BikePart 1 Relatório

SimuladoPart12026-06-13 10:09:33

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Part 1

Examinador

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Candidato

How are you looking at my life?

Examinador

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Candidato

Counting but.

Avaliação

Total

Total: 5.0Fluência e coerência: 5.0Pronúncia: 5.0Gramática: 5.0Recurso lexical: 5.0

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Pontuação: 10.0

Sugestão: Your response does not answer the question and is inappropriate for the test. Give a direct, concise answer (1 sentence) then add 1–2 brief supporting details (up to 4 additional sentences total). Use natural phrasing and relevant vocabulary. For example, state whether you had a bike, how often you used it, who you rode with, or why it was important.

Exemplo: Yes, I had a bike when I was a child. I rode it almost every day around my neighborhood with friends, which helped me become more independent and fit. My parents bought it for me when I was eight, and I still remember learning to balance on it.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Pontuação: 12.0

Sugestão: The reply is unclear and grammatically incorrect. Give a clear opinion first, then support it with specific reasons or examples using linking words (however, because, for example). Keep total length to no more than five sentences.

Exemplo: Yes, bikes are quite popular in my country because many people use them for short commutes and exercise. For example, in cities there are bike lanes and shared bicycle schemes, although they are less common in rural areas where distances are longer.

Gramática

Incorrect response to question / Sentence structure errors

× How are you looking at my life?

How do you mean?

The student's reply does not match the examiner's past-tense question and is awkwardly structured. This is a sentence structure issue (ID 26). The original uses a progressive verb phrase 'are you looking' with an unclear object 'my life', which is not idiomatic in this context. 'How do you mean?' is a natural, concise way to ask for clarification. Suggestion: Listen to the question and respond directly; if you do not understand, ask for clarification using common phrases such as 'What do you mean?' or 'How do you mean?'.

Sentence structure errors

× Counting but.

Not really, but some people do.

The student's reply is incomplete and ungrammatical (ID 26). 'Counting but.' lacks a subject and verb and is not a standard answer to 'Do you think bikes are popular in your country?'. The corrected sentence provides a complete thought that fits the question's meaning and tense. Suggestion: Provide full sentences with subject and verb; for example, 'Yes, they are popular' or 'Not really, but some people do.'

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