Escritura del Capítulo 5: Proyecto Final del Curso de Inglés

Clase 26 de 26Curso de Inglés Intermedio B1: Palabras Interrogativas y Propósitos

Contenido del curso

Tiempos y formas verbales en inglés

Resumen

Reaching the final stretch of a course is always exciting, and this moment is no exception. Here you'll find everything you need to finish strong, complete your project, and keep building your English skills long after the last lesson.

What is the final project and how should you approach it?

The story of Mox, Jenny, and Frida is still unfinished. Will they be eaten by ghost bears? Will Mr. Darkness pollute the crystals of wisdom and destroy Futureville? The ending is entirely up to you. Your task is to write chapter five of the story, and there are a few clear requirements:

  • Use at least seven structures learned throughout the course.
  • Run your draft through ChatGPT to correct errors so it sounds nice and crisp.
  • Share your finished chapter with the community.

This project is designed to push you to apply grammar, vocabulary, and storytelling skills in a single creative piece. Once your chapter is ready, you can move on to the final exam, earn your certificate, and share it as proof of your progress.

Why is daily exposure to native-level English so important?

One of the most powerful guidelines reinforced here is a simple habit: make some time to listen to native-level English every single day [3:06]. Many learners avoid native content because they feel frustrated when they don't understand everything. That frustration, however, is part of the process.

How can you overcome the frustration of not understanding everything?

The key idea is immersion. If you never expose yourself to how native speakers actually talk, you'll never develop the ability to follow real conversations. Even partial understanding trains your ear over time. Consistent listening builds what is called perfect comprehension skills — the ability to process fast, natural English without translating in your head.

What resources can you use to practice every day?

There are more tools available today than ever before:

  • Movies and series in English with or without subtitles.
  • Podcasts on topics you genuinely enjoy.
  • News outlets for current events and formal vocabulary.
  • Online courses like those at Platzi's English Academy.

The variety matters because each resource exposes you to different registers, accents, and vocabulary sets.

How can you make the most of your feedback and next steps?

After completing the exam and earning your certificate, take a moment to share your honest opinion about the course — what worked well and what could use improvement. Constructive feedback helps shape better learning experiences for everyone.

Most importantly, remember that finishing a course is not the finish line. It's a checkpoint. Keep listening, keep writing, keep practicing the structures you've learned, and trust that consistent effort will get you where you want to be. Your future in English is looking bright — now go write that final chapter and show the community how the story ends.