Designed to mirror the real PET speaking exam — from personal interests to topic discussion and collaborative tasks. 20 sets, each with a different topic combination, so every exam moment is one you've already practised.
Vocabulary and grammar are fine in isolation, but when you need to express a personal opinion in a coherent flow, you run out of words halfway through.
PET speaking requires more than short answers — you need to develop ideas, express a position, and push the conversation forward. That rhythm is unfamiliar without specific practice.
The collaborative task asks you to discuss and reach a conclusion together — a format almost nobody has practised before sitting the real exam.
Practice opportunities are too few. Sitting the real test is often the first time candidates have ever run through the full B1 speaking format.
The examiner asks about your background, interests, and daily routines. At B1 level you're expected to develop your answers, not just give one-sentence replies.
Every set · mandatoryEach set covers 1–2 discussion topics spanning hobbies, travel, environment, technology, and community — practising structured, opinion-based expression.
1–2 topics per setSelected sets include a task where you must discuss options and reach a conclusion together — the defining challenge of PET speaking compared to KET.
Advanced challenge42 topics spanning interests, travel, environment, technology, community, and more — the full range of real B1 exam subjects.
Full topic coverageFull course: 224 practice questions · 42 topics covered · continuously expanding
20 full mock sets · 224 questions · 42 topics · real PET speaking exam structure
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