A shared level signal
Room labels help participants understand whether a conversation is intended for basic, independent or proficient English use.
TalkYouApp uses CEFR-level labels to help people describe the kind of English conversation they want. The label is a shared expectation, not an automatic test or certificate. Choose an A1–C2 room that feels appropriate, sign in and practice a speaking task you can repeat with increasing detail and confidence.
An account is required before joining any live room, including from a direct room link.
Room labels help participants understand whether a conversation is intended for basic, independent or proficient English use.
Use practical speaking goals for each level without presenting TalkYouApp as a formal CEFR assessment provider.
Apply a level goal in live rooms or use it to structure an English-focused Practice Partner session on an eligible plan.
A useful level label should change the task, not simply make the topic sound harder. At early levels, success may mean giving a short answer and understanding a familiar question. At later levels, it may mean developing an argument, adjusting tone or explaining a complex idea precisely.
These examples are practice prompts rather than assessment criteria. A room participant may have stronger listening than speaking, or may feel different from one topic to another. Treat the label as a starting point and make space for people to communicate at their actual pace.
Choose the level at which you can participate while still encountering a manageable challenge. If every turn is impossible to follow, move to a more familiar task. If every response is automatic, add a constraint: explain why, give an example, compare alternatives or summarize another speaker's point before adding your own.
A CEFR label does not require all participants to perform identically. Room topics and descriptions should be specific enough to help someone decide whether to join. A welcoming introduction can then confirm the pace and expectations after people enter.
Repeat the same communication goal across different conversations. For example, explain a recent decision today, then explain another decision next week with clearer sequencing and more precise reasons. Repetition frees attention for pronunciation, listening and follow-up questions without requiring the conversation itself to be identical.
Notes and word lists can preserve expressions you want to reuse. Room chat can help with spelling or a short clarification. The next voice session is where saved language becomes active again.
A clear practice loop
Choose one observable task, such as describing a routine, telling a story or defending an opinion.
Find or create an English room whose CEFR label and topic match the task.
Enter the voice room with your TalkYouApp account and explain the goal if it helps other participants.
Reuse the task later with a new topic, longer response or more precise vocabulary.
Practical answers
No. CEFR labels organize practice expectations; they are not a formal assessment, score or certificate.
Yes. Choose an A1 or A2 context where short answers, familiar topics and a slower pace are appropriate.
Yes. C1 and C2 labels can frame longer, more nuanced discussions, although actual room availability changes over time.
No. Select a reasonable starting point based on the task and adjust if the conversation is consistently too easy or too difficult.
Create an account to browse or create live rooms. If you already have an account, sign in before opening a room link.