1. Exam Overview
- Official exam name: Certificat d’aptitude au professorat de l’enseignement du second degré
- Short name / abbreviation: CAPES
- Country / region: France
- Exam type: Public-service teacher recruitment examination for lower and upper secondary education
- Conducting body / authority: French Ministry of National Education, via the national recruitment exam system
- Status: Active, but rules and formats can change by reform and by session
The CAPES is the main competitive recruitment examination used in France to hire teachers for many subjects in public secondary education. It is not a university entrance test. It is a state recruitment pathway: if you pass and complete the required post-exam stages, you can become a trainee teacher and then potentially a tenured public-school teacher. It matters because, for many subjects, it is the standard route into teaching in collèges and lycées in the French public system.
Teaching recruitment examination and CAPES
In plain English, the Teaching recruitment examination CAPES is France’s national competitive exam family for recruiting teachers in several secondary-school subjects. It is best understood as a public-service recruitment pathway, not a general teaching certificate.
2. Quick Facts Snapshot
| Item | Summary |
|---|---|
| Who should take this exam | Candidates aiming to become public secondary-school teachers in France |
| Main purpose | Recruitment into teaching posts in the French public education system |
| Level | Professional / employment / public service |
| Frequency | Typically annual |
| Mode | Written and oral stages; format details vary by session and pathway |
| Languages offered | Primarily French; language subjects may include target-language components |
| Duration | Varies by paper and by subject |
| Number of sections / papers | Varies by subject and pathway |
| Negative marking | Not generally described as MCQ negative marking; CAPES is largely written/oral evaluative, but check subject notice |
| Score validity period | Usually tied to the session/recruitment cycle rather than long-term score validity |
| Typical application window | Usually annual; exact dates depend on official session notice |
| Typical exam window | Written and oral calendars vary by session and subject |
| Official website(s) | French Ministry recruitment portal: https://www.devenirenseignant.gouv.fr and ministry recruitment pages on https://www.education.gouv.fr |
| Official information bulletin / brochure availability | Yes, via official notices, annual session information, subject pages, and legal texts |
Important: CAPES is not one single uniform paper across all disciplines. There are multiple CAPES subjects and sometimes different pathways, such as external competition (concours externe), internal competition (concours interne), and in some periods a third competition (troisième concours) depending on subject and session.
3. Who Should Take This Exam
CAPES is a good fit for:
- Students who want to teach in public secondary education in France
- Candidates with a strong academic base in a specific school subject
- Those aiming for a civil-service teaching career
- Candidates ready for a selective process involving written and oral evaluation
- People who want a structured teaching pathway with state recognition
Ideal candidate profiles
- A master’s-level student planning to teach in collège or lycée
- A university graduate in literature, mathematics, history-geography, languages, sciences, economics, etc.
- A current education-sector worker seeking formal recruitment through a public exam
- A candidate already familiar with the French school system and official curriculum expectations
Academic background suitability
This exam typically suits candidates with:
- Strong subject knowledge
- Ability to write analytically in French
- Interest in pedagogy, classroom practice, and public service
- Familiarity with French educational institutions
Career goals supported by the exam
- Public secondary-school teacher
- Entry into teacher trainee status after success in the competition
- Long-term career in national education
- Potential progression to inspections, leadership, specialized responsibilities, or further internal promotions
Who should avoid it
You may want to reconsider CAPES if:
- You do not want to work in the French public-school system
- Your qualifications are not recognized in France and you are not prepared for equivalency steps
- You prefer private-school teaching without public recruitment
- Your French language proficiency is not yet strong enough for high-level written and oral assessment
- You want to teach in primary school instead of secondary school
Best alternative exams if this exam is not suitable
Depending on your goal, alternatives may include:
- CRPE for becoming a public primary-school teacher
- Agrégation for a more advanced and often more selective secondary/higher-level teaching route
- CAFEP-CAPES for teaching in certain private-contract schools
- Other teaching recruitment competitions depending on subject and sector
- University-based or private-school hiring pathways where public concours status is not required
4. What This Exam Leads To
Passing CAPES can lead to:
- Eligibility for recruitment as a teacher in public secondary education
- Entry into the status of fonctionnaire stagiaire (trainee civil servant teacher), subject to the applicable rules of the session
- Completion of probation/training before possible confirmation as a tenured teacher
Main outcome
This is a recruitment exam, not just a qualification test. Success does not simply give a certificate for private use; it connects to a state hiring process.
Pathways opened by CAPES
- Teaching in French public collèges and lycées in the relevant subject
- Long-term civil-service teaching career
- Access to later professional advancement within national education
Mandatory, optional, or one among multiple pathways?
- For many public secondary teaching roles in France, CAPES is one of the main official pathways
- It is not the only pathway across all sectors:
- some roles are recruited through Agrégation
- private-contract sector often uses CAFEP-CAPES
- internal routes may apply for already experienced staff
Recognition inside the country
CAPES is a nationally recognized public recruitment competition under the French education system.
