KET · Conversation Skills · South Korea
Conversation Skills for the KET Exam — Korean candidates
10% of the KET test plan. A2-level conversational turn-taking, greetings, and simple transactional dialogues. Calibrated for Korean 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. Conversation Skills sits at roughly 10% of the Cambridge Key English Test (A2) content distribution — Conversation skills in A2 Key include transactional dialogues (making requests, asking prices, giving directions), interactive turn-taking, and appropriate responses to questions. These skills are tested in both the speaking exam and the listening section. Pass rates for the KET are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Korean candidates preparing for KET, the calibration of study to local context matters: TOEIC and TOEFL are the dominant English credentials. TOPIK (Korean proficiency) and CSAT (Suneung) gate domestic outcomes.
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.
- !Not using standard conversation openers: "Excuse me...", "Could you...?", "I'd like..."
- !Giving answers that do not relate to the question asked
- !Failing to ask for clarification when not understanding — instead guessing incorrectly
Study tips
- 1Memorize the standard A2 conversation patterns: shopping (How much is it?), directions (Turn left, go straight), making requests (Can I have...? Could you help...?).
- 2Practice with a partner: role-play buying tickets, asking for information, and making arrangements.
- 3Learn the repair strategies: "Sorry, can you repeat that?" "What does ... mean?" "I'm not sure, but..."
- 4한국 응시자에게 KET 대비의 핵심은 독해 속도와 듣기 정확도입니다 — 한국식 시험 문화와 다른 출제 패턴에 익숙해지세요.
Sample KET Conversation Skills questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real KET questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
You are in a shop and want to know the price of a jacket. You say:
- A"Jacket money?"
- B"How much is this jacket, please?"Correct
- C"Tell me the cost of the jacket."
- D"I want jacket price."
Why this answer?
"How much is this jacket, please?" is the standard polite A2 transactional question for asking about price. Options A and D are not grammatically correct. Option C is grammatically possible but unnatural — "tell me" is a command, not a polite request.
Frequently asked questions
What happens in Part 2 of the A2 Key Speaking test?
What is the KET pass rate for Korean candidates?
How long should Korean candidates study Conversation Skills for the KET?
Practice Cambridge KET (A2) free with Koydo.
Reading & Writing, Listening, and Speaking practice tasks.
Related study guides
- Reading & Vocabulary for KET (South Korea)Another KET topic for Korean candidates
- Grammar Basics for KET (South Korea)Another KET topic for Korean candidates
- Listening — Short Recordings for KET (South Korea)Another KET topic for Korean candidates
- Speaking — Interaction & Personal Information for KET (South Korea)Another KET topic for Korean candidates
- Writing — Notes & Short Messages for KET (South Korea)Another KET topic for Korean candidates
- Conversation Skills for KET — U.S. candidatesSame Conversation Skills topic, different locale framing
- Conversation Skills for KET — U.K. candidatesSame Conversation Skills topic, different locale framing
- Conversation Skills for KET — Indian candidatesSame Conversation Skills topic, different locale framing