CAE has five papers
Reading | Writing | Use of English | Listening | Speaking
Each of the written papers is returned to Cambridge for marking and assessment. The Speaking Test is conducted by two locally based examiners who examine students face to face. All examiners are accredited by Cambridge ESOL.
Reading (Paper 1) 1 hour 30 minutes
The Reading paper assesses students’ ability to read and understand texts taken from a wide range of sources, including fiction and non-fiction books, journals, newspapers and magazines. students are expected to understand the meaning of written English at word, phrase, sentence, paragraph and whole text level. It includes understanding of text content, organization and structure, and the development of ideas, opinions and attitudes.
Writing (Paper 2) 2 hours
The Writing paper assesses students’ ability to write non-specialised texts types such as letters, articles, reports and reviews for a given purpose and target reader, covering a wide range of topics. The paper also includes questions on set texts. Responses are of 300-350 words in length.
Use of English (Paper 3) 1 hour 30 minutes
In the Use of English paper, students are expected to demonstrate their knowledge and control of the language system by completing various tasks at word, sentence and text level. These include gap-filling and word formation exercises, comprehension questions and a summary writing task.
Listening (Paper 4) 40 minutes (approx.)
The Listening paper assesses the ability to listen to and understand texts taken from a variety of text types including interviews, discussions, lectures and conversations. It tests the ability to understand the meaning of spoken English, to extract information from a spoken text and to understand speakers’ attitudes and opinions.
Speaking (Paper 5) 19 minutes
The Speaking Test assesses students’ ability to interact in conversational English in a range of contexts. The paper contains three parts, which take the form of an interview section, a collaborative task and individual long-turns with follow-up discussion. students are provided with picture and written stimulus. |