General Instruction for OET Reading
About the Reading sub-test
The Reading sub-test consists of three parts and a total of
42 question items. All three parts take a total of 60 minutes to complete. The
topics are of generic healthcare interest and are therefore accessible to
candidates across all professions.
The Reading sub-test structure
Part A – expeditious reading task (15 minutes)
Part A assesses your ability to locate specific information
from four short texts in a quick and efficient manner. The four short texts
relate to a single healthcare topic, and you must answer 20 questions in the
allocated time period. The 20 questions consist of matching, sentence completion
and short answer questions.
Part B and Part C – careful reading tasks (45 minutes)
Part B assesses your ability to identify the detail, gist or
main point of six short texts sourced from the healthcare workplace (100-150
words each). The texts might consist of extracts from policy documents,
hospital guidelines, manuals or internal communications, such as emails or
memos. For each text, there is one three-option multiple-choice question.
Part C assesses your ability to identify detailed meaning
and opinion in two texts on topics of interest to healthcare professionals (800
words each). For each text, you must answer eight four-option multiple choice
questions.
How is reading ability assessed in OET?
Reading Part A (the expeditious reading task) tests your
ability to skim and scan quickly across different texts on a given topic in
order to locate specific information. For that purpose, Part A is strictly
timed and you must complete all 20 question items within the allocated 15
minutes. To complete the task successfully, you will also need to understand
the conventions of different medical text types and understand the presentation
of numerical and textual information.
Reading Part B tests your ability to understand the detail,
gist or main point of complex texts commonly found in the healthcare workplace.
To complete the task successfully, you will need to identify specific ideas at
sentence level.
Reading Part C tests your ability to understand the explicit
or implied meaning as well as the attitude or opinion presented in a longer
text. To complete the task successfully, you will need to identify the
relationship between ideas at sentence and paragraph level. Part C also tests
your ability to accurately understand lexical references and complex phrases
within the text.
Assessors who mark the Reading sub-test are qualified and
highly trained. Candidate responses are assessed against an established marking
guide. During the marking session, problematic or unforeseen answers are
referred to a sub-group of senior assessors for guidance.
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