Intermediate Unit Test 3: Straightforward

Characters: Mia and her friends. Setting: Their neighborhood. Conflict: Pollution in the park. Solution: Organize a clean-up drive, involve the community, create awareness. The story can cover how they planned, faced challenges, and succeeded.

Including specific vocabulary from the unit is important. If the unit's vocabulary is about problems/ solutions, environmental terms, or teamwork, the story should reflect that.

Wait, the user said "useful story"—maybe they want it to serve as a listening or reading text followed by exercises. So the story should have enough detail to generate questions on vocabulary, grammar, and comprehension.

First, they researched the problem and discovered that the river’s pollution was harming wildlife. Mia, the most organized of the group, created a social media campaign and printed flyers to invite residents to join. She wrote, “Together, we can make our river clean and safe again!” By the time the event began, over fifty volunteers had signed up.

Let me decide on a specific story. A community clean-up project. The story can show characters organizing an event, encountering problems (like lack of volunteers, weather issues), and resolving them. This uses past tenses for events, and maybe some conditional for hypothetical problems.