[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"external-mm-1261":3},{"payload":4,"id":35,"user":36,"level":42,"course":43,"activity":44,"activity_slug":45,"title":21,"topic":46,"tone":47,"stats":48,"created":51,"score":52,"is_favorite":53,"public":54,"is_external":53},{"texts":5,"title":21,"choices":22,"subtitle":23,"questions":24},[6,9,12,15,18],{"text":7,"title":8},"When I signed up for a two-week language bootcamp, I expected grammar drills and awkward role-plays. Instead, we were treated like professionals: every morning began with a short briefing, and by lunchtime we had already recorded podcasts, negotiated in mock meetings and rewritten each other’s emails. What made it effective was the constant feedback. Our tutor didn’t simply correct mistakes; she made us notice patterns in what we kept getting wrong, so we could fix them ourselves next time. It was exhausting, though. By day five, I had stopped going out in the evenings because my brain felt full. Still, the progress was undeniable, and I left feeling far more confident in real conversations.","Option A: Intensive Language Bootcamp",{"text":10,"title":11},"I tried learning through video lessons because they suited my timetable. If I missed a session, I could watch it later, and I could pause whenever the teacher spoke too quickly. The drawback was that I rarely practised speaking. Although the platform offered discussion boards, I tended to read other people’s comments rather than post my own. After a month I realised I could understand more, but I hesitated when I had to produce language on the spot. To deal with that, I started repeating phrases aloud and sending short voice messages to a study partner. Even so, I sometimes felt that I was studying in a bubble, with nobody noticing whether I was improving or simply rewatching the same material.","Option B: Video Lessons at Home",{"text":13,"title":14},"Our local library runs evening workshops on practical skills, from basic coding to public speaking. The atmosphere is friendly, but it’s not a soft option: participants are expected to bring a small project and explain their choices to the group. That moment—having to justify your decisions—can be uncomfortable, yet it pushes you to think more clearly. The instructor acts more like a coach than a lecturer, walking around and giving quick suggestions rather than long explanations. Because the classes are mixed-ability, you often learn from other learners as much as from the teacher. I’ve also made useful contacts there, which has helped me find opportunities outside the course.","Option C: Community Workshop Classes",{"text":16,"title":17},"I didn’t join a course at all; I started volunteering at a community centre that supports newly arrived families. At first I was nervous because I had no formal training, but I was paired with an experienced coordinator who showed me the routines and introduced me to people gradually. The learning happened in real time: if I explained something badly, I had to rephrase it immediately, otherwise the person in front of me would be confused. That pressure forced me to become clearer and more patient. The downside is that progress is hard to measure, because there are no tests or certificates. However, the work feels meaningful, which keeps me motivated.","Option D: Learning Through Volunteering",{"text":19,"title":20},"I’ve completed several short online courses that promise a certificate at the end. What I like is the structure: each week has a checklist, deadlines and a final task, so it’s difficult to drift. The certificate isn’t magic, but it does give employers something concrete to look at, especially when you’re changing fields. That said, the courses can be surprisingly impersonal. Feedback is often automated, and even when peer assessment is used, it depends on how much effort other students put in. I’ve learned to choose courses where the final assignment requires applying ideas to your own situation, because that’s when the content stops being theory and becomes useful.","Option E: Short Online Courses with Certificates","Modern Ways of Learning",[8,11,14,17,20],"Read about modern ways of learning, then answer the questions.",{"1":25,"2":26,"3":27,"4":28,"5":29,"6":30,"7":31,"8":32,"9":33,"10":34},"Which option involves a mentor guiding someone step by step at the beginning?","Which option mentions making measurable progress but feeling mentally drained?","Which option suggests that the learner’s timetable strongly influenced the choice?","Which option highlights that other learners can be an important source of learning?","Which option points out that success may depend on how seriously classmates take feedback tasks?","Which option describes learning by having to respond immediately when communication fails?","Which option includes a requirement to present and defend personal decisions publicly?","Which option shows concern about studying without anyone monitoring improvement?","Which option emphasises a highly organised study plan that prevents losing focus?","Which option describes a teacher who helps learners recognise recurring errors rather than just correcting them?",1261,{"id":37,"username":38,"first_name":39,"last_name":40,"image":41},26289,"adrian-arellano","Adrián","Arellano","https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a/ACg8ocKS2GmIE3PJNLgvT1f_DZAOMASFXvNKvv4saaI5Nq6S8e7Gdg=s96-c","B2","Reading","Multiple Matching","multiple-matching","Design a B2 Reading and Use of English Multiple Matching exercise that resembles the Cambridge English exam in structure and difficulty.","Standard",{"times_played":49,"num_favorites":50},1,0,"2026-06-29T19:54:54",null,false,true]