Ideas & Content
A real moment, examined honestly.
The writer's thinking — what they assumed and learned.
Not just what happened, but why it mattered.
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Honest examination of: a genuine moment
Task in one sentence
Write a reflective piece about a time you misjudged someone, how you realised you were wrong, and what you learned.
Audience & Purpose
Strong writing this week sounds like real thinking, not performance. The voice should feel true. The tone should match the weight of the moment — serious without being preachy. Draw readers in instead of telling them what to think.
What markers scan for
- A voice that speaks straight to the reader.
- A tone that matches the weight of the moment.
- Writing that feels honest, not performed.
- Readers invited in, not told what to think.
Score Bands
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Basic
Voice feels distant or formal; the tone doesn't match the content.
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Strong
Voice feels honest and direct; the tone matches the weight of the moment.
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Excellent
Voice is distinctive and warm; readers feel welcomed into the writer's realisation.
Language Choices
Strong writing this week uses precise words to capture moments and feelings. Show emotion through action and detail, not flat statements. Pick words that catch fine shades of feeling. Make every word count.
What markers scan for
- Specific details that bring moments to life.
- Emotions shown through action, not stated.
- Words that capture exact feelings.
- Language used carefully — every word earns its place.
Score Bands
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Basic
Language is generic; emotions are stated and details are thin.
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Strong
Language is specific and precise; emotions show through detail and action.
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Excellent
Language is vivid and lean; feelings come through specific detail and every word counts.
Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 6 student in Caulfield, Victoria, Australia.
Last year there was a girl in my class called Jasmine. I didn't like her. I thought she was annoying because she was always quiet and she never talked in group work and she kept to herself. I made a joke about her in the group chat once and a bunch of other kids laughed. I didn't think much of it until Mrs Chen sat me down after class. Jasmine's family had just moved from another country. Mrs Chen said she spoke a different language at home and she was still learning English and she was probably nervous about talking. "Imagine if you moved somewhere and had to learn a new language," Mrs Chen said. "How would that feel?" I felt my face get hot. I realised I had been mean to someone who was already scared. I didn't know what to say to Jasmine. Sorry seemed small. I was embarrassed. But after a few days I just asked her if she wanted to sit with me at lunch. She said yes. We didn't talk much at first but I let her sit there and I asked her simple questions about her life. I learned she had a dog like mine. She liked the same movies. By the end of the year we were actual friends. The thing I learned is that when someone seems like they don't want to be involved, maybe they are just nervous. Being quiet doesn't make someone annoying. It made me realise I judge people too fast, without knowing their story. I still do that sometimes but now I try to ask myself: What might I not know about this person? I think about that sometimes now, even with new people. It made me kinder, I think.