Enem 2025 was held this Sunday (9), and the topic of its article was “Perspectives on Aging in Brazilian Society”. Many candidates will likely leave the test curious to know whether they did well. To help with this evaluation, Bound Provides Writing Sheet, a free tool that uses artificial intelligence to correct texts and estimate a participant’s grade.
Using it is simple: just access the platform, register briefly, write the text on the topic and send it. Within seconds, the system displays detailed feedback and scores from 0 to 200 for each of the five skills required by the exam
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Efficiency 1: Mastery of written standards.
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Efficiency 2: Understand and develop the topic.
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Efficiency 3: Organizing and defending arguments.
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Efficiency 4: Coherence and coherence in argumentation.
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Efficiency 5: A proposal that respects human rights.
The analysis follows the same criteria as the official Enem patch and provides specific comments on strengths and areas for improvement.
The platform was developed based on exercises from Colégio Farias Brito, the institution that ranked first in the national Enem 2024 ranking, bringing digital training closer to the real experience of human correction.
In addition to writing, this Sunday’s exam includes questions about languages, symbols, their technologies, and the humanities.
This year, more than 4.8 million candidates have registered for the exam, which is held on Sundays in most parts of the country. The second day of the test will be next Sunday (16) with questions in mathematics and natural sciences. Presentation begins at 1:30pm (Brasilia time) and lasts for five hours.
This initiative is part of the Folha Estudantes project, which brings together reports, tips, tests and an exclusive newsletter aimed at preparing for the Enem exams and the country’s main entrance exams.