Writing is the module that most candidates underestimate. In both Goethe and DELF exams, many test-takers spend months on grammar books and vocabulary lists — then score poorly on writing because they have never practised producing structured, exam-quality text under timed conditions.
This guide gives you a concrete strategy for improving your writing score using mock tests, targeted feedback loops, and a repeatable structure that examiners reward.
Why Writing Is the Hardest Module to Improve
Reading and listening improve with passive exposure — podcasts, articles, films. Speaking improves with conversation partners. But writing requires active production — you must generate correct, organised German or French from scratch, under time pressure, without feedback.
The three core problems candidates face:
| Problem | Why It Happens | Fix |
| Off-topic responses | Misread the task or wrote a general essay | Always underline task keywords before writing |
| Weak structure | No clear introduction, body, conclusion | Use a 3-part skeleton every time |
| Grammar errors under pressure | Correct in exercises, wrong in timed writing | Timed mock tests with immediate review |
| Vocabulary repetition | Limited range, same words repeated | Build topic-specific synonym lists |
| Wrong register | Formal task answered informally (or vice versa) | Identify register before writing a single word |
Understanding Writing Tasks Across Levels
Different exam levels demand different writing outputs. Know exactly what each level expects:
| Exam | Writing Task 1 | Writing Task 2 | Key Register |
| Goethe A2 | Form / simple message | Short informal text | Informal |
| Goethe B1 | Forum post / email (150w) | Not applicable | Semi-formal |
| Goethe B2 | Forum reply (180–220w) | Formal letter/email (180–220w) | Mixed |
| Goethe C1 | Text commentary (230–270w) | Formal text (230–270w) | Formal |
| DELF A2 | Message / postcard (60–80w) | Simple letter (60–80w) | Informal |
| DELF B1 | Letter / article (160–180w) | Not applicable | Semi-formal |
| DELF B2 | Formal letter or article (250w) | Not applicable | Formal |
The 3-Part Writing Skeleton – Use It Every Time
Strong exam writing always has a clear skeleton. Memorise this structure and apply it regardless of the topic:
| Part | Function | Word Target (B2 example) |
| Introduction | Acknowledge the topic, state your position or purpose | 30–40 words |
| Body Paragraph 1 | Main argument or first point + example/evidence | 60–80 words |
| Body Paragraph 2 | Second argument or counterpoint + evidence | 60–80 words |
| Conclusion | Summarise position, polite closing if needed | 30–40 words |
For B1 level: Introduction + 1–2 body points + Conclusion is sufficient. For C1: expect 3–4 body paragraphs with more sophisticated argumentation.
Register Recognition – The Invisible Skill
Examiners deduct marks for using the wrong register (formal/informal). Before you write a single word, ask:
| Clue in Task | Correct Register | Examples (German/French) |
| Write to a friend / forum post | Informal | Du / tu, contractions, casual vocabulary |
| Write to an organisation / official | Formal | Sie / vous, complete sentences, no slang |
| Write to your university | Formal | Academic tone, structured paragraphs |
| Write an article for a magazine | Neutral-formal | Third person possible, no personal address |
Mock Test Writing Strategy – Step by Step
Step 1: Read the task twice. Underline: (a) who you are writing to, (b) what content points are required, (c) the register clue.
Step 2: Spend 5 minutes planning. Write a quick skeleton — 4 bullet points maximum. Do not skip this. Unplanned writing drifts off-topic.
Step 3: Write at a steady pace. Budget your time: 5 min plan + 55 min writing + 5 min review for a 75-minute task.
Step 4: Review for 3 common errors. In the last 5 minutes, check: verb endings, article genders (German), subjunctive use (French B2+), and word count.
How Mock Tests Specifically Improve Writing
| Mock Test Activity | Benefit |
| Write under timed conditions (no dictionary) | Builds real exam speed and mental endurance |
| Compare your response to a model answer | Identifies structural and vocabulary gaps |
| Count your words accurately | Stops you writing too little (penalty) or too much (wasted time) |
| Rewrite rejected sentences correctly | Embeds correct grammar patterns in muscle memory |
| Track which error types recur | Allows targeted grammar revision rather than random studying |
The Review Cycle – How to Learn from Each Mock Test
Most candidates write a mock test and move on. The review cycle is where real improvement happens:
1. Write → Complete the task under timed conditions
2. Read model answer → Note structural differences, vocabulary choices, register
3. Tag your errors → Grammar / Vocabulary / Structure / Register / Word count
4. Rewrite the weak paragraphs → Fix the specific errors you made
5. Write a new task → Apply the lesson from the previous task immediately
Running this cycle once per week is enough to see measurable improvement within 6–8 weeks.
Useful Connectors to Boost Writing Quality
Examiners reward lexical variety and cohesion. Use a range of connectors — not just “aber” or “mais”:
| Function | German | French |
| Adding information | Außerdem, Darüber hinaus | De plus, En outre |
| Contrasting | Allerdings, Jedoch | Cependant, Néanmoins |
| Giving reasons | Da, Weil, Denn | Car, Puisque, Parce que |
| Conceding a point | Zwar … aber, Obwohl | Certes … mais, Bien que (+subj) |
| Concluding | Zusammenfassend, Insgesamt | En conclusion, En somme |
Key Takeaway
Writing is a trainable skill. The candidates who improve fastest are those who write regularly under timed mock conditions, review their errors systematically, and repeat. Use languagetest.in mock tests to generate timed writing prompts, compare against model answers, and track your progress across practice sessions.
References
1. Goethe-Institut B2 Writing Criteria – goethe.de
2. DELF B2 Writing Assessment Grid – ciep.fr
3. languagetest.in Mock Tests – Goethe and DELF Writing Practice

