Assisted writing means writing in the target language with tools available — a dictionary, grammar reference, AI chatbot, or any other resource that helps you produce better text than you could unaided.
Find a quiet place, open a notepad (physical or digital), and start writing. The topic doesn't matter — a journal entry about your day, an opinion about something, a description of a movie, a message to a friend. What matters is that you're putting your thoughts into the target language.
When you don't know a word, look it up. When you're unsure about a grammar pattern, check it. When a sentence feels wrong, ask an AI chatbot to help you correct it. The goal of assisted writing is to stretch yourself — to write at a level above what you could produce on your own.
Once you're finished, you can also use automated tools (or ask a native) to give you further corrections and comments.
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Writing builds accuracy in a way that speaking can't. When you write, you have time to think, revise, and correct yourself. This deliberate, slow process is how you develop a feel for what's correct in the language. The accuracy you build through writing eventually transfers to your speech.
Writing also reveals gaps in your knowledge that you might not notice while consuming content. You might understand the word "nevertheless" when you read it, but can you actually use it correctly in a sentence? Writing forces you to find out.
Assisted writing is introduced in Phase 5A and continues through Phase 7.