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OET

OET

Occupational English Test – The English Language Test that reflects real nursing scenarios

OET is an English language test conducted for candidates those who have medical grounds. It is a practical test with content that reflects real-life tasks. OET covers all four language skills with an emphasis on communication in a healthcare environment. Countries like USA, UK, Australia, Australia New Zeeland and Switzerland accept OET for students’ visa and for migration. OET has four modules; speaking, Listening, Reading and writing like IELTS, each module grades A,B C… like that. Here also, they assess the power of your English Language. Here the communication will be in medical terms. It is very easy to crack OET if you get proper guidance through a recognized coaching institute. At A2Z English academy,you will get an adequate training to develop the English skills of reading, writing, listening and speaking to achieve a better grade in the OET test.

Listening(approx. 50 minutes) Same content for all healthcare professions.

  • Part A: recorded, simulated professional/patient consultation with note-taking questions.
  • Part B: recorded talk or lecture on health-related topic, with range of short and multiple choice answers.

Reading (1 hour) Same content for all healthcare professions.

  • Part A: skim and scan short health-related texts and complete a summary paragraph by filling in missing words.
  • Part B: read longer health-related texts and answer multiple-choice questions.

 

Writing (45 minutes) Specific to profession, based on typical workplace situations.

The task is to write a letter, usually a referral letter. Sometimes, especially for some professions, a different type of letter is required: e.g. a letter of transfer or discharge, or a letter to advise or inform a patient, career, or group.

Speaking (approx. 20 minutes) Specific to profession, based on typical workplace situations.

In a private room you will take part in two role-plays. You take your professional role (as a healthcare professional) while the interlocutor plays a patient or client, or sometimes a relative or career.

112 K

CLASSES COMPLETED

347 K

STUDENTS ENROLLED

451

PROFESSIONAL TEACHERS

992 K

FOREIGN FOLLOWERS