Level 1 French Quebec: What Absolute Beginners Can Do [2026 Guide]
Level 1 on Quebec's Francisation Scale is the absolute beginner stage. See what learners can do at Level 1, the CEFR equivalent, and how to move up — with a free placement test.
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Level 1 French Quebec: What Absolute Beginners Can Do
Quick answer: Level 1 on Quebec's Francisation Scale is the entry point — the absolute beginner stage, equivalent to pre-A1 on the CEFR. Learners at Level 1 recognize isolated French words and basic greetings but cannot yet form independent sentences.
Already know a few French words? Take our free French placement test — most learners who think they're at Level 1 are actually at Level 2 or 3.
What You Can Do at Level 1
At Level 1, a learner can typically:
- Recognize and produce common greetings: bonjour, merci, au revoir, oui, non
- Identify basic French sounds and rhythm
- Understand isolated, very common words (numbers 1–10, colours, days of the week)
- Repeat memorized phrases with help from a teacher or prompt
- Read individual French words letter by letter
Level 1 learners typically cannot yet:
- String words into independent sentences
- Hold even the briefest unscripted conversation
- Read or understand short text (signs, simple labels) without help
- Follow spoken French at any pace
Level 1 CEFR Equivalent
| Quebec Level | CEFR Equivalent |
|---|---|
| Level 1 | Pre-A1 (below A1) |
Most international scales (CEFR, ACTFL) start at A1. Quebec's scale adds a Level 1 to capture the absolute-beginner stage that comes before A1 — useful for francization programs that work with learners arriving with no French at all.
Who Is at Level 1
Level 1 typically describes:
- New immigrants who have just arrived in Quebec with no prior French exposure
- Workers brought in from countries with no French presence
- Learners at the very start of a francization program
If you can already exchange basic information ("My name is...", "I am from..."), you're more likely at Level 2 or Level 3.
How to Move from Level 1 to Level 2
The first move (Level 1 → Level 2) is the fastest in the entire scale because it just requires building a small core vocabulary. With consistent practice (3–5 hours per week), most learners reach Level 2 in 6–10 weeks.
What works:
- Daily exposure — even 15 minutes a day beats once-a-week classes
- Speaking from week one — repeat phrases out loud, don't just read them
- Survival vocabulary first — focus on the 200 words you'll actually use (greetings, numbers, food, transportation, family)
- One conversation partner — having a regular AI or human partner cuts learning time dramatically
Conversaflex's AI tutor is built to start at Level 1 — it adapts to absolute beginners and walks them through workplace-relevant scenarios.

