CAE · Reading & Use of English Parts 1–3 · Texas, USA

Reading & Use of English Parts 1–3 for the CAE Exam — Texas candidates

10% of the CAE test plan. Multiple-choice cloze, open cloze, and word formation at C1 level, testing advanced vocabulary and grammar. Calibrated for Texan candidates.

If you have already studied this content from a textbook, you know the material. The question this page answers is whether you can apply it under exam conditions. Reading & Use of English Parts 1–3 sits at roughly 10% of the Cambridge Advanced (C1) content distribution — Parts 1–3 of CAE Reading and Use of English test vocabulary, grammar, and word formation at C1 level. The vocabulary in Part 1 is more nuanced than FCE — testing idiomatic phrases, formal register words, and near-synonyms with subtle connotation differences. Pass rates for the CAE are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Texas candidates preparing for CAE, the calibration of study to local context matters: Texas is the second-largest CDL-issuing state and a top-3 state for NCLEX-RN candidates. TxDPS administers CDL skills tests; the Texas Board of Nursing recognises NCLEX results from Pearson VUE.

Pass rates for CAE (Texas, USA) are published periodically by the awarding body.

Common failure modes

These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.

  • !Choosing a word that works in isolation but has the wrong register for the text context
  • !Word formation errors — not recognising when a negative prefix changes connotation significantly
  • !Open cloze: writing content words when function words (that, which, whether, nor) are required

Study tips

  • 1Read The Economist, The Guardian, or The Atlantic — exposure to C1 prose vocabulary in context.
  • 2For word formation, learn the prefix/suffix effects on meaning and register: -ness, -tion, -ity, mis-, over-, under-.
  • 3For open cloze, focus on: conjunctions (however/nevertheless), determiners (little/few/no), and pronouns (those, which).
  • 4For CDL: book your skills test at a TxDPS megacenter (Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Austin) or one of the 200+ third-party testers; megacenter wait times average 4–6 weeks.
  • 5For NCLEX-RN: the Texas Board of Nursing requires fingerprinting via IdentoGO before authorization-to-test (ATT) is issued — start that process the same day you submit your application.
  • 6Spanish-language CDL written tests are offered in Texas; the skills/road portion is conducted in English. Many CDL training programs in the Rio Grande Valley teach a bilingual track.

Sample CAE Reading & Use of English Parts 1–3 questions

These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real CAE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.

  1. 1

    The politician's speech had an _____ effect on public opinion, boosting support for the policy.

    • AinfluentialCorrect
    • Bimpactful
    • Cconsiderable
    • Doverwhelming
    Why this answer?

    "Influential" is the precise collocate for "having an effect on opinion" — it specifically connotes the quality of influencing. "Impactful" is informal/business jargon avoided in formal English; "considerable" modifies size not type of effect; "overwhelming" contradicts the positive framing.

Frequently asked questions

How difficult is CAE Reading and Use of English compared to FCE?
CAE R&UoE tests vocabulary at C1 level — idiomatic expressions, formal register words, and subtle synonym distinctions that go well beyond FCE. Part 1 options are often plausible and require deep collocational knowledge. Parts 2–6 require the same skills as FCE but applied to more complex texts.
What is the CAE pass rate for Texan candidates?
Pass rates for CAE candidates in Texas, USA are published periodically by the awarding body. Practice questions, full-length simulations, and weak-area drills are the highest-impact way to improve your odds.
How long should Texan candidates study Reading & Use of English Parts 1–3 for the CAE?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Reading & Use of English Parts 1–3 requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. Texas is the second-largest CDL-issuing state and a top-3 state for NCLEX-RN candidates. TxDPS administers CDL skills tests; the Texas Board of Nursing recognises NCLEX results from Pearson VUE. Combine Reading & Use of English Parts 1–3 study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

Practice Cambridge CAE (C1) free with Koydo.

Advanced-level reading, writing, listening, and speaking.

Related study guides