Self-practice is what builds the skill

Mocks tell students where they are weak.
Self-practice is what removes the weakness.

If a student does 20 mock tests without practice, the score barely moves.
If a student practices daily and does 3–4 mocks, the score jumps.

Especially for TEF writing and speaking:

  • structure comes from practice
  • vocabulary comes from practice
  • reflexes come from practice

Mocks don’t create reflexes. Practice does.

Use mock tests to check yourself.
Use self-practice to improve yourself.

That’s 80–90% of the score.

What actually gives high scores (TEF Writing & Speaking)

High scores don’t come from “fancy French.”
They come from method, structure, and control:


1. Method = You follow steps, not inspiration

In the TEF, you should never think:
“Hmm… what should I write/say?”

You already know the steps.

For example, in Writing Task B or Speaking Task 3, your brain runs this automatically:

  1. React to the situation
  2. Give your opinion
  3. Argument 1 + example
  4. Argument 2 + example
  5. Solution
  6. Conclusion

You are following a procedure, like a recipe.
That is method.

No stress. No improvisation. No confusion.


2. Structure = Your message is clearly organized

The examiner can see your organization.

Your text/speech has visible parts:

  • Introduction
  • Development
  • Conclusion

Your ideas are linked with connectors:

  • Tout d’abord
  • Ensuite
  • En effet
  • Donc
  • Pour conclure

Even if your grammar is simple, your organization looks advanced.

The examiner thinks: This candidate knows how to communicate.


3. Control = You manage the language, the time, and the task

Control means:

  • You respect the word count / time limit
  • You don’t go off topic
  • You use the correct register (formal)
  • You don’t panic searching for vocabulary
  • You use memorized phrases smoothly

You are not “trying to speak French.”
You are using French with confidence.

This feeling of control is what examiners reward.


Why this gives high scores

Because the TEF is not testing creativity.
It is testing: Can this person function in real life in French in Canada?

Method shows you are trained.
Structure shows you are clear.
Control shows you are reliable.

That is exactly what the examiner wants to see.


1. You know the exact structure of each task by heart

You don’t invent while writing or speaking.
You follow a pre-learned structure automatically.

  • Task A / Speaking Task 1 → functional message structure
  • Task B / Speaking Task 2 & 3 → opinion structure

The examiner immediately sees: organized candidate.


2. You have ready-made phrases you can use automatically

You don’t search for sentences during the exam.
You use expressions like:

  • Je me permets de vous écrire…
  • Suite à votre message…
  • À mon avis…
  • Il est important de…
  • Il serait préférable de…
  • Pour conclure…

This creates a B2/C1 impression, even with simple grammar.


3. You have practiced many topics using the same structure

You are not surprised by topics.

Social media, transport, environment, work, neighbors, health, services…
You have already practiced them with the same model.

So in the exam, you are calm and fast.


4. You understand what the examiner is looking for

The examiner is checking:

  • Is the message clear?
  • Is the instruction respected?
  • Is the register correct?
  • Are ideas logical?
  • Is there an opinion + justification + solution?

Not: “Is this beautiful French?”


The reality

Candidates with perfect grammar but no structure → average score.
Candidates with simple grammar but perfect method → high score.


Golden idea

The TEF rewards communication efficiency, not linguistic beauty.

What mock tests really do

  • Show timing
  • Show pressure
  • Show your weak spots

They do not build:

  • vocabulary reflexes
  • sentence patterns
  • structure habits

Only practice does that.

The winning combo most people miss

You don’t need 20 mocks.

You need:

  • 90% structured practice
  • 10% mock tests (just to check timing & nerves)

I’ve seen candidates who did:

2 mock tests + heavy structure practice → C1
and others who did:
15 mocks + no real practice → stuck at B1/B2

Why this works (especially for TEF)

TEF is predictable:

  • same task types
  • same expectations
  • same writing patterns
  • same formal phrases

If you master the pattern, the topic almost doesn’t matter.

So yes, you can score very high without relying on mocks,
as long as you:

practice with the exam structure in mind, every day.