The Production Orale (Speaking) component of the DALF C1 is the most intellectually demanding part of the exam. Unlike lower-level DELF speaking tests — which focus on everyday personal communication — the DALF C1 oral requires you to engage in a sustained, structured academic discussion with an examiner, defending a position on a complex topic from a document dossier. This guide explains exactly what happens in the C1 speaking test and how to prepare effectively.
Intellectual, social, professional, or scientific — not personal topics
The Two Phases of the DALF C1 Oral
Phase
Duration
What You Do
Phase 1 – Expose (Presentation)
Approximately 10 minutes
Deliver a structured, independent presentation synthesising the dossier documents and developing an argued personal position
Phase 2 – Discussion
Approximately 20 minutes
Respond to examiner questions; defend your position; demonstrate ability to qualify, refute, and develop arguments under pressure
The Dossier – What You Get in Preparation
During the 60-minute preparation, you receive a dossier of 3–4 authentic French-language documents on a single complex theme. Documents may include:
Document Type
Examples
Journalistic article
Opinion piece from Le Monde, Le Figaro, or a specialist magazine
Academic or research text
Extract from a study, report, or intellectual essay
Statistical document
Graph, table, or infographic with data and commentary
Interview or testimony
Expert interview or personal account related to the theme
You are expected to synthesise — not simply summarise — the documents. You must identify convergences and divergences between sources, extract the key tensions or issues, and use the dossier as the foundation for your own argued position.
Structure for the 10-Minute Expose
Section
Duration
Content
Introduction
90 seconds
Introduce the theme; present the documents briefly; state your central question or problematique
Part 1
2–3 minutes
First main axis of analysis, drawing on 1–2 documents
Part 2
2–3 minutes
Second axis or contrasting perspective; use another document
Part 3 (optional)
1–2 minutes
Synthesis or resolution; your own evaluative position
Conclusion
60–90 seconds
Answer your initial question; broader implication; open to discussion
Scoring Criteria for DALF C1 Speaking
Criterion
Points
What Examiners Assess
Capacity to interact
5
Active participation in discussion; responding to challenges; building on examiner input
Coherence and cohesion
5
Logical organisation of presentation; transitions; ability to develop arguments over 10 minutes
Lexical competence
5
Range and precision of vocabulary; C1-level terminology; no repetition or approximate words
Grammatical and phonological competence
5
Accuracy; complex structures used correctly; pronunciation that does not impede understanding
Degree of elaboration
5
Depth of ideas; nuance; intellectual engagement with the topic; not surface-level summary
Phrases That Signal C1 Level in Speaking
Function
C1-Level French Phrases
Introducing a problematic
Il convient de s’interroger sur… / La question qui se pose est de savoir si…
Citing a document
Comme le souligne l’auteur… / Selon les donnees presentees dans… / L’article met en evidence que…
Nuancing a position
Si l’on nuance cette affirmation… / Il faut toutefois relativiser… / Certes, mais il serait reducteur de…
Opposing or contrasting
A rebours de cette idee… / Contrairement a ce que l’on pourrait croire… / Force est de constater que…
Concluding and opening discussion
Pour conclure provisionment… / Ces elements nous invitent a reflechir sur… / Il reste a determiner si…
Common Mistakes in DALF C1 Speaking
Mistake
Why It Reduces Score
Fix
Summarising documents instead of synthesising
Shows B2 level skill, not C1
Extract the tension between documents: “Alors que X soutient…, Y remet en question…”
Reading notes verbatim
No permitted notes may be read in full
Use bullet notes as prompts only; speak naturally
Giving up position under examiner challenge
Fails interaction criterion
Defend with qualifications: “Je maintiens que… bien que votre point soit valide”
Avoiding complex vocabulary
Limits lexical score to B2 range
Prepare thematic vocabulary in advance; use it in the expose
Finishing the expose in under 8 minutes
Indicates underdeveloped content
Aim for 9–10 minutes; expand each axis with examples and document references
60-Day Preparation Plan for DALF C1 Speaking
Week
Focus
Activity
1–2
Dossier reading skills
Read 3 French articles per day on complex topics; practise identifying tensions
3–4
Expose structure
Give 10-minute presentations on practice dossiers; record yourself
5–6
Discussion practice
Work with a partner or tutor — defend positions, handle challenges
languagetest.in provides DALF C1 speaking practice dossiers with model expose outlines and examiner feedback guides. The speaking component is the hardest to self-prepare — using structured resources is essential.