Goethe B1 Sprechen (Speaking): Format, Tasks, and Strategies to Score High

The Sprechen (Speaking) module of the Goethe-Zertifikat B1 is the only module where you interact with another person — a fellow candidate and an examiner. For many test-takers, this is the most nerve-wracking part of the exam. But the Sprechen module is also the most predictable: it follows a fixed structure with three defined tasks, and examiners score you on clear criteria. This guide explains exactly what happens and how to prepare.

Goethe B1 Sprechen – Module Overview

FeatureDetails
Duration15 minutes (shared between 2 candidates)
Number of tasks3 tasks
Total marks100
Pass mark60 out of 100
FormatPair-based — you and one other candidate
Examiner roleObserves and scores; does not participate in tasks
Scoring criteriaCommunicative effectiveness, vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation, interaction

The Three Speaking Tasks – What Actually Happens

TaskNameDurationWhat You Do
Task 1Gemeinsam etwas planen (Plan something together)4–5 minutesDiscuss a scenario with your partner and agree on a joint plan
Task 2Ein Thema prasentieren (Present a topic)2 minutes per personPresent a topic from a card; partner asks one question
Task 3Auf eine Prasentation reagieren (Respond to a presentation)2 minutes per personReact to your partner’s presentation; ask a question and give feedback

Task 1 – Planning Together: Strategy and Language

Task 1 is a collaborative discussion. You and your partner receive a scenario — for example, planning a class party, organising a trip, or deciding what gift to buy for a teacher. The task requires you to:

• Make suggestions: “Wir konnten… / Was hattest du davon, wenn wir…?”

• Agree and disagree politely: “Das ist eine gute Idee. / Ich bin nicht sicher, ob das funktioniert.”

• Ask for and give opinions: “Was meinst du? / Ich finde, dass…”

• Reach a conclusion: “Also, wir sind uns einig, dass wir…”

The examiner is looking for genuine interaction — not two people delivering monologues. Show that you are listening to your partner by referring back to what they said.

Useful Phrase CategoryGerman Examples
Making suggestionsIch schlage vor… / Wir konnten doch… / Wie ware es mit…?
AgreeingDas klingt gut. / Damit bin ich einverstanden. / Gute Idee!
Disagreeing politelyIch bin da anderer Meinung. / Das sehe ich etwas anders. / Meinst du wirklich?
Asking for opinionsWas denkst du darüber? / Wie siehst du das? / Stimmt das so für dich?
Reaching agreementAlso einigen wir uns auf… / Dann machen wir das so. / Wir sind uns einig.

Task 2 – Presenting a Topic: Structure and Timing

Each candidate receives a card with a topic — typically a statement about everyday life, society, or personal experience. You have 1 minute to prepare and 2 minutes to present. Your presentation should follow a clear structure:

SectionContentTime
IntroductionState the topic and your initial position20–25 seconds
Main point 1Argument or personal experience30–35 seconds
Main point 2A second angle or contrasting view30–35 seconds
ConclusionSummarise your position; invite questions20–25 seconds

Example topic card: “Heutzutage verbringen Jugendliche zu viel Zeit am Smartphone.” (Today, young people spend too much time on smartphones.)

A strong 2-minute presentation on this topic would: define the issue, give a personal or observed example, acknowledge the counterargument, and state a clear position. Examiners do not need you to be right — they need to hear structured, grammatically varied German.

Task 3 – Responding to a Presentation

After your partner presents, you have approximately 2 minutes to respond. This means:

1. Asking a follow-up question: Your question should be genuinely connected to what your partner said — not a generic question you prepared in advance. This shows active listening.

2. Giving your own view: React to their arguments. Do you agree? Partially? Offer a different perspective. Use phrases like “Du hast einen guten Punkt gemacht, aber ich denke, dass…” (You made a good point, but I think that…)

3. Sharing a personal example or anecdote: Ground your response in something real or plausible. This demonstrates communicative fluency.

Goethe B1 Speaking Scoring Criteria

CriterionWhat Examiners AssessWeight
Communicative effectivenessCan you achieve the communicative goal? Does the discussion succeed?High
Vocabulary rangeDo you use varied and appropriate vocabulary beyond basic words?Medium-High
Grammatical accuracyAre your sentences structured correctly? Do you use a range of tenses?Medium-High
Pronunciation and intonationIs your German understandable? Are you intelligible, not necessarily accent-free?Medium
InteractionDo you respond to your partner? Do you build on what they say?High (Task 1)

Key insight: Communicative effectiveness and interaction are weighted heavily. A candidate who speaks imperfect German but genuinely engages with their partner and completes the task will outscore a candidate who speaks grammatically correct German in a monologue-style.

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

MistakeWhy It HurtsFix
Speaking without pausing for partnerKills the interaction scoreUse explicit turn-handover phrases: “Und du?”
Ignoring partner’s points in Task 1Looks like monologue, not discussionParaphrase: “Wie du sagtest… / Du meintest, dass…”
Memorised phrases delivered roboticallySounds unnatural; examiners noticePractise adaptable phrases, not fixed scripts
Giving up after a grammar errorBreaks fluency and loses timeContinue speaking — self-correction mid-flow is acceptable
Preparing only in German from day 1Limits exposure to how B1 German soundsWatch German YouTube, podcasts, films at B1 level

30-Day Sprechen Preparation Plan

WeekFocusDaily Activity
Week 1Vocabulary and phrase banksLearn 5 discussion phrases per day; practise inserting them in sentences
Week 2Presentation structureRecord 2-minute presentations on random topics; listen back
Week 3Partner practiceFind a study partner; do 2 full Task 1 practices per session
Week 4Mock exam conditionsFull 15-minute mock with timer; self-assess against scoring criteria

languagetest.in provides Goethe B1 speaking topic cards with sample presentations and interaction guides. Use these to build your preparation bank before the exam.

References: Goethe-Institut B1 speaking sample tasks: goethe.de | Goethe B1 Prüfungsziele Testbeschreibung: goethe.de | languagetest.in Goethe B1 speaking preparation

Each post reviewed by the languagetest.in research team.

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