Part 1
시험관
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
수험생
Yes, I have.
시험관
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
수험생
Yes, it is popular because there is so many kids having a bike here.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
점수: 40.0제안: Give a direct past-tense answer, add a brief supporting detail and use linking words if needed. Correct grammar (use past tense) and expand slightly to sound natural. Limit to up to 5 short sentences.
예시: Yes, I did. I had a small red bicycle with training wheels when I was about seven, and I used to ride it to the park every weekend. Because I liked it so much, my parents fixed it whenever it broke, so I could keep practicing.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
점수: 45.0제안: Answer in full sentences, ensure subject-verb agreement and correct grammar, and give a specific reason or example. Use linking words (e.g., because, for example, so) to make your response coherent. Keep it concise (1–3 sentences).
예시: Yes, I think bikes are popular in my country because many children and adults use them for short trips and exercise. For example, you can see families riding together in parks on weekends, which shows how common cycling is.
× Yes, I have.
✓ Yes, I did.
The question asked 'Did you have a bike when you were a child?' which is in the past simple. The student's reply uses 'have' (present), causing a tense mismatch. Use 'did' to match past simple. Suggestion: answer past questions with past tense verbs (e.g., 'Yes, I did.' or 'Yes, I had one.').
× Yes, it is popular because there is so many kids having a bike here.
✓ Yes, they are popular because there are so many kids who have bikes here.
There are multiple errors: 'it is popular' uses singular pronoun for plural noun 'bikes', causing agreement error; 'there is so many kids' uses singular 'is' with plural 'kids' (subject-verb agreement) and incorrect quantifier structure; 'having a bike' is awkward in this context. Correction uses plural pronoun 'they', plural verb 'are', correct 'there are', and rephrases to 'kids who have bikes' for clarity. Suggestion: ensure pronouns and verbs agree in number and restructure sentences for naturalness (use 'there are' + plural noun, and 'who have' or 'with' to describe possession).