Exam-style scenarios
Practice with realistic role-play tasks so your preparation matches the actual test format.
Speaking isn’t a “study topic” — it’s a skill. The exam rewards performance: clear structure, professional empathy, and confident next steps. Oety helps you train those habits with realistic AI role-plays and fast, actionable feedback.
Oety turns OET Speaking into a repeatable loop: practice an exam-style role-play, receive instant feedback, and repeat daily. Short sessions build automatic speaking habits — the fastest way to improve role-play performance.
Practice with realistic role-play tasks so your preparation matches the actual test format.
Train professional empathy and clarity so you sound natural, supportive, and confident.
A simple flow prevents rambling and makes your message easy to follow under time pressure.
Oety is built for the reality of OET Speaking: you must perform in a role-play, not just “know English”. Focus on confidence, structure, empathy, and consistency — the things that actually move your score.
Role-plays require professional tone, patient-friendly language, and clear explanations. Oety helps you practice these patterns repeatedly until they become automatic.
Improve fastest by changing one thing at a time: structure first, then empathy, then clarity and next steps.
Answers to help you start faster and avoid common Speaking mistakes.
Yes. Oety supports OET Speaking practice for both professions.
No. Oety helps you practice role-plays consistently without depending on a partner.
Start with 5 minutes daily. Consistency beats occasional long sessions. If you have more time, do 2–3 role-plays.
Clear structure, patient-friendly explanations, empathy, and confident next steps. Role-plays reward communication habits.
Use a consistent opening: greet, introduce your role, confirm the patient’s name, and state the purpose (“I’d like to ask a few questions…”).
Signpost your plan (“First I’ll ask…, then I’ll explain…, and finally we’ll decide…”) and close each section before moving on.
Keep templates short. Use one empathy line at the right moment, and explain with plain language instead of memorized complex phrases.
Use one targeted line: acknowledge feelings, reassure, then move to the plan. Example: “I understand this is worrying. Let’s go through it step by step.”
Unclear structure, missing next steps, too much medical jargon, and weak rapport. Fix structure first and keep language patient-friendly.
Yes. Start with the structure template and short role-plays, then increase complexity as you gain confidence.
Android: Google Play. iOS: App Store. Use the download links below.
Email us anytime at oety@veridir.com.
Start training role-plays today. Download on iOS or Android. For daily prompts and scripts, join Telegram, Youtube and Facebook. For quick tips and short routines, follow on X and Instagram . Need help? Email oety@veridir.com.