International recognition
International recognition is limited and context-dependent. CAPES is primarily meaningful within France’s public education system. Outside France, its value depends on:
- local teacher licensing rules
- recognition of French qualifications
- language and curriculum compatibility
5. Conducting Body and Official Authority
- Full name of organization: French Ministry of National Education and Youth (Ministère de l’Éducation nationale)
- Role and authority: Organizes or supervises national teacher recruitment competitions, publishes annual notices, legal texts, eligibility rules, and results
- Official website:
- https://www.devenirenseignant.gouv.fr
- https://www.education.gouv.fr
- Governing ministry / regulator / board: Ministry of National Education; some legal frameworks are also published through official administrative texts
- Rule source: CAPES rules come from a combination of:
- annual session notices
- official ministry pages
- legal/regulatory texts
- subject-specific competition information
Warning: Do not rely on a single old blog post or one past-year PDF. CAPES rules can be affected by reforms, and some details vary by subject and pathway.
6. Eligibility Criteria
Eligibility for CAPES depends on the specific competition type and session rules. The most important distinction is usually between:
- Concours externe (external competition)
- Concours interne (internal competition)
- Sometimes third competition / special pathways, if offered
Teaching recruitment examination and CAPES
For the Teaching recruitment examination CAPES, eligibility is not completely identical across all candidates. You must check the official notice for your subject, competition type, and session year.
Nationality / domicile / residency
For public-service recruitment in France, nationality conditions may apply. In many public competitions, eligibility can depend on being:
- a French national, or
- a national of an EU/EEA member state, or
- from a country covered by applicable legal provisions
However, rules can differ depending on the post and status. Always verify on the official ministry page for the current session.
Age limit and relaxations
For CAPES, a general upper age limit is not typically the defining issue in the same way as some other countries’ recruitment exams. The main barriers are usually:
- degree status
- public-service eligibility
- legal rights to hold the post
- internal/external route conditions
Still, check the current official notice for any role-specific restriction.
Educational qualification
For many CAPES external competitions, candidates generally need a master’s-level qualification or to be in a qualifying stage of master’s study, subject to current rules and exemptions.
Typical official eligibility frameworks often consider:
- enrollment in a Master’s degree
- holding a Master’s degree
- possessing an equivalent qualification
- benefiting from a legal exemption in some cases
Minimum marks / GPA / class / degree requirement
No general nationwide CAPES rule is commonly framed as a minimum percentage/GPA cutoff in the way university admissions are. What matters is usually:
- the qualifying degree level
- recognition/equivalence
- compliance with the official recruitment notice
Subject prerequisites
Yes. The chosen CAPES subject should match your academic preparation. In practice, strong university-level study in the subject is highly important, and formal suitability may be checked through degree content or eligibility framework.
Final-year eligibility rules
This depends on the current session rules. In some sessions and reforms, candidates in a qualifying year of master’s study may be permitted to sit the exam, with appointment conditional on later degree completion. Verify carefully for the current cycle.
Work experience requirement
- External CAPES: usually no prior work experience requirement as the standard route
- Internal CAPES: yes, internal routes typically require service experience and status conditions
Internship / practical training requirement
Usually not required merely to register for the external competition, but training/probation requirements arise after success and appointment.
Reservation / category rules
France does not operate exactly like reservation systems seen in some other countries. Relevant accommodations or category-based provisions may include:
- disability accommodations
- public-service legal status provisions
- internal candidate pathways
Medical / physical standards
Candidates recruited into public service may need to satisfy fitness/administrative requirements consistent with the post. These are generally not athletic tests, but there can be administrative and occupational fitness requirements.
Language requirements
French proficiency is effectively essential for almost all CAPES paths. For language subjects, additional proficiency in the target language is also central.
Number of attempts
A fixed nationwide lifetime-attempt limit is not generally presented as the main CAPES rule, but verify the current official guidance. In many cases, candidates may reattempt in later sessions if eligible.
Gap year rules
A gap year is not usually disqualifying by itself. What matters is whether you still meet the degree and legal eligibility conditions.
Special eligibility for foreign candidates / international students
Possible issues include:
- nationality restrictions for public employment
- recognition of foreign qualifications
- equivalency procedures
- French language proficiency
- ability to complete administrative formalities in France
Disabled candidates
Accommodation and special arrangements may be available. Candidates should consult official registration instructions and submit requests within deadlines.
Important exclusions or disqualifications
Potential disqualifiers may include:
- not meeting nationality/public-service eligibility rules
- insufficient degree status by required deadline
- unrecognized foreign qualification without equivalence
- incomplete application
- missing mandatory supporting documents
- being ineligible for public office under applicable law
7. Important Dates and Timeline
Current-cycle exact dates must be checked on the official ministry recruitment portal. Because dates change annually, only the broad structure can be stated safely here unless a current session notice is open in front of you.
Current cycle dates
- Check official session pages on: https://www.devenirenseignant.gouv.fr
- Registration and exam calendars are published by session and may differ by competition and subject.
Typical / historical annual timeline
This is a typical pattern only, not a guaranteed current schedule:
| Stage | Typical pattern |
|---|---|
| Registration opens | Usually once per year, often in the autumn period |
| Registration closes | Usually a few weeks after opening |
| Written exams | Often several months after registration |
| Oral exams | After written eligibility/admissibility results |
| Final results | After oral stage |
| Administrative follow-up / assignment / trainee process | After final selection |
What to verify each year
- registration start and end
- whether there is a correction window
- written exam dates by subject
- oral exam location and date
- result publication date
- trainee appointment and posting timeline
Month-by-month student planning timeline
12–10 months before exam
- Confirm subject and competition type
- Download latest official notice
- Check degree eligibility
- Start subject-content revision
9–7 months before
- Build written paper preparation plan
- Study pedagogical expectations
- Begin essay/dissertation/problem-solving practice
6–4 months before
- Solve past papers
- Practice oral presentation
- Track official updates
3–2 months before
- Intensive revision
- Simulate written papers under timed conditions
- Prepare administrative documents
1 month before
- Confirm exam center details
- Review high-yield topics
- Continue oral groundwork if applicable
After written exams
- Shift quickly to oral preparation
- Study curriculum, classroom scenarios, and didactics
After final results
- Prepare for administrative formalities, assignment, and trainee year steps
8. Application Process
The application process is handled through the official government recruitment system for education competitions.
