LOTE (Language Other Than English) assessments measure proficiency in a target language across listening, reading, writing, and speaking domains. Whether you are preparing for the Australian HSC LOTE exam, the Texas LOTE assessment, or a state-level language proficiency test, our free printable PDF provides practice questions you can study anywhere.
Students preparing for HSC language exams in New South Wales, Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) LOTE evaluations, and CEFR-aligned assessments at the A2 through B2 levels will find these practice questions representative of real exam task types and difficulty.
Listening Comprehension tasks present recorded audio in the target language โ conversations, announcements, interviews, or radio segments. Questions test global understanding (main idea), specific detail recall, and inference. For the HSC LOTE exam, audio is played twice; for Texas LOTE assessments, playback rules vary by test administration.
Reading Comprehension uses authentic or near-authentic texts: newspaper articles, personal letters, advertisements, menus, timetables, and brochures. Questions range from identifying factual information to inferring meaning from context and recognizing text purpose. Vocabulary in context questions are common at B1 and above.
Writing is typically divided into two tasks. Functional writing requires producing a letter, email, postcard, or form response to a specific prompt โ accuracy, register, and task fulfillment are all marked. Extended writing at higher levels requires an essay, narrative, or argumentative response demonstrating range of vocabulary, grammatical accuracy, and discourse coherence.
Speaking assessments involve prepared and unprepared components. Structured oral responses ask students to respond to visual stimuli or describe a situation in the target language. Conversation tasks test spontaneous interaction. Examiners mark pronunciation, fluency, grammatical range, and communicative effectiveness. CEFR descriptors (A1 through C2) underpin the marking rubrics used across most LOTE frameworks.
The LOTE PDF is structured around skill domains rather than a single language, making it useful for students of Spanish, French, Italian, German, Japanese, Chinese (Mandarin), Arabic, and other commonly assessed languages. When reviewing comprehension questions, focus on the task strategy โ identifying key words, predicting content from context, and eliminating wrong answers โ rather than translating every word.
For writing tasks in the PDF, practice rewriting sample answers in your target language using the same structural framework. For speaking preparation, use the PDF prompts as oral practice cues and record your responses. Comparing your answers against the model responses builds awareness of vocabulary range and grammatical accuracy expected at each CEFR band.