Practise real OET (Occupational English Test) interview rounds with an AI interviewer that adapts to your answers — 5 mock interviews across 3 roles, modelled on real candidate reports from 2024 to 2026. Each ends with a published rubric and a transcript-backed scorecard, so you know exactly what to fix before the real thing.
An OET Speaking role play where you are the physiotherapist and a warehouse worker is anxious about returning to a physically demanding job after a lumbar back injury. Ravi Anand, playing the patient, gets more worried whenever you skip his fears, dictate the plan, or bury him in jargon. The session produces a transcript-backed scorecard naming the exact moment you gave information before acknowledging his worry, mapped to the OET Linguistic and Clinical Communication criteria for grade B.
An anxious 46-year-old just started on warfarin after a suspected stroke wants to know which foods she must avoid and refuses to drop her herbal tablets. This OET Speaking role play, set to the Grade B bar Indian nurses need for NMC registration, has a patient interlocutor who pushes back until you explain in plain language and negotiate a plan. The scorecard names the exact moment empathy or structure broke.
A primary-care consultation where you, the nurse, must explain a high blood pressure result in plain words and move a resistant patient toward lifestyle change. This is the OET Speaking nurse role play at the band B bar for India NMC and AHPRA candidates, with an interlocutor who pushes back with a busy job and a preference for medication. The transcript-backed scorecard names the exact criterion you dropped, from relationship building to incorporating the patient's perspective.
A five-minute OET Speaking role play where you are the doctor delivering a serious diagnosis to a frightened patient who keeps asking if it is cancer. Priya, the patient interlocutor, escalates with tears, cost worries and a request for herbal treatment, calibrated to the Grade B bar the GMC and AHPRA require. The transcript-backed scorecard names the exact moment your warning shot, chunking or empathy slipped below Grade B.
An OET Speaking role play where you are a registered nurse explaining a newly prescribed medication and its dosage to an anxious patient who fears side effects and dependence. Margaret, the patient, resists, interrupts, and pushes back the way a trained OET interlocutor does, and you must reach Grade B by leading with empathy, translating jargon, and confirming understanding. The session produces a transcript-backed scorecard naming the exact moment your structure or reassurance broke against the OET clinical communication and linguistic criteria.