Part 1 of the TEA is the most predictable seven minutes in aviation English testing: an interview about your own background and experience. The topics are familiar, the questions are conversational, and follow-ups build on whatever you say. That predictability makes Part 1 the highest-return section to prepare — if you prepare it the right way.
The Topics That Come Up
Questions center on your professional life. Typical areas include:
- Your role: What is your current position? What does a typical duty day look like?
- Your aircraft or unit: What do you fly (or control)? What do you like about it? How does it compare to previous types?
- Your routes and operations: Where do you operate? What is challenging about those airports or that airspace?
- Your career: Why did you choose aviation? How did your training go? What are your plans?
- Experiences: Describe a difficult situation you faced. What happened, and what did you do?
- Opinions: How has the job changed? What role does technology play in your cockpit or ops room?
The Answer Structure: Three Sentences, Then Depth
A strong Part 1 answer is not long — it is structured. Aim for three connected sentences: direct answer, supporting detail, personal angle.
“What do you like about your aircraft?” — “I really enjoy the automation philosophy. The flight deck gives you excellent situational awareness, especially during complex arrivals. Coming from an older type, I appreciate how much mental capacity it frees up for decision-making.”
Direct, detailed, personal — and it hands the examiner three natural follow-up threads, which keeps the conversation flowing on territory you chose.
Prepare Stories, Not Scripts
Examiners recognize memorized answers instantly — the delivery flattens, the eyes drift, and the first unexpected follow-up breaks the recitation. Prepare differently: for each topic above, practice speaking freely for 60–90 seconds, out loud, several times, in different words each time. You are training the story, not the sentences.
For the “difficult situation” question, use the four-part story structure that works across every ICAO test: when and where → what happened → how you responded → the outcome. Prepare three or four irregular-operations stories (a diversion, a technical issue, a weather encounter, a go-around) and one of them will fit whatever angle the examiner takes. This pivot technique — bringing any scenario onto your own prepared ground — is one of the most reliable score-raisers across every ICAO test format, and the wrap-up question appears in the TEA too.
Ten Practice Questions to Start With
- What does your job involve on a typical day?
- What do you enjoy most about the aircraft you fly?
- How is it different from the previous type you were on?
- Which airport on your network do you find most demanding, and why?
- Why did you decide to become a pilot?
- What was the most difficult part of your flight training?
- Tell me about a time the weather affected one of your flights.
- Have you ever had a technical problem during a flight? What happened?
- How has technology changed the way you work?
- What advice would you give someone starting their aviation career?
Treat these as speaking drills, not a study list: one question per day, out loud, 90 seconds, recorded. By the end of two weeks you will have covered the entire Part 1 territory in your own words.
The Practice Loop
- Pick one topic per day and answer out loud for 90 seconds.
- Record yourself; listen back for fillers, flat spots, and grammar collapses.
- Answer the same question again, differently. If you can vary the words freely, you own the story.
For the full test picture — including Parts 2 and 3 — see our complete TEA guide and Part 2 listening tactics. And our practice materials — picture description sets with real examiner follow-ups — cover the Part 3 skills directly.