Last updated: 24 juin 2026
TEF Speaking Section: Time Management Mastery

TEF Speaking Section: Time Management Mastery (5 Minutes to CLB 7+)
Total Word Count: 1,800+ words
The TEF Canada Expression Orale is divided into two tasks:
- Task A (Formal Call): ~5 minutes.
- Task B (Convince a Friend): ~5 minutes.
Total Time: ~10 minutes of speaking.
The Problem: Most students either:
- Run out of things to say in 2 minutes (silence = panic).
- Rush through and finish in 3 minutes (missing points for development).
The Solution: A Time Management Framework that ensures you use every second strategically.
Part 1: The 5-Minute Breakdown (Task A - Formal Call)
Phase 1: Opening (0:00 - 0:30)
Goal: Introduce yourself and state your reason for calling.
Script:
- "Bonjour, je m'appelle [Name]. Je vous appelle concernant [Topic from prompt]."
Example:
Part 2: The 5-Minute Breakdown (Task B - Convince a Friend)
Phase 1: Opening / Greeting (0:00 - 0:20)
Goal: Establish the friendly tone and introduce the topic.
Script:
- "Salut [Friend's Name] ! Dis-moi, j'ai une super idée. Tu sais que [Context from prompt] ? Eh bien, je pense qu'on devrait [Proposal]."
Example:
Part 3: Advanced Time Fillers (When You're Running Short)
If you finish your arguments in 3 minutes, use these Time Extenders:
Technique 1: Personal Anecdote
- "Tu te souviens la dernière fois qu'on est allés à un concert ? On s'était tellement amusés ! Ce sera pareil cette fois-ci."
Time Gain: +30 seconds.
Technique 2: Ask Rhetorical Questions
Part 4: What to Do When Time is Running Out
If the examiner signals that time is up (usually at 4:45), wrap up quickly.
Emergency Closing:
- "Bon, en résumé, je pense vraiment que c'est une super idée et j'espère que tu viendras avec moi. Fais-moi confiance !"
Time: 10 seconds.
Aiming for ?
Part 5: Common Timing Mistakes
Mistake 1: Finishing Too Early
- Problem: You ask 5 questions in Task A and stop at 2 minutes.
- Solution: Always have a backup list of "Nice-to-know" questions (parking, accessibility, payment methods).
Mistake 2: Repeating the Same Idea
Conclusion
Time management is not about watching the clock—it's about using a structured framework that naturally fills 5 minutes.
- Task A: Opening (30s) + Questions (3min) + Hypotheticals (1min) + Closing (30s) = 5min.
- Task B: Opening (20s) + Arguments (2.5min) + Objections (1.5min) + Closing (30s) = 5min.
Stick to the phases, and you'll never run out of things to say.