What Is Read Aloud?

Read Aloud is the first task in the PTE Speaking section. You are shown a short text of up to 60 words and must read it aloud as naturally and clearly as possible. The microphone opens automatically after a preparation countdown, so you must be ready to speak when the tone sounds.

Detail Value
Number of items per test 6–7
Preparation time 30–40 seconds (varies by text length)
Response time 30–40 seconds
Text length Up to 60 words
Skills scored Speaking and Reading
Weight in exam High — one of the most heavily weighted Speaking tasks

How It Is Scored

Read Aloud contributes to both your Speaking and Reading scores. It is marked on three dimensions, each out of 5 points (maximum 15 points per item):

Dimension Max Points What the AI Checks
Content 5 How many words from the original text you said correctly, in order, without adding or skipping words
Oral Fluency 5 Smooth, natural delivery — no long pauses, no repetitions, no false starts
Pronunciation 5 Clear vowels, consonants, word stress, and sentence rhythm

Important: Content and Oral Fluency together count for 10 of 15 points. Fluency is often the deciding factor between a 65 and a 79.

Step-by-Step Approach

Follow this routine for every Read Aloud item:

Step When What To Do
1. Skim First 5 seconds of prep Read the whole passage once quickly to understand the meaning and spot long or unfamiliar words
2. Mark pause points Next 10 seconds Identify natural pauses at commas, semicolons, dashes, and full stops
3. Identify hard words Remaining prep time Practise tricky words silently — names, technical terms, multi-syllable academic words
4. Speak immediately When tone sounds Start at once — do not pause, do not clear your throat. The mic records from the first sound
5. Keep going Throughout response Never stop mid-sentence to correct yourself. A small mispronunciation costs far less than a long pause

Sample Passages

The texts below are representative of real PTE Read Aloud items. Practise reading each one aloud smoothly in one breath-group at a time.

Sample 1 — Science and Technology

“Artificial intelligence is reshaping the way scientists analyse large datasets. By automating repetitive tasks and identifying patterns that humans might overlook, these systems are accelerating discoveries in fields ranging from genomics to climate modelling. Researchers, however, caution that algorithmic bias remains a significant challenge that must be addressed before the technology can be widely trusted.”

Focus words: ar-ti-fi-cial, ge-no-mics, al-go-rith-mic — practise the stress pattern before you speak.

Sample 2 — Economics and Society

“Urbanisation has accelerated dramatically over the past century, with more than half the world’s population now living in cities. While urban centres drive economic growth and innovation, they also concentrate poverty, pollution, and pressure on public services. Sustainable city planning has therefore become one of the defining policy challenges of the twenty-first century.”

Focus words: ur-ban-i-sa-tion, sus-tain-a-ble, pol-lu-tion — keep a steady rhythm; do not rush the long words.

Sample 3 — Health and Medicine

“Sleep deprivation has been linked to a wide range of health problems, including impaired memory consolidation, weakened immune response, and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Neuroscientists recommend that adults aim for seven to nine hours of uninterrupted sleep each night to maintain optimal cognitive and physical function.”

Focus words: de-pri-va-tion, con-sol-i-da-tion, neu-ro-sci-en-tists — pause naturally at the comma after “disease.”

Sample 4 — Environment

“Coral reefs support approximately twenty-five percent of all marine species despite covering less than one percent of the ocean floor. Rising sea temperatures caused by climate change are triggering mass bleaching events, and scientists warn that without significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, many reef ecosystems could be irreversibly damaged within decades.”

Focus words: ir-re-vers-ib-ly, e-co-sys-tems, green-house — stress the numbers (twenty-five, one) clearly.

Tips and Tricks

Tone and Pacing

  • Speak at 70-80% of your normal conversational speed. Most test-takers rush. Slowing down by 20% dramatically improves both fluency and pronunciation scores.
  • Use sentence stress, not uniform word stress. Content words (nouns, main verbs, adjectives, adverbs) get emphasis. Function words (a, the, of, is, was) are softer and shorter. Reading every word at the same volume sounds robotic and lowers your fluency score.
  • Rise and fall with punctuation. A comma means a slight rise and a micro-pause. A full stop means a definite fall in pitch. A semicolon is similar to a comma but with a slightly longer pause.

Handling Difficult Words

  • Break long words into syllables silently during prep. “Photosynthesis” becomes pho-to-syn-the-sis. Knowing the breakdown before the mic opens means you never stumble mid-word.
  • If you mispronounce a word, keep going. The AI deducts a fraction of a point for one poor vowel. It deducts far more for a 2-second silence while you self-correct.
  • Never skip a word. A missing word removes a full Content point. An imperfect pronunciation removes far less. Always make an attempt, even for words you are unsure of.

Microphone and Delivery

  • Start speaking within one second of the tone. The recording window is fixed. Every second you hesitate is a second lost at the end.
  • Maintain consistent volume throughout. Do not trail off at sentence ends — the AI is still listening, and quiet endings are often missed by the scoring engine.
  • Breathe at natural pause points — commas and full stops — not in the middle of a phrase. Mid-phrase breathing creates unnatural gaps that hurt fluency.

High-Score Habits

  • During prep time, mouth the first few words silently so your lips and tongue are warm and ready when the mic opens.
  • Read in thought-groups, not individual words. “Urbanisation / has accelerated dramatically / over the past century” sounds natural. “Urbanisation. Has. Accelerated.” does not.
  • Think of yourself as a newsreader — authoritative, clear, and unhurried — not a student reading out loud.
  • If the passage has a statistic (numbers, percentages), give it a slight emphasis. The AI recognises numbers as key content.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake Why It Hurts Fix
Starting too late after the tone Wastes response time; short recordings score poorly Begin within 1 second of the beep
Reading word by word with flat intonation Destroys Oral Fluency score Read in thought-groups; use natural stress and rhythm
Stopping to self-correct Long pauses hurt fluency more than the original error Keep speaking regardless
Rushing to finish quickly Causes mispronunciation and slurred words Slow down by 20% — you have enough time
Skipping words or lines Each skipped word loses a Content point Mark your place on screen during prep
Trailing off at sentence ends AI may not capture the final words Maintain volume until the full stop is read

Quick Reference

Question Answer
How many items per test? 6–7
Preparation time 30–40 seconds
Response window 30–40 seconds
Two scores it affects Speaking and Reading
Most important skill to practise? Oral Fluency — it separates 65 from 79
What to do if you mispronounce? Keep going — never stop to correct
Ideal speaking pace? Slightly slower than normal conversation — clear and steady