Where to apply
Apply only through the official recruitment portal indicated by the Ministry of National Education.
- Main official information entry point: https://www.devenirenseignant.gouv.fr
Step-by-step application process
-
Read the official notice – Confirm your subject – Confirm competition type: external, internal, or other – Confirm eligibility conditions and required documents
-
Create or access your official account – Follow the ministry’s online registration process – Keep login details secure
-
Choose the correct competition – CAPES subject – pathway type – session year
-
Fill personal details – name exactly as on official ID – date and place of birth – nationality – address and contact details
-
Fill academic details – degree(s) – current enrollment if applicable – qualification equivalency information where required
-
Declare category or special status if relevant – disability accommodations – internal candidate status – other legally relevant declarations
-
Upload or prepare supporting documents – exact document list depends on session and candidate type
-
Review carefully – subject choice – exam route – spelling and legal identity data
-
Submit before deadline – save proof of submission – download acknowledgement if available
Document upload requirements
These vary by session, but may include:
- identity document
- proof of degree or enrollment
- supporting documents for exemptions/equivalency
- disability accommodation documents
- internal candidate service documents where applicable
Photograph / signature / ID rules
Follow the portal’s exact technical specifications if upload is requested. Do not assume passport-photo rules from another exam.
Category / quota / reservation declaration
France does not use the same category structure as many other countries’ competitive exams. Declare only statuses recognized in the official French recruitment process.
Payment steps
Check whether a fee applies in the current session. Some French public recruitment competitions may not follow the same fee model as private admission tests, but do not assume zero cost without checking the official notice.
Correction process
If an official correction window exists, it will be described in the session instructions. Not all fields may be editable after submission.
Common application mistakes
- choosing the wrong CAPES subject
- choosing the wrong competition type
- assuming eligibility without reading degree rules
- entering a name that does not match ID
- missing supporting documents
- waiting until the last day
Final submission checklist
- correct exam and subject selected
- correct competition type selected
- degree status verified
- nationality/public-service eligibility checked
- accommodation request filed if needed
- submission proof saved
- deadlines noted in calendar
9. Application Fee and Other Costs
Official application fee
I could not confirm a single universal current-cycle CAPES application fee from the ministry pages alone for all pathways and all sessions. Candidates should verify the current session notice.
Category-wise fee differences
Not confirmed from a universal official source for all current CAPES sessions.
Late fee / correction fee
Not confirmed as a standard universal CAPES rule. Check the current session notice.
Counselling / interview / document verification fee
CAPES is a recruitment competition rather than a counseling-based admission exam. Separate counseling fees are generally not the core issue, but later administrative costs may arise.
Retest / revaluation / objection fee
Not confirmed as a standard nationwide fee structure. CAPES generally follows competition result procedures rather than a typical objection-fee model used in CBT exams.
Hidden practical costs students should budget for
Even if the application fee is modest or absent, real preparation costs can be significant:
- Travel: exam center and oral center travel
- Accommodation: especially for oral stage if held away from home
- Coaching: optional but potentially expensive
- Books: subject knowledge, pedagogy, curriculum texts
- Mock tests / workshops: especially oral training
- Document certification / translation: for foreign degrees
- Internet / device: needed for registration and preparation
- Relocation risk: if recruited, later posting may involve moving
Pro Tip: Budget separately for the oral stage. Many candidates underestimate travel and lodging costs for admissibility/admission phases.
10. Exam Pattern
The CAPES exam pattern is not identical across all subjects or all reforms. The broad structure is:
- written admissibility/eligibility tests
- oral admission tests
Teaching recruitment examination and CAPES
For the Teaching recruitment examination CAPES, the exact pattern depends on:
- subject
- competition type
- session year
- reform status
General pattern structure
Written stage
Usually includes one or more written papers testing:
- disciplinary knowledge
- analysis
- problem solving
- composition/dissertation
- pedagogical or didactic application, depending on subject and year
Oral stage
Usually includes one or more oral assessments testing:
- subject mastery
- ability to explain concepts
- pedagogical judgment
- knowledge of school curriculum
- classroom reasoning
- professional suitability
Number of papers / sections
Varies by subject and session.
Subject-wise structure
Examples of variation:
- mathematics may include advanced problem solving and pedagogy
- literature/history/social sciences may include dissertation, document analysis, lesson-building
- languages may include target-language oral/written components
- sciences may include experimental or practical reasoning depending on official pattern
Mode
- Written papers: in-person exam hall
- Oral stage: in-person oral examination before a jury
Question types
Depending on subject:
- essays/dissertations
- analytical responses
- problem-solving
- document analysis
- oral presentation
- interview-style professional discussion
Total marks
Varies by subject and official notice.
