ESL Tests That Measure Usable English
Create placement checks, unit quizzes, and progress tests that assess grammar, vocabulary, comprehension, and communication. ESL lessons have to balance fluency, accuracy, confidence, and real-life language, often with learners who understand more than they can comfortably say.
What You Will Get
- Mixed question types
- CEFR-friendly difficulty
- Automatic answer keys
- Progress checks across skills
Why This Matters for ESL Teachers
Good teaching materials are not just faster to make. They need to fit the real learners, constraints, and follow-up work in your classroom.
Keeping activities level-appropriate without flattening the lesson into textbook drills
Giving enough speaking practice while still covering grammar, vocabulary, and reading
Explaining progress to parents or adult learners in language they can act on
What you can create with GoTeach
Start from a real lesson need, not a blank page. These examples show the kind of specific, usable output this page is built around.
A2 placement test with speaking prompts
Use this to check whether recent teaching stuck before moving on to the next unit or exam skill.
B1 grammar and vocabulary review
Mix quick recall with applied questions so the result shows more than memorization.
Listening-style comprehension questions from a lesson text
Look for the error pattern behind the score, then turn that pattern into the next lesson.
How to Use It Well
The best results come from giving GoTeach the same context you would give a trusted teaching assistant.
Test what was actually taught
Base the quiz on recent lessons and include items like a2 placement test with speaking prompts instead of pulling random questions from the subject.
Mix recall with application
Combine quick checks, short answers, explanations, and applied tasks so the result shows what students understand.
Use results to plan the next lesson
Look for patterns, not just scores. Include the language taught recently so the test checks what students had a fair chance to learn.
Questions ESL Teachers Ask
Short answers before you start creating.
How can ESL Teachers avoid generic test generation?
Start with the student context: level, recent mistakes, lesson goal, and the exact format you need. Include the language taught recently so the test checks what students had a fair chance to learn.
What can I create for English language learners?
Useful starting points include A2 placement test with speaking prompts, B1 grammar and vocabulary review, Listening-style comprehension questions from a lesson text. You can edit the result before using it with students or sharing it with families.
Can GoTeach match my teaching style?
Yes. Add your preferred tone, pacing, examples, and constraints. GoTeach gives you a strong first draft, but you stay in control of what students see.
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Explore other features designed to save you time
Create Something You Can Actually Use
Start with your next lesson, your real students, and the format you need. GoTeach gives you a strong draft, then you make it yours.
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