Lena raised her hand. “So the answer to Netzwerk Neu A1.1 is… us?”
Lena copied the answers into her notebook, but something felt wrong. In Exercise 7a ( “Ich ____ (kommen) aus Spanien” ), Kai had written “kommst” instead of “komme” . She hesitated. Determined, Lena went to the city library. In the language learning section, she found a teacher’s edition of Netzwerk Neu A1.1 . It had all the answers—but it was marked “Nur für Lehrende” (only for teachers). She sat in a corner and quickly snapped photos with her phone. Netzwerk Neu A1 1 Answers
After class, Ahmed asked, “How did you do it?” Lena raised her hand
The class laughed. Herr Schmidt nodded.
“Genau. The network is you.”
Back home, she compared her answers to the teacher’s key. She had made 14 mistakes in the first two chapters alone. But instead of despairing, she corrected each one, writing notes in the margins: “Achtung: Verb conjugation!” and “Remember: ‘Sie’ (formal) vs. ‘sie’ (she/they).” The next Monday, Herr Schmidt announced a surprise quiz. The class panicked. But when Lena saw the questions— “Wohnst du in Berlin?” , “Was kostet der Kaffee?” , “Wie spät ist es?” —she didn’t freeze. She remembered her mistakes. She remembered why “komme” was right and “kommst” was wrong. She hesitated