Sectional timing and overall duration
Varies by paper. Official subject notices must be checked.
Language options
French is central. Some language subjects involve the relevant foreign language.
Marking scheme
CAPES is generally judged through marked written and oral tests rather than MCQ scoring.
Negative marking
No standard CAPES-wide negative-marking framework like objective entrance exams is typically highlighted.
Partial marking
Depends on the evaluator and paper type; descriptive and oral assessments naturally allow partial credit.
Practical / viva / skill components
Yes, oral and professional aptitude components are a major part of the exam process.
Normalization or scaling
Not generally presented in the same style as large CBT entrance tests. Jury-based competition procedures apply, and official results are based on the session’s marking and selection framework.
Pattern changes across streams / roles / levels
Yes, significantly. This is one of the most important CAPES realities.
Warning: Never prepare from a generic “CAPES pattern” article without checking your exact subject’s official session description.
11. Detailed Syllabus
There is no single CAPES syllabus for all candidates. The syllabus depends heavily on the subject.
How the syllabus is organized
Most CAPES syllabi combine:
- advanced academic knowledge in the chosen discipline
- didactics/pedagogy of that discipline
- understanding of French school curricula
- professional context of teaching
Core domains commonly tested
1. Subject mastery
You are expected to know your discipline at a serious university level.
Examples: – mathematics – French literature/language – English – history-geography – life and earth sciences – physics-chemistry – economics and social sciences – classics – arts – other approved subjects
2. Didactics
You must show that you can transform academic knowledge into teachable classroom content.
3. Curriculum awareness
Knowledge of official school programs, levels, progression, and learning objectives matters.
4. Professional context
You may be assessed on:
- classroom management reasoning
- educational values
- institutional framework
- student diversity and inclusion
- assessment practices
Important topics
Because subject specificity is central, candidates should gather the official syllabus for their discipline. Typical topic categories include:
- foundational theories and concepts of the discipline
- major methods and problem types
- curriculum-linked teaching applications
- document analysis and lesson construction
- oral explanation and professional reflection
High-weightage areas if known
No universal CAPES-wide high-weightage breakdown can be safely stated. Within many subjects, these usually matter most:
- core disciplinary fundamentals
- ability to write structured, rigorous answers
- curriculum-based pedagogical application
- oral clarity and teaching logic
Topic-level breakdown
This must be checked from the official subject page for your session. The Ministry often publishes program details or references for each competition subject.
Skills being tested
- disciplinary depth
- analysis
- writing quality
- oral communication
- pedagogical reasoning
- curriculum alignment
- professional judgment
Static or annual syllabus?
Partly stable, partly variable.
- The disciplinary base is often relatively stable
- The exact program, themes, references, and oral expectations may change by session or reform
Link between syllabus and real exam difficulty
CAPES is difficult not only because of the syllabus breadth, but because candidates must combine:
- university-level subject mastery
- formal writing ability
- educational applicability
- oral composure before a jury
Commonly ignored but important topics
- official school curricula
- didactic transposition
- assessment and progression design
- legal/institutional context of teaching
- oral justification of pedagogical choices
Common Mistake: Many students prepare only the university subject content and neglect the teaching-specific dimension. That is often fatal at the oral stage.
12. Difficulty Level and Competition Analysis
Relative difficulty
CAPES is generally a moderately to highly competitive exam, depending on subject and year.
Conceptual vs memory-based nature
It is more:
- conceptual
- analytical
- expressive
- professionally applied
than purely memory-based.
Speed vs accuracy demands
Written papers require:
- strong time management
- coherent long-form responses
- subject precision
Oral stages require:
- fast thinking
- structured explanation
- confidence under questioning
Typical competition level
Competition varies a lot by:
- subject
- year
- number of positions offered
- candidate pool quality
- reform effects
Number of test-takers, vacancies, or selection ratio
These are published by official authorities in some cases, but they vary by subject and session. No single universal figure should be assumed.
What makes the exam difficult
- subject-specific depth
- long-form academic writing
- transition from knowledge to teaching application
- oral jury pressure
- uncertainty caused by subject variation and reforms
- selective ranking rather than simple pass/fail logic
What kind of student usually performs well
- disciplined and consistent
- strong in written expression
- conceptually solid in the subject
- aware of French school curriculum
- able to think pedagogically
- calm in oral presentation
13. Scoring, Ranking, and Results
Raw score calculation
Scores are based on marks awarded in written and oral tests according to the official session framework for the subject.
Percentile / scaled score / rank
CAPES is generally handled as a competitive recruitment selection, not a percentile-based mass aptitude exam. Results usually identify admissible and admitted candidates according to marks and ranking.
Passing marks / qualifying marks
There is not always a simple universal fixed “pass mark” applicable to all CAPES subjects and sessions in the same way as standardized admission tests. The jury and competition rules matter.
Sectional cutoffs
Not safely stated as a universal CAPES rule.
Overall cutoffs
These vary by subject, year, and number of posts. Use official published results where available.
Merit list rules
Candidates are selected according to their performance and the number of posts offered in the session.
Tie-breaking rules
Check the official legal or session rules if published for the relevant competition.
Result validity
CAPES success is generally tied to the recruitment and appointment process of that session, not a multi-year reusable scorecard system.
