Last updated: 24 de junio de 2026
TEF Listening Section C: How to Spot and Avoid Distractors

TEF Listening Section C: How to Spot and Avoid Distractors
The Listening section (Compréhension Orale) of the TEF Canada is often a source of anxiety, and Section C is where many candidates lose crucial points. This section tests your ability to understand a short audio clip and answer questions that require deep comprehension, inference, and the ability to navigate tricky "distractors."
If you're aiming for a CLB 9 or higher, mastering Section C is non-negotiable.
What is a Distractor?
In the context of the TEF exam, a distractor is a multiple-choice option designed to sound correct but is actually wrong. It might use words directly from the audio, play on common misconceptions, or offer a statement that is partially true but incorrect in the context of the specific question asked.
The exam creators use distractors to separate candidates who truly understand the nuance of the spoken French from those who are just listening for familiar keywords.
The 4 Most Common Types of Distractors
To beat the test, you need to understand how the traps are set. Here are the four primary distractors you will encounter in TEF Listening Section C:
1. The "Exact Word" Trap (Le piège du mot exact)
This is the most common distractor. You hear a specific word or phrase in the audio, and suddenly, you see that exact word in one of the answers.
The Trap: The answer uses the word, but the overall meaning of the sentence is completely different from the audio. Example: The audio mentions "Le maire a refusé la construction d'un nouveau parc" (The mayor refused the construction of a new park).
Strategies to Avoid the Traps
Now that you know what to look for, here is how you defend against these distractors:
- Read the Questions Before the Audio Starts: You usually have a few seconds before the audio begins. Scan the question and the options. This primes your brain to listen for specific information.
- Listen for Synonyms, Not Exact Words: The correct answer will almost always paraphrase what was said in the audio. If you hear "Il fait très froid," the correct answer might say "La température est glaciale."
- Take Quick Notes: Jot down key numbers, dates, or main ideas. Don't try to write full sentences.
- Evaluate the Entire Option: Never stop reading halfway through an answer. Ensure every single word aligns with the audio.
- If You Miss It, Guess and Move On: Do not dwell on a missed question. The audio for the next question will start, and if you are still thinking about the previous one, you will miss the new information.
How PrepMyFrench Can Help
Practicing with realistic mock exams is the only way to train your ear to spot these distractors instinctively. Our platform offers hundreds of TEF listening questions that perfectly mimic the difficulty and the trickery of the real exam. We don't just give you the score; our AI provides detailed explanations of why an answer is right and why the distractors are wrong.
Don't let Section C keep you from your CLB 9. Start practicing smarter today.