Talking About Your Experience in Interviews — English Shadowing Practice
Practice the professional English for talking about your experience in an interview. In this lesson you shadow real lines like “Can you tell us about your experience?”, “I have three years of experience in project management.”, and “I worked closely with cross-functional teams.”. It helps you describe your work experience clearly when asked in an interview. You listen and speak along, copying the natural, polite tone so the phrases come out smoothly at work.

More lessons from this course
b1Professional Self-Introduction at Work — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for introducing yourself at work — “Hi, I'm Anna from the marketing team.”. Speak along to introduce yourself professionally.
b2Starting a Work Chat Politely — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for starting a work chat politely — “Hi, do you have a minute?”, “Sorry to bother you.”. Speak along to start a work chat politely.
b1Asking Quick Questions on Chat — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for asking quick questions on chat — “Did you send the file already?”, “Is this the final draft?”. Speak along to ask quick work questions clearly.
b2Confirming Tasks and Responsibilities — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for confirming tasks and responsibilities — “I'll take care of this.”, “You can leave this part to me.”. Speak along to confirm who does what.
b1Talking About Deadlines — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for talking about deadlines — “When is this due?”, “The deadline is Friday afternoon.”. Speak along to talk about deadlines confidently.
b2Scheduling a Meeting — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for scheduling a meeting — “Can we schedule a meeting for tomorrow?”, “Does 3 p.m. work for you?”. Speak along to schedule a meeting.
b1Rescheduling a Meeting — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for rescheduling a meeting — “Sorry, I need to reschedule.”, “Something urgent came up.”. Speak along to reschedule a meeting politely.
b2Joining and Starting a Meeting — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow professional English for joining and starting a meeting — “Hi everyone, thanks for joining.”, “Can you hear me clearly?”. Speak along to open a meeting smoothly.
What this lesson trains
Make these phrases automatic: “Can you tell us about your experience?”, “I have three years of experience in project management.”, “I worked closely with cross-functional teams.”, “I learned how to work under pressure.”.
Language in focus: Present perfect + past simple for experience (“I have… / I worked… / I managed…”).
Own this workplace vocabulary: experience, client-facing, cross-functional, responsible for, under pressure.
Copy the polite, professional tone on lines like “I learned how to work under pressure.” — at work, tone matters as much as words.
Learning goals
- Handle talking about your experience in an interview in English clearly and professionally.
- Use natural phrasing for talking about your experience in interviews without sounding blunt.
- Contribute and respond with a polite, confident tone.
- Say key workplace vocabulary clearly the first time.
About this practice
The lesson is built from a real workplace exchange of short, professional lines you'd use when talking about your experience in an interview.
At B1 level it focuses on the tone and phrasing that make workplace English sound natural.
Practice tips
- 1Shadow the softening phrases — they carry the professional tone.
- 2Drill the vocabulary (experience, client-facing, cross-functional) until it's automatic.
- 3Rehearse the lines aloud before a real meeting or message.
Frequently asked questions
What will I be able to do after this lesson?
You'll be able to handle talking about your experience in an interview in English — describe your experience in an interview — with natural, professional phrasing.
Will it help me sound more professional?
Yes. You shadow polite, natural phrasing so you sound clear and confident instead of blunt or unsure.
How do I describe past roles clearly?
You practice lines like “Most of my experience is in client-facing roles” and “I managed timelines, reports, and coordination.”
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