Rechecking / revaluation / objections
French public competitions usually do not function like university objective tests with broad answer-key objection windows. Any recourse follows official administrative procedures rather than a simple retotalling request model. Check official rights and procedures.
Scorecard interpretation
Focus on:
- whether you are admissible after written tests
- whether you are admitted after oral tests
- your rank or list position if published
- any next administrative step required
14. Selection Process After the Exam
The process usually includes more than just passing a written test.
Typical sequence
- Registration
- Written tests
- Admissibility / eligibility result
- Oral tests
- Final admission result
- Administrative verification
- Assignment / trainee appointment
- Probation / training year
- Potential tenure confirmation
Counselling / choice filling / seat allotment
CAPES is not like centralized college admissions counseling. However, after success, there may be administrative procedures related to assignment, academy placement, and trainee posting.
Interview / oral
Yes, oral examination is a major component.
Skill test / practical / lab test
For some subjects, practical or applied dimensions may be built into the oral/professional assessment.
Physical test
Not generally a standard CAPES component.
Medical examination
Possible as part of public-service appointment formalities, subject to the current rules.
Background verification
Yes, administrative verification can be part of appointment.
Document verification
Yes, very important: – degree proof – identity – eligibility documents – possibly service records for internal candidates
Training / probation
Successful candidates typically enter a trainee/probationary stage before full tenure.
Final appointment
Final confirmation as a teacher depends on successful completion of the required post-selection processes.
15. Seats, Vacancies, Intake, or Opportunity Size
Total vacancies
The number of positions is set by the French authorities and varies each year by:
- competition type
- subject
- policy needs
Category-wise breakup
Not generally presented in the same category-reservation format common in some other countries.
Institution-wise or department-wise distribution
CAPES recruits for the public national education system rather than for one university. Distribution is linked to subject needs and later assignment processes.
State / zone / campus variation
France is nationally organized, but academy-level assignment realities matter after success.
Trends over recent years
Vacancy patterns may fluctuate by subject and policy. Use official annual opening notices and results rather than secondary summaries.
If you need exact vacancy numbers, check the official session opening notice for your subject.
16. Colleges, Universities, Employers, or Pathways That Accept This Exam
Main employer/pathway
The exam is accepted by the French public education system for recruitment of secondary teachers in relevant subjects.
Key institutions / recruiters / departments
- Ministry of National Education
- Public collèges
- Public lycées
- Associated academy-level assignment structures
Whether acceptance is nationwide or limited
It is a nationally recognized recruitment pathway within France.
Top examples
Rather than “colleges accepting scores,” the better framing is:
- public secondary schools under the French national education system
- teaching trainee placements after recruitment
- long-term public teaching service
Notable exceptions
- CAPES is not the route for all teaching roles
- primary education uses other pathways such as CRPE
- some higher-level or different-status roles may use Agrégation
- private-contract teaching may involve CAFEP-CAPES
Alternative pathways if a candidate does not qualify
- retry CAPES next session
- attempt CAFEP-CAPES
- pursue Agrégation later
- apply to private schools directly where permitted
- work in education support roles while preparing again
17. Eligibility-to-Outcome Map
If you are a master’s student in a school subject
This exam can lead to: – public secondary teaching recruitment – trainee teacher status – long-term civil-service career
If you are a graduate with strong subject knowledge but no teaching experience
This exam can lead to: – entry into public teaching through the external competition – structured professional training after success
If you already work in education or public service
This exam can lead to: – progression through an internal competition route, if eligible
If you want to teach in private contract schools
CAPES itself may not be the only fit; instead: – CAFEP-CAPES may be more suitable
If you want to teach in primary school
This exam is likely not the right one; consider: – CRPE
If you want a more advanced/high-prestige teaching competition
You may also consider: – Agrégation, depending on qualifications and goals
18. Preparation Strategy
Teaching recruitment examination and CAPES
To prepare well for the Teaching recruitment examination CAPES, you need a dual strategy:
- master the academic subject
- master how to teach, explain, and defend that subject in the French school context
12-month plan
Months 1–3
- Read the official syllabus and competition rules
- Gather past papers and reports if available
- Diagnose your level in:
- subject content
- writing
- oral explanation
- curriculum knowledge
Months 4–6
- Build complete notes topic by topic
- Start timed written answers every week
- Study collège/lycée curriculum and competency expectations
- Begin oral micro-presentations
Months 7–9
- Increase full-paper simulations
- Learn standard answer structures
- Build teaching examples for major topics
- Review jury expectations from official reports if available
Months 10–12
- Intensive revision
- Alternate between written and oral work
- Memorize core references, definitions, frameworks
- Practice with peers or mentors for oral stage
6-month plan
- Month 1: map entire syllabus
- Month 2: complete first reading and summary notes
- Month 3: begin weekly mocks
- Month 4: improve weak areas and pedagogy
- Month 5: full-length written practice and oral drills
- Month 6: revision, error correction, official-text review
3-month plan
This is realistic only if you already have strong academic foundations.
