TCF Canada Speaking Section: Format, Scoring, and How to Reach CLB 7

The TCF Canada Expression Orale (Speaking) section is a computer-delivered oral production test — you speak into a microphone and your responses are recorded for assessment. Unlike DELF speaking which happens face-to-face with an examiner, TCF Canada speaking is entirely automated during the test itself. For Canadian immigration, CLB 7 in speaking requires reaching the score band of approximately 369–399 out of 699. This guide covers the full format and the strategies that score CLB 7 and above.

TCF Canada Speaking – Fast Facts

FeatureDetails
Section nameExpression orale
Number of tasks3 tasks
DurationApproximately 12 minutes (varies by task)
FormatComputer-delivered; responses recorded via microphone
Scoring0–699 points
CLB 7 thresholdApproximately 369–399 out of 699
AssessmentRecordings scored by trained human raters after the exam

CLB Score Chart for TCF Canada Speaking

CLB LevelTCF Canada Speaking ScoreNotes
CLB 4181–225Below Express Entry French bonus threshold
CLB 5226–270Not sufficient for bilingualism bonus
CLB 6271–309Near threshold
CLB 7310–348Qualifies for 15–30 CRS bonus points
CLB 8349–370Strong profile
CLB 9371–392High proficiency
CLB 10393–699Near-native speaking

The Three Speaking Tasks – What You Actually Do

TaskDescriptionPreparation TimeResponse Time
Task 1 – Describe and narrateYou see an image or situation; describe what you see and what is happening1 minute preparation2 minutes response
Task 2 – Give your opinionYou receive an opinion-based question or scenario; give your point of view with reasons1 minute preparation3 minutes response
Task 3 – Role-play or defend a positionRespond to a more complex situation; take a position and argue it convincingly2 minutes preparation4 minutes response

How TCF Canada Speaking Is Scored

Human raters assess your recorded responses against four criteria:

CriterionDescription
Communicative effectivenessDid you achieve the communicative goal? Is the message clear?
Vocabulary rangeDid you use varied and precise vocabulary? Avoid repetition?
Grammatical accuracyDid you use correct grammatical structures? Range of tenses?
Fluency and cohesionWas your speech fluid? Did you use connectors to structure your ideas?

Task 1 Strategy – Describing an Image

Structure your description in three moves: Location → Action → Interpretation.

Move 1 – Setting: “Dans cette image, on voit… / La scene se passe dans… / Il s’agit d’un/une…”

Move 2 – Action: “On peut voir que… / Il y a des personnes qui… / La personne semble…”

Move 3 – Interpretation: “On pourrait interpreter cela comme… / Cela me fait penser a… / Je suppose que…”

Using all three moves fills the 2 minutes naturally and demonstrates communicative range. Never stop speaking early — a 90-second response when 2 minutes is available suggests you ran out of language.

Task 2 Strategy – Giving Your Opinion

Structure your 3-minute opinion response in four parts:

PartContentTime
Position statementState your view clearly: “A mon avis… / Je pense que… / Je suis convaincu(e) que…”30 seconds
Argument 1First reason with a brief example or evidence60 seconds
Argument 2 / NuanceSecond reason, OR acknowledge a counterpoint and respond to it60 seconds
ConclusionRestate position briefly: “Pour ces raisons, je maintiens que…”30 seconds

Task 3 Strategy – Defending a Position

Task 3 is the most demanding. You may be asked to role-play a scenario (e.g. persuade a colleague, respond to a complaint) or argue a position on a complex issue. Key strategies:

1. Take a clear position immediately. Do not hedge. “Je suis fermement d’avis que…” signals confidence and earns fluency points.

2. Use formal connectors throughout: “Premierement… Deuxiemement… Qui plus est… Cependant… En conclusion…”

3. Acknowledge complexity: “Bien que certains soutiennent que X, il faut reconnaitre que Y…” — this demonstrates B2+ level.

4. Manage the 4 minutes fully. Plan 2 main arguments of approximately 90 seconds each, plus a 30-second opening and 30-second conclusion.

Fluency Builders – What Separates CLB 6 from CLB 7

CLB 6 PatternCLB 7 Upgrade
Long pauses while searching for vocabularyFiller phrases that maintain fluency: “C’est-a-dire… / En quelque sorte… / Comment dire…”
Repeating the same connector (donc, mais)Varied connectors: neanmoins, par consequent, c’est pourquoi, en revanche
Short simple sentencesComplex sentences: “Il me semble que… bien que… ce qui montre que…”
Stopping at the end of each sentenceRunning ideas together with “ce qui” relative clauses and participial phrases

Difference Between TCF Canada and TEF Canada Speaking

AspectTCF CanadaTEF Canada
FormatComputer + microphone; 3 tasksComputer + microphone; 4 tasks
AssessmentHuman raters review recordingsHuman raters review recordings
Task typesDescription, opinion, defenceSimilar structure with 4 task progression
Total speaking time~12 minutes~17 minutes
Who benefitsCandidates who speak more fluently under low-pressure conditionsCandidates with stamina for longer spoken production

Practice TCF Canada speaking tasks on languagetest.in using timed audio-recorded mock tests. Listening to your own recordings is the single most effective way to identify hesitation patterns, vocabulary gaps, and grammatical errors.

References: TCF Canada official format: france-education-international.fr | Radio-Canada: ici.radio-canada.ca | languagetest.in TCF Canada speaking practice

Each post reviewed by the languagetest.in research team.

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