BikePart 1 Báo cáo

Mô phỏngPart12026-06-19 00:08:34

Cuộc hội thoại

Part 1

Giám khảo

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Thí sinh

No, I don't have a bike because we are broke.

Giám khảo

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Thí sinh

Yes, many bikers here in the Philippines, but school's not allowed.

Đánh giá

Tổng

Tổng: 5.0Trôi chảy và mạch lạc: 5.0Phát âm: 5.0Ngữ pháp: 5.0Từ vựng: 5.0

Part 1

Did you have a bike when you were a child?

Điểm: 30.0

Gợi ý: Improve grammar, politeness and provide a brief elaboration. Start with a clear topic sentence in past tense, avoid informal or blunt phrasing, and add one or two short supporting details using a linking word (e.g., because, so, but). Keep to no more than 3–4 sentences.

Ví dụ: No, I didn’t have a bike when I was a child because my family couldn’t afford one. As a result, I usually walked to school or rode public transport. However, I sometimes borrowed a neighbour’s bike to ride with friends.

Do you think bikes are popular in your country?

Điểm: 40.0

Gợi ý: Use a grammatically correct, direct topic sentence, then give specific supporting details and link them logically. Avoid unclear fragments and explain what you mean by restrictions (e.g., at school). Keep answers concise and natural (2–3 sentences).

Ví dụ: Yes, bicycles are quite popular in the Philippines, especially in small towns and among students commuting short distances. However, some schools discourage cycling on campus for safety reasons, so students often park their bikes outside.

Ngữ pháp

Incorrect use of verb tense (Present vs Past)

× No, I don't have a bike because we are broke.

No, I didn't have a bike because we were broke.

The question asks about the past ('when you were a child'), so the student's reply must use past tense. 'Don't have' (present simple) is incorrect for past time reference; use 'didn't have'. Also 'we are broke' refers to a past state, so use 'we were broke'. Use past-tense verbs to match the time frame of the question.'

Singular and plural issue and article/pronoun omission

× Yes, many bikers here in the Philippines, but school's not allowed.

Yes, many people ride bikes here in the Philippines, but schools don't allow it.

The original sentence is missing a main verb and has unclear noun phrases. 'Many bikers here in the Philippines' lacks a verb — this is a sentence structure error but primarily fixes to plural/usage: say 'many people ride bikes' or 'there are many bikers'. The second clause 'but school's not allowed' is ungrammatical: 'school's' (contraction) plus 'not allowed' is unclear. If the intended meaning is that schools do not allow biking, use 'schools don't allow it'. This corrects subject-verb agreement and clarifies the object. Also maintain present simple tense because the question asks generally about popularity.'}]} }<'INVALID_JSON'>Note: The above JSON ends with an invalid token due to assistant formatting requirements. Please use the JSON object only.ُمْ

Từ vựng trọng tâm

ManyNumerous; A great/good deal of
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