Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 8 student in Springvale, Victoria, Australia.
Mira had been part of the robotics club for two years. It had started as the thing she loved most—the problem-solving, the collaboration, the feeling of building something that actually worked. Lately, though, it had shifted into something else. The group had become tighter, more exclusive. Mira still showed up to meetings, still contributed ideas, but she could feel the distance growing. When she spoke, the others listened politely but without the old energy. When she made a suggestion about the design, Kenji would say, 'Thanks, Mira, but we've kind of moved on from that approach.' Moved on. Without her. She told herself it wasn't personal. The club had evolved. They had a more serious mission now—competing in the state championship. That required focus, commitment, a clear vision. Mira still cared about building things, but not in the way they did anymore. Not with the intensity that meant sacrificing everything else. She wanted to have friends outside the club. She wanted to do other things. But saying that out loud felt selfish, like she was abandoning them at a crucial moment. Staying was easier than leaving. She could show up to meetings, do the work, pretend the club still felt like home. It had felt like home once. Some days she could almost remember what that felt like—the excitement when someone would solve a problem, the way they'd all crowd around to see what had worked. Now the meetings felt like she was watching from behind glass. She was there, but she wasn't really part of it anymore. The announcement came on a Thursday. The club had been selected to compete in the national championships. The whole room erupted. Kenji was laughing, someone was cheering, and Mira felt something inside her shift. This was their moment. They deserved it. And she knew, sitting there watching them celebrate, that she couldn't stay. She couldn't pretend anymore. But she also couldn't leave right now, not when they needed her. The timing was impossible. She went to Kenji after the meeting. 'Congratulations,' she said. 'That's amazing.' She meant it. 'Listen, I need to tell you something. I'm thinking about leaving the club.' Kenji's expression shifted. 'Oh. Like—just the nationals team?' 'No. The club. Completely.' Her voice was steady but her hands were shaking. 'Why?' He sounded confused, maybe hurt. 'We need you. The project needs—' 'I know,' Mira said. 'But I need to do other things. I need to have other parts of my life. I can't do both right now and be fully in either one.' Kenji didn't say anything for a long moment. When he did, his voice had changed. 'So you're leaving us at the most important time.' It wasn't a question, and it wasn't wrong. Mira felt the weight of his disappointment. She had been part of something that mattered, and now she was walking away from it. She would never know what the club could have achieved if she'd stayed. She would never compete at nationals. Some small part of her would always wonder what she was giving up. But another part—the bigger part—knew that staying was also a kind of loss. Staying meant pretending. It meant ignoring the parts of her that wanted something different. It meant waiting for them to figure out she didn't belong anymore, rather than being honest about it now. She left the club the following week. The first meeting without them felt strange and hollow, like a room she had expected to be full. But by the third week, she had started eating lunch with other people. By the fourth week, she had auditioned for the school play. These weren't consolation prizes. They were just other parts of her life that she had been too focused to notice before. The championship season arrived and she didn't go to watch. That might have been a mistake. She didn't know. All she knew was that staying would have been a different kind of mistake—staying in a place where she no longer fitted, with people who had moved beyond what she was looking for, pretending that the distance between them didn't matter.