RelaxPart 1 Report

MockPart12026-04-24 11:04:51

Conversation

Part 1

Examiner

Where do you go to relax recently?

Candidate

When I need a time off I usually go to the park and take a long walk. I usually have a 30 minute walk along the park and go to a coffee shop after.

Examiner

Who do you usually relax with?

Candidate

Oh, it depends on what I want to do. When I want to relax myself by by walking along the along the park, I usually do it by myself. But when I want to relax by pampering, I usually call my mother to uh so that we can both have a whole body massage.

Examiner

Do you think listening to music is relaxing?

Candidate

Definitely yes, because when a lot is going on in my head I always open the Spotify and play Christian songs and sing my heart out.

Examiner

What do you do to relax?

Candidate

Whenever I am stressed and I needed to relax, I usually go for a 15 minute walk at the park from where I live. It is a 7 minute walk and the the grass and the sky makes me feel relaxed.

Evaluation

Overall

Overall: 6.0Fluency & Coherence: 6.0Pronunciation: 6.0Grammar: 6.0Lexical Resource: 6.0

Part 1

Where do you go to relax recently?

Score: 72.0

Suggestion: Be more concise and avoid repetition. Start with a clear topic sentence, then add one specific detail (how the park helps you relax) using a linking word. Reduce redundant phrases like “I usually” repeated and correct small grammar issues (e.g., “a 30-minute walk in the park”).

Example: I usually relax in the nearby park. For example, I take a 30-minute walk along the tree-lined paths, which helps me clear my mind, and then I often stop at a coffee shop to unwind.

Who do you usually relax with?

Score: 65.0

Suggestion: Avoid fillers and repeated words, and organize the answer with a clear topic sentence followed by contrasting details using linking words (e.g., “but” or “however”). Correct phrasing like “by walking in the park” and remove hesitation sounds (“uh”).

Example: It depends on the activity. If I want a quiet walk, I relax alone because I enjoy the solitude; however, if I want to be pampered, I usually go with my mother so we can have a full-body massage together.

Do you think listening to music is relaxing?

Score: 78.0

Suggestion: Provide a concise topic sentence and add one or two specific reasons using linking words. Replace vague phrase “a lot is going on in my head” with more precise language like “when I feel stressed or overwhelmed.”

Example: Yes, I find music very relaxing because when I feel stressed or overwhelmed I open Spotify and play Christian songs; singing along helps calm my thoughts and lift my mood.

What do you do to relax?

Score: 70.0

Suggestion: Use correct tense and avoid repetition. Start with a clear topic sentence, then give one specific supporting detail with a linking word (e.g., “because”). Fix small grammar errors: “I need” instead of “I needed,” “a 15-minute walk to the park,” and remove duplicate words.

Example: When I need to relax, I usually take a 15-minute walk to the nearby park because the fresh air and open sky help me feel calmer and more focused.

Grammar

Verb + -ing form

× When I need a time off I usually go to the park and take a long walk.

When I need time off I usually go to the park and take a long walk.

The phrase 'a time off' is incorrect; 'time off' is an uncountable noun and should not take the indefinite article 'a'. Remove 'a' to use the correct noun phrase. Also no tense change is needed.

Incorrect use of prepositions

× I usually have a 30 minute walk along the park and go to a coffee shop after.

I usually take a 30-minute walk in the park and go to a coffee shop afterwards.

Use 'take a walk' rather than 'have a walk' in natural English. 'Along the park' is incorrect; use 'in the park' or 'along the path in the park'. '30 minute' should be hyphenated as a compound adjective: '30-minute'. 'After' at sentence end is better replaced with 'afterwards'.

Incorrect use of pronouns

× Oh, it depends on what I want to do. When I want to relax myself by by walking along the along the park, I usually do it by myself.

Oh, it depends on what I want to do. When I want to relax by walking in the park, I usually do it by myself.

Redundant 'myself' is unnecessary; 'relax' is intransitive here so 'relax myself' is awkward. Remove duplicate words 'by by' and 'along the along the'. Use 'in the park' rather than 'along the park'.

Sentence structure errors

× But when I want to relax by pampering, I usually call my mother to uh so that we can both have a whole body massage.

But when I want to be pampered, I usually call my mother so that we can both have a full-body massage.

'Relax by pampering' is awkward; use passive 'be pampered' or 'have a pampering session'. Remove filler 'to uh'. Use 'full-body' as the correct adjective and hyphenate it. The infinitive 'to' before 'so that' is unnecessary and causes structure issues.

Sentence without a verb

× Definitely yes, because when a lot is going on in my head I always open the Spotify and play Christian songs and sing my heart out.

Definitely yes, because when a lot is going on in my head I always open Spotify, play Christian songs, and sing my heart out.

'Open the Spotify' is incorrect article usage; use 'open Spotify' or 'open the Spotify app'. Also the original sentence had extra commas missing; list items should be separated with commas and 'and' before the last item. This fixes sentence flow and article use.

Present tense issue

× Whenever I am stressed and I needed to relax, I usually go for a 15 minute walk at the park from where I live.

Whenever I am stressed and need to relax, I usually go for a 15-minute walk to the park near where I live.

Tense mismatch: 'am stressed' (present) should be followed by 'need' (present), not 'needed' (past). '15 minute' should be hyphenated as '15-minute'. 'At the park from where I live' is awkward; use 'to the park near where I live' for natural preposition and word order.

Sentence structure errors

× It is a 7 minute walk and the the grass and the sky makes me feel relaxed.

It is a seven-minute walk, and the grass and the sky make me feel relaxed.

'7 minute' should be written 'seven-minute' or '7-minute' and hyphenated as a compound adjective. 'the the' is duplicated; remove the extra 'the'. Subject-verb agreement: 'the grass and the sky' is plural so use 'make' not 'makes'.

Vocabulary

LongLengthy; Soon; Yearn for
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