- Focus on high-priority topics
- Practice under time limits
- Prepare standard frameworks for oral explanation
- Do not try to learn everything from scratch
- Use previous papers aggressively
Last 30-day strategy
- revise notes, not entire textbooks
- do 2–4 full simulations if possible
- refine introductions, argument structure, and conclusion style
- practice speaking clearly on core topics
- review curriculum and pedagogy daily
Last 7-day strategy
- no major new topics
- review core concepts and standard mistakes
- sleep properly
- confirm logistics
- prepare oral self-presentation mindset if relevant
Exam-day strategy
For written papers
- read the prompt twice
- allocate time before writing
- build a visible structure
- answer the actual question, not a memorized essay
- leave time to review
For oral stage
- structure first, speak second
- define terms clearly
- link subject knowledge to classroom use
- stay calm under jury questions
- admit uncertainty honestly rather than bluffing
Beginner strategy
- start with official documents
- build topic-wise notes
- learn how French teacher recruitment differs from university exams
- practice writing every week
Repeater strategy
- analyze last attempt in detail
- identify whether failure was due to:
- subject gap
- writing weakness
- oral weakness
- pedagogy gap
- poor time management
- fix one major bottleneck at a time
Working-professional strategy
- study 90 minutes on weekdays, longer blocks on weekends
- prioritize past papers and official curriculum
- use audio summaries or oral rehearsal during commute
- plan leave around written/oral stages
Weak-student recovery strategy
If your basics are poor:
- cut the syllabus into small modules
- master fundamentals before advanced topics
- write short answers before full papers
- get feedback early
- do not hide from oral practice
Time management
Use a three-layer system:
- daily: 2–3 priority tasks
- weekly: one mock + one revision day
- monthly: one full syllabus review
Note-making
Make three note sets:
- full concept notes
- revision notes
- oral presentation points
Revision cycles
- first revision within 7 days
- second revision within 21 days
- third revision through mock-test correction
Mock test strategy
- start untimed if needed
- quickly move to timed conditions
- review quality matters more than number
- maintain an error log
Error log method
Create a sheet with:
- topic
- mistake made
- why it happened
- correct method
- revision date
Subject prioritization
Prioritize:
- core high-frequency discipline topics
- official curriculum-linked themes
- oral pedagogy frameworks
- weak but recoverable areas
Accuracy improvement
- practice clear definitions
- avoid vague claims
- support arguments with examples
- review structure before submission
Stress management
- fixed study hours
- one light half-day off per week
- oral breathing routine
- no last-minute comparison with other candidates
Burnout prevention
- rotate between reading, writing, and speaking practice
- avoid 10-hour unproductive days
- protect sleep in the final month
19. Best Study Materials
Because CAPES is subject-specific, the best resources depend on your discipline. Start with official material, then add standard university and pedagogy references.
1. Official syllabus / subject pages
- Why useful: Most reliable source for actual topics and expectations
- Where: Ministry recruitment pages on
- https://www.devenirenseignant.gouv.fr
- https://www.education.gouv.fr
2. Official session notices and legal texts
- Why useful: Confirm eligibility, structure, and administrative rules
- Best use: Before registration and again before final revision
3. Official past papers and jury reports, if available
- Why useful: Best source for real exam style and evaluator expectations
- Best use: Essential for understanding what counts as a strong answer
4. French national curriculum documents
- Why useful: Oral and professional stages often require school-level applicability
- Best use: Link university knowledge to teaching practice
5. Standard university textbooks in your subject
- Why useful: CAPES expects serious subject mastery
- Best use: Build fundamentals and depth
6. Subject-specific CAPES preparation books from established academic publishers
- Why useful: Often synthesize syllabus, methodology, and sample topics
- Caution: Use only after checking alignment with the current official session
7. Methodology books for dissertation, document analysis, and oral presentation
- Why useful: Many candidates fail because of poor method, not lack of knowledge
8. University lecture notes / INSPE resources
- Why useful: Often closely aligned with teaching preparation in France
- Best use: Especially valuable for pedagogy and didactics
9. Peer practice groups
- Why useful: Critical for oral preparation and answer review
- Caution: Useful only if guided by the official syllabus
20. Top 5 Institutes for Preparation
Important note: CAPES preparation in France is often university-linked rather than dominated by a small group of famous private coaching brands. I will list only credible, real, relevant options that are clearly connected to teacher preparation or public exam preparation. This is not a ranking.
