BikePart 1 Report

MockPart12026-04-24 07:21:26

Conversation

Part 1

Examiner

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Candidate

Yes, I have.

Examiner

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Candidate

Yes, this must be a blood in my country because it's people exercise to the people that use them.

Evaluation

Overall

Overall: 5.0Fluency & Coherence: 5.0Pronunciation: 5.0Grammar: 5.0Lexical Resource: 5.0

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Score: 40.0

Suggestion: Be precise with tense and expand slightly. Answer the question directly using past tense, then add one brief supporting detail. Use a topic sentence followed by a reason or short memory. Keep it natural and under five sentences.

Example: Yes, I did. I had a small red bicycle when I was about seven, and I learned to ride it in my neighborhood park. It was my favorite toy because it made me feel independent.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Score: 30.0

Suggestion: Give a clear main idea and support it with a specific reason. Avoid literal or unclear phrases like “blood in my country.” Use linking words (because, for example, so) and provide a concise example or comparison. Keep responses natural and grammatically correct.

Example: Yes, I think bikes are quite popular in my country because many people use them for exercise and short commutes. For example, city parks and bike lanes are often busy on weekends, and some communities organize cycling events.

Grammar

Present tense issue

× Yes, I have.

Yes, I did.

The question 'Did you have a bike when you were a child?' is in the past simple. The student's reply uses the present tense auxiliary 'have', which is incorrect. Use past simple 'did' or 'Yes, I had.' Suggestion: match the tense of the question; say 'Yes, I did.' or 'Yes, I had a bike.'

Sentence structure errors

× Yes, this must be a blood in my country because it's people exercise to the people that use them.

Yes, bicycles are very popular in my country because many people use them for exercise.

The original sentence has multiple structural and word-choice errors: 'must be a blood' is meaningless here, 'it's people exercise to the people that use them' is ungrammatical. The intended meaning is that bikes are popular and people use them for exercise. Correction uses clear subject-verb structure, correct noun 'bicycles', proper quantifier 'many people', and a clear reason 'use them for exercise'. Suggestion: simplify the sentence, use correct nouns and collocations ('popular', 'use for exercise'), and keep subject-verb agreement.

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