FCE · Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze · New York, USA
Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for the FCE Exam — New York candidates
8% of the FCE test plan. Selecting the correct word from four options to fill gaps in a text, testing vocabulary and collocation. Calibrated for New Yorker candidates.
Most exam coaching covers the curriculum at the same depth across all topics. That misses the asymmetry of high-stakes testing: a few topics carry disproportionate weight on the score. Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze sits at roughly 8% of the Cambridge First Certificate (B2) content distribution — Part 1 has 8 gaps in a text, each with four vocabulary/collocation options. This tests lexical knowledge: the ability to select words that fit grammatically AND collocate correctly with the surrounding text. A strong performance here is a reliable indicator of broad B2 vocabulary. Pass rates for the FCE are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For New York candidates preparing for FCE, the calibration of study to local context matters: New York is a top-3 state for NCLEX-RN, MCAT, and GRE candidates. NY State Education Department (NYSED) handles RN licensure differently from compact states.
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.
- !Selecting a word that is grammatically possible but collocates incorrectly with the context
- !Ignoring the surrounding text and selecting based on single-word recognition alone
- !Confusing near-synonyms: affect/influence, raise/rise, do/make, say/tell
Study tips
- 1Learn vocabulary in collocational frames: "make a decision" not "do a decision"; "heavy traffic" not "strong traffic".
- 2Read each gap sentence twice — once alone, once in the paragraph context — before choosing.
- 3Build a list of commonly confused word pairs from FCE practice tests and learn the distinction.
- 4For NCLEX-RN: NYSED is not part of the Nurse Licensure Compact, so a NY licence does not transfer to other states without endorsement. Consider this if you plan to work in NJ/CT after graduating.
- 5For MCAT: most NY medical schools (Columbia, Cornell, Mount Sinai, NYU) cap MCAT scores accepted at 3 years old — verify your target schools' exact policy.
- 6For CDL: NY DMV requires a 14-day permit-holding period before scheduling the CDL skills test; budget this gap into your training schedule.
Sample FCE Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real FCE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
The new policy had a significant _____ on employee satisfaction.
- Aaffect
- Beffect
- CimpactCorrect
- Dconsequence
Why this answer?
"Impact" and "effect" are both possible, but "significant impact on" is the most idiomatic collocation in formal English. "Affect" is a verb, not a noun. "Consequence" implies a result of something negative and typically takes "of" not "on".
- 2
She _____ the opportunity to speak to the director.
- Adid
- Bgot
- CtookCorrect
- Dhad
Why this answer?
"Took the opportunity" is the correct fixed collocation. "Got an opportunity" is possible informally, but "took the opportunity" is the standard idiomatic form for deliberately using a chance.
Frequently asked questions
How many questions are in FCE Reading and Use of English?
What is the FCE pass rate for New Yorker candidates?
How long should New Yorker candidates study Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for the FCE?
Practice Cambridge FCE (B2) free with Koydo.
B2 First — Use of English, Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking.
Related study guides
- Reading & Use of English Part 2 — Open Cloze for FCE (New York, USA)Another FCE topic for New Yorker candidates
- Reading & Use of English Part 3 — Word Formation for FCE (New York, USA)Another FCE topic for New Yorker candidates
- Reading & Use of English Part 4 — Key Word Transformation for FCE (New York, USA)Another FCE topic for New Yorker candidates
- Writing — Essay for FCE (New York, USA)Another FCE topic for New Yorker candidates
- Writing — Article & Report for FCE (New York, USA)Another FCE topic for New Yorker candidates
- Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for FCE — U.S. candidatesSame Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze topic, different locale framing
- Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for FCE — U.K. candidatesSame Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze topic, different locale framing
- Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze for FCE — Indian candidatesSame Reading & Use of English Part 1 — Multiple-Choice Cloze topic, different locale framing