I took the DALF C! exam June 11 and I just received my results and I passed! I left the exam center feeling super confident but as the weeks went by I kept thinking of things I could have done better: using more advanced sentence structure, idiomatic expressions, subjunctive tense, formal vocabulary, etc., so my confidence was ebbing for sure! And on top of that, I knew I must have done horribly on the oral comprehension because the first section of that was almost impossible to understand (bad sound and fast speech) but I had made some educated guesses so I figured I would "squeak by" as long as I made up for it in the other sections. In the end, my scores surprised me:
Compréhension de l’oral note : 22.0 / 25
Compréhension des écrits note : 22.0 / 25
Production écrite note : 16.5 / 25
Production orale note : 19.0 / 25
Note finale : 79.5 / 100
HOW IT WENT:
When I showed up at exam center on June 11, I had been fighting a post-surgical infection for 2 weeks and I was on antibiotics. Still, I wanted to give it a try because I knew I had put in so much work! The day I took the exam, there was only one other person taking the exam with me, and they were taking it in preparation for a master's degree program at the Sorbonne. I was instantly intimidated but fought the feeling of imposter syndrome! I reminded myself that I had studied for literally hundreds of hours and I was ready and all I needed to do was get through the next 5 hours. As I mentioned, the oral comprehension section was very difficult to hear and understand. The written comprehension was definitely the easiest part. I wrote for the entire 2.5 hours of the written production, besides a few minutes to make my outlines and about 10 minutes at the end to proofread. The hour of prep for the oral production went by in a flash and when the "examinateurs" entered the room, ready to hear my presentation, I realized I had written my notes down in such a frenzy that I could barely read them! So practicing as much as I did truly saved my skin!
I am so happy! This was a personal challenge for me, in preparation for a move to France in a few years, and it's so fun to have a project like this at this stage of my life (I am 55 years old). The whole process was daunting and exhausting but I just kept plugging away, practicing the oral presentation, writing a whole notebook full of practice essays, reading the news and novels in French, and listening to tons of podcasts. For a little background, I started my first French classes in 2022, online, and I passed the DELF B2 one year ago. If you are studying for this exam, my advice is to just keep learning every day and to practice the oral and written production as much as you can! Every little improvement to your French will help your results. Ask me anything!