




We are regularly adding new school and college English conversation dialogues to this section — covering more topics like group projects, college admissions, talking to professors, student life abroad, and much more. Bookmark this page and check back often for fresh practice material.
Once you feel confident with school and college conversations, explore our Workplace English Conversations to prepare for your future career, or challenge yourself with our popular 30-Day English Speaking Challenge for structured daily practice.
Q1. Why should students practice English conversations for school life?
Students who practice real school and college English conversations become more confident in class discussions, group work, and presentations. It also helps you communicate better with teachers and international classmates. Speaking practice is the fastest way to improve your English fluency as a student.
Q2. What school and college situations are covered in this section?
This section covers common student situations including your first day at school, asking a classmate for notes, preparing for an exam together, waiting for the school bus, and lunch break conversations. More topics like group projects, talking to teachers, and college life discussions are being added regularly.
Q3. Can school students who are absolute beginners use these conversations?
Yes! All conversations in this section are written in simple, easy-to-understand English that even absolute beginners can follow. If you find any conversation too challenging, we recommend starting with our Absolute Beginner section first and then returning here.
Q4. How do these conversations help with English exams?
Practicing real dialogues helps you become familiar with natural English sentence patterns, common vocabulary, and correct pronunciation. This directly improves your performance in spoken English exams, oral tests, and any assessment that requires you to speak or respond in English.
Q5. How many times should I repeat each conversation for best results?
We recommend practicing each conversation at least 3 to 5 times. First, read it through once to understand the meaning. Then practice speaking your role out loud 2 to 3 times. On the final round, try to speak naturally without looking at the text too much. This builds real fluency and confidence.
Q6. Are these conversations useful for college students too, not just school students?
Absolutely. While some conversations focus on school situations, many topics like exam preparation, classmate interactions, and lunch break discussions are equally relevant for college and university students. We are also adding more college-specific conversations regularly.