Part 1
시험관
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
수험생
No, I don't have bike.
시험관
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
수험생
Yes, yes, bikes are popular in our country, Pakistan.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
점수: 30.0제안: Give a direct answer in the past tense, add a brief reason or short detail, and avoid grammar mistakes. Use one topic sentence in past tense (because the question asks about childhood) and one supporting sentence with a reason or a short memory. Keep it natural and concise.
예시: No, I didn't have a bike when I was a child. My family couldn't afford one then, so I usually walked to school or shared rides with neighbors.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
점수: 60.0제안: Answer directly and then add specific supporting details and a linking word to make your response coherent. Use present tense, provide one or two concrete reasons or examples (e.g., for commuting, affordability, rural use), and avoid repeating words. Keep it within 2–4 sentences.
예시: Yes, bikes are very popular in Pakistan because they are affordable and practical for short-distance travel. For example, many people use motorbikes to commute to work and run errands in crowded cities, and bicycles remain common in rural areas for daily tasks.
× No, I don't have bike.
✓ No, I didn't have a bike.
The question 'Did you have a bike when you were a child?' is in the past tense. The student used the present simple negative 'I don't have', which is inconsistent. Use past simple 'didn't have'. Also include the article 'a' before 'bike' because 'bike' is a singular countable noun. Suggestion: match the tense of your answer to the question (use past simple) and include appropriate articles: 'I didn't have a bike.'
× Yes, yes, bikes are popular in our country, Pakistan.
✓ Yes, bikes are popular in our country, Pakistan.
The repetition 'Yes, yes' is conversational but unnecessary in a concise test answer; not a strict grammar error. The main grammar point is fine: 'bikes are popular' correctly uses plural noun and present simple. Remove redundant 'yes' to make the response clearer: 'Yes, bikes are popular in our country, Pakistan.'