they don’t know French,
but because they don’t understand how the exam works.
So in every lesson, I want you to think like this:
Do not try to speak perfectly.
Try to speak clearly, correctly, and simply.
1. What the Examiner Is Really Checking
Let me be very direct with you.
The examiner is NOT asking:
“Is this student advanced?”
They are asking:
“Can this student communicate in real life in Canada?”
So they evaluate:
- grammar accuracy (basic but correct)
- clarity (can we understand you easily?)
- structure (complete sentences, not fragments)
- interaction (do you respond naturally?)
Level Expectations (Very Important)
You must adapt your answers depending on your level.
A1
- one short correct sentence
- no need to expand
A2
- complete sentence + one detail
B1
- complete sentence + reason
B2
- opinion + explanation + contrast
If you try to speak like B2 at A1, you will make mistakes.
If you speak like A1 at B2, your score will be low.
2. The High-Scoring Answer Formula (Use This Always)
This is the most important rule I will teach you.
Every strong answer follows a pattern.
A1 Formula
Answer
Je travaille.
A2 Formula
Answer + detail
Je travaille le matin.
B1 Formula
Answer + reason
Je travaille le matin parce que c’est plus pratique.
B2 Formula
Answer + reason + contrast
Je travaille le matin parce que c’est plus pratique, mais parfois c’est difficile.
If you remember only one thing from this lesson, remember this structure.
This is how you move from basic to strong answers.
3. The Most Common TEF Mistakes (Avoid These)
I see the same errors every time.
If you avoid them, your score improves immediately.
Mistake 1: Speaking in fragments
Incorrect
Travail matin
Correct
Je travaille le matin
Mistake 2: Translating from English
Incorrect
Je suis 20 ans
Correct
J’ai 20 ans
Mistake 3: Overcomplicating
Students try to use difficult grammar → more mistakes
Better strategy:
Use simple, correct sentences.
Mistake 4: Not answering fully
Question: Où habites-tu ?
Weak answer: Paris
Strong answer:
J’habite à Paris
4. How to Instantly Improve Your Score (Upgrade Technique)
Let me show you something powerful.
You don’t need advanced grammar to improve.
You just need to add one element.
Step 1: Start simple
J’aime ce quartier
Step 2: Add a reason
J’aime ce quartier parce qu’il est calme
Step 3: Add detail (A2+)
J’aime ce quartier parce qu’il est calme et agréable
That is how you grow your level.
Not by complexity—but by expansion.
5. What to Do If You Don’t Understand (Critical for Speaking)
This is something many students ignore—and it costs them points.
If you don’t understand, DO NOT stay silent.
The examiner wants interaction.
Use these strategies
- Excusez-moi, je ne comprends pas
- Pouvez-vous répéter, s’il vous plaît ?
- Pouvez-vous parler plus lentement ?
If you don’t know a word
- Comment on dit … en français ?
This shows:
- confidence
- communication ability
- real-life competence
And that increases your score.
6. How to Think During the Exam
Do not panic.
Do not rush.
Do not try to be perfect.
Instead:
- listen carefully
- answer simply
- add one detail
That is enough to succeed at A1–A2.
7. Final Advice
If you want to succeed in TEF Canada:
- focus on clarity, not complexity
- build complete sentences
- always add one detail or reason
- stay calm and interact
You are not here to impress.
You are here to communicate.
And that is exactly what the TEF examiner wants.



