Part 1
Examiner
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidate
I had to bike when I a child.
Examiner
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidate
I don't know about a lot of bikes, uh, because I don't uh, understanding, uh, about bikes.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Score: 45.0Suggestion: Ответ содержит грамматические ошибки и неясную конструкцию. Постарайтесь: 1) использовать простое утверждение в прошедшем времени (I had a bike / I used to ride a bike); 2) добавить одно-два уточняющих предложения с деталями (например, сколько лет, с кем катались, где); 3) избегать лишних слов и пауз. Примерный план ответа: тема → поддержка (время/место/частота) → одна короткая деталь/впечатление.
Example: Yes. I had a bike when I was a child. I used to ride it around my neighborhood every afternoon with my friends. It was a small red bike and I remember learning to balance on it when I was six.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Score: 30.0Suggestion: Ответ не отвечает напрямую, содержит много пауз и неверные формы (I don't know about a lot of bikes / I don't understanding). Нужно дать прямой ответ (Yes/No/Partly), затем пояснить причину и привести конкретный пример или сравнение. Уберите междометия («uh») и используйте связки (because, for example, however).
Example: I think bikes are quite popular in some cities. For example, many people use them for short commutes because traffic is heavy and bike lanes are available. However, in rural areas cars are more common, so popularity varies by location.
× I had to bike when I a child.
✓ I had a bike when I was a child.
The student used 'had to bike' which means 'was required to ride a bike' and is incorrect here; also omitted the verb 'was' after 'I' resulting in an ungrammatical clause. Correct structure is simple past 'had' for possession and past 'was' for 'I was a child'. Suggestion: use 'I had a bike' to indicate possession and 'when I was a child' to set the time.
× I don't know about a lot of bikes, uh, because I don't uh, understanding, uh, about bikes.
✓ I don't know much about bikes because I don't understand much about them.
Multiple errors: 'a lot of bikes' is awkward after 'know about' (use 'much about bikes' for uncountable knowledge), 'I don't ... understanding' mixes auxiliary 'do' with gerund 'understanding' instead of base verb 'understand', and 'about bikes' repetition is redundant; also pronoun 'them' is more natural. Suggestion: use 'I don't know much about bikes' and 'I don't understand much about them' or combine into one concise sentence.