1. INSPE network (Instituts Nationaux Supérieurs du Professorat et de l’Éducation)
- Country / city / online: France-wide, university-linked
- Mode: Offline and often blended
- Why students choose it: Officially connected to teacher education pathways
- Strengths: Strong alignment with pedagogy, curriculum, and teaching profession
- Weaknesses / caution points: Quality and style can vary by university site
- Who it suits best: Candidates seeking structured, institution-linked preparation
- Official site: National information entry via Ministry and university INSPE pages; ministry overview available through official education sites
- Exam-specific or general: Teacher-preparation focused, often highly relevant to CAPES
2. CNED
- Country / city / online: France / online-distance
- Mode: Online / distance learning
- Why students choose it: Flexible preparation for candidates who cannot attend regular classes
- Strengths: Accessibility, remote format, useful for working candidates
- Weaknesses / caution points: Requires self-discipline; support intensity may feel limited for some
- Who it suits best: Working professionals, repeaters, remote learners
- Official site: https://www.cned.fr
- Exam-specific or general: Public distance education provider with exam-relevant preparation offers depending on year
3. University CAPES preparation programs through relevant faculties
- Country / city / online: France-wide
- Mode: Mainly offline, some hybrid
- Why students choose it: Strong subject-specialist teaching plus local competition preparation
- Strengths: Academic depth, access to faculty experts, often integrated with master’s pathways
- Weaknesses / caution points: Offerings vary significantly by university and subject
- Who it suits best: Current students and those wanting subject-rich preparation
- Official site: Use the official website of the relevant French university
- Exam-specific or general: Often CAPES-relevant, sometimes directly exam-oriented
4. Sorbonne Université / other major public universities with teacher-prep tracks
- Country / city / online: France, varies by institution
- Mode: Mostly offline/hybrid
- Why students choose it: Reputation, strong disciplinary environment, structured preparation in some subjects
- Strengths: High-level academic support
- Weaknesses / caution points: Not every subject or year will have the same support format
- Who it suits best: Candidates in or near major academic centers
- Official site: Official university websites only
- Exam-specific or general: University-based, subject and teacher-prep oriented
5. Acadomia / private tutoring platforms with concours support
- Country / city / online: France-wide
- Mode: Online/offline depending on service
- Why students choose it: Individual tutoring and flexible help
- Strengths: Personalization, targeted support
- Weaknesses / caution points: Not always CAPES-specialized; quality depends on tutor
- Who it suits best: Candidates needing one-to-one help for weak areas
- Official site: https://www.acadomia.fr
- Exam-specific or general: General tutoring; exam-specific relevance depends on tutor and package
How to choose the right institute for this exam
Pick based on:
- your subject
- your need for oral training
- whether you need degree-linked preparation
- schedule flexibility
- whether you need pedagogy support or subject support more
- quality of feedback on written papers
Warning: A famous tutoring brand is not automatically better for CAPES than an INSPE or university program.
21. Common Mistakes Students Make
Application mistakes
- selecting the wrong CAPES subject
- confusing CAPES with CAFEP-CAPES or Agrégation
- missing document deadlines
- not checking foreign degree equivalency requirements
Eligibility misunderstandings
- assuming any bachelor’s degree is enough
- ignoring internal vs external competition differences
- not checking nationality/public-service conditions
Weak preparation habits
- studying only theory
- neglecting pedagogy and curriculum
- reading passively without writing practice
Poor mock strategy
- doing too few timed papers
- never reviewing mistakes
- avoiding oral simulation
Bad time allocation
- spending months on favorite topics
- postponing weak areas too long
- starting oral preparation only after written results
Overreliance on coaching
- expecting coaching to replace self-study
- copying model answers without understanding
Ignoring official notices
- using old reforms or old patterns
- preparing from unofficial summaries only
Misunderstanding cutoffs or rank
- assuming “average marks” guarantee success
- forgetting that CAPES is competitive and subject-dependent
Last-minute errors
- poor sleep
- document confusion
- reaching the exam center late
- changing strategy two days before the exam
22. Success Factors and Winning Traits
The strongest CAPES candidates usually show:
- Conceptual clarity: real command of the subject
- Consistency: steady preparation over many months
- Writing quality: clear structure, precise language, strong argumentation
- Reasoning: ability to justify choices, not just state facts
- Domain knowledge: depth appropriate to secondary teaching recruitment
- Curriculum awareness: understanding of school-level teaching goals
- Stamina: ability to manage long written papers and oral stress
- Interview/oral communication: calm, organized speaking
- Discipline: keeping up with official updates and revision cycles
23. Failure Recovery and Backup Options
If you miss the deadline
- wait for the next session
- use the extra time to strengthen fundamentals
- if urgent employment is needed, seek temporary education roles or tutoring
If you are not eligible
- complete the required degree
- obtain recognition/equivalency for foreign qualifications
- explore private-sector teaching or assistant roles temporarily
If you score low
- diagnose the real cause
- review jury expectations and past papers
- rebuild method before content overload
Alternative exams
- CRPE
- Agrégation
- CAFEP-CAPES
- other teaching concours depending on profile
Bridge options
- enroll in a relevant master’s or teacher-prep course
- join an INSPE-linked pathway
- gain classroom exposure through support roles
Lateral pathways
- private tutoring
- private schools
- education support and academic coaching
- university continuation before retrying
Retry strategy
- retake only with a redesigned plan
- keep an error log from the last attempt
- improve oral preparation early, not late
Whether a gap year makes sense
A gap year can make sense if:
- you are close to eligibility
- you need concentrated preparation
- you have a structured plan and financial support
It may not make sense if:
- you are using it without a clear study system
- your basics are too weak and need longer formal training
24. Career, Salary, and Long-Term Value
Immediate outcome
After success and completion of required post-exam steps, you can enter the French public teaching pathway as a trainee teacher.
Study or job options after qualifying
- public secondary-school teaching
- long-term national education career
- later progression through internal promotions and additional qualifications
Career trajectory
Possible long-term directions include:
- tenured classroom teacher
- senior teaching responsibilities
- exam preparation or mentor roles
- school-level responsibilities
- inspection or administrative progression through later pathways
Salary / pay scale / grade / earning potential
Salary depends on:
- trainee vs tenured status
- public-service pay scales
- seniority
- allowances
- assignment location
Because pay scales are updated and official remuneration tables can change, candidates should verify current ministry or public-service salary references.
Long-term value
CAPES offers:
- stable public-sector career potential
- recognized professional status in France
- structured advancement opportunities
Risks or limitations
- highly system-specific to France
- requires comfort with public administration and mobility
- subject demand and assignment realities may affect location
- international transferability is limited
25. Special Notes for This Country
Public-service reality
CAPES is part of the French concours system. That means:
- competition matters, not just basic qualification
- official notices are legally important
- administrative accuracy matters
Regional language issues
Although France is centralized, teaching and school assignment happen within a real territorial structure. Candidates may not fully control where they are first posted.
