Prompt-based drills
Practice with the same kinds of question shapes learners face at the embassy instead of disconnected speaking exercises.
Speaking practice
Build confidence with the prompt types and response formats used in the embassy speaking section.
Focused prep
Clear exam-specific guidance without turning into a generic Dutch course.
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Why speaking is hard
The BIB speaking section is human-evaluated. Learners have to hear the prompt, understand what is being asked, and produce a short useful answer under pressure.
That is different from generic flashcards or phrase lists. A learner can know the words and still freeze when the prompt arrives.
Anais focuses on the specific prompt patterns the exam uses: personal questions, short responses, and sentence-completion style tasks.
The goal is not perfect free conversation. The goal is controlled, relevant answers that fit the exam.
How Anais helps
Practice with the same kinds of question shapes learners face at the embassy instead of disconnected speaking exercises.
Study with prompt audio and short-answer expectations so the interaction feels closer to the real task.
Train on part-two style completions where recall and basic Dutch sentence structure have to work together.
Next step
Use a focused speaking flow built around short prompts, sentence completions, and the exam’s practical answer style.