The speaking module is the component most candidates feel least prepared for — and most under-practise. Unlike listening and reading, which can be drilled with mock tests alone, speaking requires active production, self-monitoring, and structured feedback. Yet speaking is worth 25% of your total Goethe score and up to 25 points in DELF, and weak speaking performance is one of the most common reasons otherwise strong candidates fall below the pass threshold. This guide sets out a systematic speaking improvement strategy using mock test practice for both Goethe (A1–C2) and DELF/DALF.
Why Speaking Is Different From Other Modules
| Characteristic | Implication for Preparation |
| Real-time production under pressure | Unlike reading or writing, you cannot pause to look up words or revise; your active vocabulary — the words you can produce spontaneously — must be strong |
| Interaction with an examiner or partner | Examiner questions and reactions are unpredictable; you must be able to respond flexibly, not just deliver a memorised script |
| Scored on multiple criteria simultaneously | At B1 and above, examiners score vocabulary, grammar, fluency, pronunciation, and task achievement at the same time — all criteria must meet the minimum threshold |
| Preparation time is limited and structured | Goethe Sprechen gives 20 minutes of preparation for A2–C2; DELF Production Orale gives 10–30 minutes depending on level; this time must be used efficiently |
The Record-and-Review Method
The most effective speaking preparation tool available without a teacher is the record-and-review cycle. Record your speaking response to a mock task, listen back critically, and identify gaps. Most candidates are surprised to hear problems they did not notice while speaking — hesitations, repetitive vocabulary, incomplete sentences, pronunciation patterns.
| Review Dimension | What to Listen For |
| Fluency | How many pauses longer than 2 seconds? Are filler words (ähm / alors / euh) excessive? Is the delivery sufficiently continuous for your target level? |
| Vocabulary range | Count the number of different words you used for key concepts — did you repeat the same word 3–4 times? At B2/C1, varied vocabulary is a core criterion |
| Grammar accuracy | Listen for verb agreement, tense consistency, gender agreement, and sentence completion — did sentences end with complete grammatical structures? |
| Task achievement | Did you cover all the required content points? Did you stay on topic? Did your response match the required length (monologue vs. dialogue)? |
| Register | Is your register appropriate for the task level? B2 and above requires a formal-standard register; colloquialisms and very simple sentences are penalised |
Speaking Strategy by Level
| Level | Key Speaking Priority | Common Weakness to Fix |
| Goethe / DELF A1–A2 | Complete sentences; cover all content points; clear pronunciation of high-frequency words | Answering in single words or phrases instead of complete sentences; fix by rehearsing full-sentence answers to common A1/A2 questions |
| Goethe / DELF B1 | Fluency; sustained speaking for 2–3 minutes; use of connectors (weil / parce que / aber / mais) | Starting sentences and abandoning them mid-way; fix by practising the full monologue without stopping |
| Goethe / DELF B2 | Vocabulary range; argument structure; formal register; engaging with counter-arguments | Vocabulary poverty at B2 level (using simple words from B1); fix with active vocabulary building — learn 5 B2 words per day and use them in speaking practice |
| Goethe / DALF C1 | Analytical register; precise vocabulary; coherent argument arc; sophisticated grammar | Over-rehearsed memorised responses that do not adapt to the specific task prompt; practise with varied C1 prompts to develop flexibility |
| Goethe / DALF C2 | Full C2 precision; intellectual discourse register; spontaneous engagement with complex ideas | Speaking fluently but at C1 register — failing to demonstrate C2 vocabulary sophistication; systematically upgrade vocabulary used in practice responses |
Using Preparation Time Effectively in the Exam
| Exam | Prep Time | How to Use It |
| Goethe A2–C2 Sprechen (20 min prep) | 20 minutes before entering the exam room | Allocate 5 min per task; for each task: write 3–4 key words (not full sentences) as memory anchors; note your opening sentence; note your conclusion; do not write full scripts |
| DELF B1–B2 Production Orale (10–30 min) | Varies by level | Outline your monologue: 3 main points + opening + conclusion; for the document comment (B2), identify the thesis of the document and your position on it before entering |
| DALF C1 Production Orale (30 min prep) | 30 minutes for the 3h30 written + oral session | Use a structured plan: Introduction (problematique + thesis) / Part 1 / Part 2 / Conclusion; allocate words mentally; time yourself in your head during practice |
Speaking improvement requires daily practice — even 10 minutes of focused speaking aloud in German or French every day is more effective than one hour per week. Combine mock task responses with authentic speaking exposure: podcasts, radio, films in your target language with subtitles off. languagetest.in provides Goethe and DELF speaking mock tasks at every level with model response frameworks and scoring criteria to support structured speaking preparation.
References: Goethe Sprechen criteria: goethe.de | DELF Production Orale guide: ciep.fr | languagetest.in speaking mock tasks and frameworks
Each post reviewed by the languagetest.in research team.