Public vs private recognition
Public-school recruitment and private-contract teaching are not identical pathways. Do not confuse CAPES with CAFEP-CAPES.
Urban vs rural access
Preparation access may be easier in major university cities. Oral travel can create extra costs for remote candidates.
Digital divide
Registration and information access rely heavily on official online portals.
Local documentation problems
Foreign-qualified candidates may face delays in:
- degree recognition
- translation
- administrative proof submission
Visa / foreign candidate issues
Even with strong academic ability, foreign candidates must verify:
- nationality eligibility for public employment
- legal right to work
- qualification equivalency
Equivalency of qualifications
This is one of the most important issues for international applicants. Never assume your degree will automatically be accepted.
26. FAQs
1. Is CAPES a university entrance exam?
No. It is a public teacher recruitment competition.
2. Is CAPES mandatory to become a teacher in France?
For many public secondary teaching posts, it is a main pathway, but not the only possible route across all sectors and statuses.
3. Can I take CAPES in my final year?
Possibly, depending on the current session rules and your degree status. Check the official notice.
4. How many attempts are allowed?
A universal fixed attempt cap was not confirmed here. Check the current official rules for your pathway.
5. Is coaching necessary?
No, not always. Many candidates prepare through universities, INSPEs, CNED, and self-study. But guided feedback can help a lot.
6. Is CAPES the same for every subject?
No. Pattern and syllabus vary significantly by subject.
7. Is there negative marking?
CAPES is not typically structured as a negative-marking MCQ exam. Check your subject’s current format.
8. What happens after I qualify in the written stage?
You usually move to the oral stage if declared admissible.
9. What happens after final success?
You enter the administrative and trainee appointment process, subject to official rules.
10. Can international students apply?
Sometimes, but nationality and qualification-recognition rules are critical. Verify carefully.
11. Is CAPES valid outside France?
Its strongest value is inside the French public education system. International recognition is limited and context-based.
12. Can I prepare in 3 months?
Only if you already have strong subject knowledge and can work intensely and strategically.
13. Is CAPES easier than Agrégation?
CAPES and Agrégation are different competitions. Agrégation is generally viewed as more advanced/selective, but suitability depends on your profile and goal.
14. Do I need a master’s degree?
Often yes for the standard external route, or you must meet current master’s-level eligibility conditions or an official exemption.
15. Are oral exams important?
Yes. They are often decisive and require serious preparation.
16. Can I choose where I will work after qualifying?
Not entirely. Assignment depends on the national education system’s procedures and needs.
17. What is a good score in CAPES?
There is no universal safe “good score” across all subjects. What matters is your position relative to the competition and the number of posts.
18. If I fail, can I try again next year?
Usually yes, if you remain eligible. Check official rules.
27. Final Student Action Plan
Use this checklist.
Before registration
- confirm the exact CAPES subject
- confirm whether you need external, internal, or another pathway
- download the official notice
- verify degree eligibility
- verify nationality and public-service eligibility if relevant
Registration stage
- create official portal access
- gather ID and degree documents
- prepare accommodation request documents if needed
- submit early, not on the last day
- save proof of submission
Preparation stage
- collect official syllabus and past papers
- map the full syllabus
- build weekly writing practice
- start oral practice early
- study curriculum and pedagogy, not only subject theory
Revision stage
- take timed mocks
- maintain an error log
- revise weak areas first
- review official updates again
Exam logistics
- verify center, date, and travel
- arrange accommodation if needed
- keep ID and documents ready
- sleep properly in the final week
After the exam
- monitor official result publication
- prepare for oral stage immediately after written exams if applicable
- gather administrative documents for next steps
- understand trainee and assignment procedures
Avoid last-minute mistakes
- do not rely on old unofficial material
- do not confuse CAPES with another teaching concours
- do not ignore oral preparation
- do not assume eligibility without proof
28. Source Transparency
Official sources used
- French Ministry recruitment portal: https://www.devenirenseignant.gouv.fr
- French Ministry of National Education: https://www.education.gouv.fr
- CNED official site: https://www.cned.fr
Supplementary sources used
- General public knowledge of the French concours system and teacher recruitment structure was used cautiously for explanation, but no unofficial numerical claims were added.
Which facts are confirmed for the current cycle
Confirmed at a stable level: – CAPES is the Certificat d’aptitude au professorat de l’enseignement du second degré – it is a French public teacher recruitment examination – it is organized within the national education recruitment framework – it is subject-based – it involves written and oral selection stages – official information is available through ministry recruitment portals
Which facts are based on recent historical patterns
These can change by session and must be rechecked: – annual timeline shape – exact registration months – degree-stage eligibility nuances – subject-wise paper structure – vacancy levels – post-success administrative sequence details
Any unresolved ambiguity or missing public information
- Exact current-cycle dates were not reproduced here because they change by session and subject and must be checked on the live official pages.
- A universal current application fee could not be safely confirmed for all CAPES pathways from a single official source.
- Exact paper durations, marks, and syllabus details vary by subject and were therefore not generalized beyond what can be stated safely.
Last reviewed on: 2026-03-21