CSET SUBTEST IV – WORLD LANGUAGE
Actual Exam 2026/2027: Questions and Correct
Answers | Graded A+ for California Teaching
Credential – Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
Section 1: Language and Communication (15 questions)
Q1: A high school Spanish teacher is reviewing student essays and encounters the following
sentence: "Si yo habría sabido que venías, yo habría preparado la cena." The student is
attempting to express a hypothetical situation in the past. What linguistic phenomenon does this
error represent?
A. Overgeneralization of the pluperfect subjunctive in conditional clauses
B. Interference from English conditional perfect structures
C. Hypercorrection of the preterite indicative in hypothetical contexts
D. Inappropriate application of the conditional perfect in the protasis of a contrary-to-fact
conditional [CORRECT]
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: In Spanish, contrary-to-fact conditionals require the imperfect subjunctive in the
protasis (if-clause) and conditional perfect in the apodosis (then-clause): "Si yo hubiera/hiese
sabido... habría preparado..." The student incorrectly used the conditional perfect (habría sabido)
in the protasis, a common error reflecting incomplete acquisition of the subjunctive mood in
complex syntactic structures. This demonstrates interlanguage development where learners
overuse indicative forms before mastering subjunctive morphology in embedded clauses.
Q2: In a Mandarin Chinese class, a student asks a peer, "你吃了吗?" (Nǐ chī le ma? / "Have you
eaten?") during a morning break. The peer responds with confusion, later explaining they felt the
question was overly intimate for the context. What sociolinguistic principle explains this
pragmatic failure?
A. Violation of the cooperative principle regarding relevance
B. Misalignment of politeness strategies and social distance expectations [CORRECT]
C. Incorrect application of speech act theory regarding directives
D. Failure to observe the adjacency pair structure in greetings
,2
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The phrase "你吃了吗?" functions as a phatic communion (social greeting) in
Chinese culture, similar to "How are you?" in English, but carries cultural assumptions about
care and intimacy. The student's confusion stems from differing cultural scripts regarding
appropriate social distance in peer interactions. This illustrates Brown and Levinson's politeness
theory, where the estimation of social distance (D) and power differential (P) varies cross-
culturally. ACTFL's Cultures and Comparisons standards emphasize that learners must
understand how cultural perspectives shape linguistic choices.
Q3: An AP French teacher analyzes the following student utterance produced during a class
debate: "Le gouvernement devrait, comment dire, ils devraient écouter les jeunes plus." Which
discourse feature is most prominently demonstrated here?
A. Code-switching between formal and informal registers
B. Self-repair and monitoring of output [CORRECT]
C. Topic shift marked by discourse particles
D. Turn-taking violation in conversational structure
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The student's insertion of "comment dire" (how to say) followed by reformulation
demonstrates self-repair, a metalinguistic strategy where learners monitor and correct their own
output. This aligns with Swain's Output Hypothesis, which posits that producing language
(output) triggers cognitive processes that input alone cannot. The student notices a gap between
their intended message and linguistic resources, engaging in the "monitor" (Krashen) or
"noticing" (Schmidt) process characteristic of advanced interlanguage development.
Q4: A teacher examines this heritage Spanish speaker's written production: "Los niños estaban
jugando y de repente se cayó uno de ellos." The use of the impersonal "se" construction here
indicates which linguistic competence?
A. Native-like intuition for middle voice and spontaneous event encoding [CORRECT]
B. Overgeneralization of reflexive pronouns in intransitive contexts
C. Transfer from English passive voice constructions
D. Developmental error in subject-verb agreement
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Heritage speakers often demonstrate sophisticated intuitive knowledge of
constructions like the impersonal/reflexive "se" (se cayó = "one fell/there was a falling"), which
, 3
encodes spontaneous events without assigning agency. This "middle voice" construction is
notoriously difficult for L2 learners but natural for heritage speakers, reflecting their exposure to
authentic input during critical periods. Understanding heritage learner competencies is essential
for CSET candidates, as California classrooms increasingly include these students requiring
differentiated instruction that builds on existing linguistic strengths rather than treating them as
novice learners.
Q5: Which of the following demonstrates an understanding of cohesion through lexical chains in
academic writing?
A. A text using synonymous repetition: "The environment... the ecosystem... the natural world..."
B. A text employing hyponymy and superordination: "Transportation includes various vehicles.
Cars provide flexibility. Buses offer economy..." [CORRECT]
C. A text utilizing parallel syntactic structures: "Walking is healthy. Running is beneficial.
Swimming is excellent."
D. A text demonstrating anaphoric reference: "Dr. Smith published her research. She presented it
at the conference."
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Lexical cohesion operates through systematic relationships between vocabulary items,
including hyponymy (specific-to-general relationships). The example demonstrates how
"transportation" (superordinate) encompasses "cars" and "buses" (hyponyms), creating semantic
networks that enhance text coherence. While anaphoric reference (D) and synonymy (A)
contribute to cohesion, hyponymy represents sophisticated academic discourse competence that
ACTFL's Advanced-level descriptors emphasize for written presentational communication.
Q6: A German teacher presents the following minimal pair to illustrate phonemic contrast:
"Stadt" [ʃtat] (city) vs. "Staat" [ʃtaːt] (state). This instructional strategy targets which aspect of
linguistic competence?
A. Morphophonemic alternation in derivational processes
B. Phonemic awareness of vowel length distinctions [CORRECT]
C. Suprasegmental features of stress placement
D. Allophonic variation in consonant clusters
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The contrast between short [a] and long [aː] in German represents phonemic vowel
length, a distinctive feature that differentiates lexical meaning. This targets phonological
competence at the segmental level, essential for listening comprehension and intelligible