Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 8 student in Thornbury, Victoria, Australia.
Priya and Joel both watched the same moment of unfairness, but they understood it through completely different lenses. Their responses reveal not that one is right and the other wrong, but that they're protecting different things. Priya's instinct is toward fairness. When she sees someone blamed for something they didn't do, her stomach tightens. She feels the wrongness of it immediately—not as an abstract idea but as a physical sensation. She tells herself 'it's not my problem,' twice, as if the words could convince her. But they don't work. The feeling persists. What Priya is protecting is her own sense of herself as someone fair, someone who knows right from wrong and acts on it. Speaking up would cost her something (maybe embarrassment, maybe confrontation, maybe being seen as a troublemaker), but staying silent costs her too: it costs her the image of herself as a fair person. She can't live comfortably in her own skin if she stays silent. Joel, watching the same scene, has already done the calculus. He's seen Marcus disappear into himself before—he knows what that expression means. But he also knows something else: that picking battles is survival, and that drawing attention in a situation he can't change is just making things worse. What is Joel protecting? His own safety and effectiveness. He's not unkind; he's strategic. He understands that sometimes the smart move is not to fight. There's a kind of wisdom in that—not all moments are the ones to fight in, and knowing the difference matters. But there's a cost too. Every time he stays silent, something small hardens in him. The deeper question isn't which character is right. It's that both choices cost something, and neither is without loss. Priya's choice to speak protects her conscience but might damage her safety or social position. Joel's choice to stay silent protects him in the short term but demands that he live comfortably with unfairness around him. Neither character is wrong for choosing as they do. Both are responding rationally to the world as they understand it. The real point is that this moment reveals who they are—not in a right or wrong way, but in the way that small choices reveal larger values.