samehyassa said:
the last site was helpfull thank you, but there is a last question and every thing will be clear,, if you know a site name that show how they evaluate the reslts or how many points they assign for each question i will be thankfull.
regards.
I can't find any. What I suggest you do is go to the nearest Alliance Francaise (AF) or any organization that offers French courses in your area, and ask for a free evaluation test. That will give you an idea of what to work on. Of course if you know no French at all, that won't help. The TEF does not appear to be very popular, it seems to be used only if you're going to canada, or in a few specific cases. There's an equivalence between DELF and TEF (you can find an equivalence table online), and you can find lots of practice books for DELF, and lots of material online explaining how DELF works. TEF is different, but not so different. If you score high on DELF, you'll probably score high on TEF as well. Hope this helps.
To josinyc: depends on you. I came to France 2 years ago, and I still can't speak French past a very basic level (I can read the newspaper and books, I can read aloud, and I can watch TV, though). But again, I didn't take a course. I think 6 months (4 hours a week + homework), as long as the emphasis is on the TEF, should be sufficient to get to the basic level. But what you need, in this case, is to find a course that trains your or the TEF. In that case, Alliance Francaise is probably a bad choice (but go see them anyway!), as they spend time teaching about French culture and lifestyle.