Y08W41WR What Antibiotics Are and Why Resistance Matters
Part 1
How to Write
An informative report presents organised information on a specific topic for a defined audience. It is written for readers who need clear, factual knowledge they can rely on. The tone is precise and impersonal — the writer’s role is to explain accurately, not to offer personal views.
- Ideas & content: Select the most relevant facts for your topic and audience. Prioritise information that builds understanding, and leave out what does not serve the report’s purpose.
- Structure & cohesion: Divide your report into clear paragraphs, each with a distinct focus. Open each paragraph with a topic sentence and use connecting words to link ideas across sections.
- Voice & audience: Write in third person and maintain a consistently factual tone. Avoid personal opinions or casual phrasing — sound like someone who has researched carefully.
- Language choices: Use precise, subject-specific vocabulary. Write in the present tense for facts and past tense for historical events. Vary sentence length to maintain readability.
- Conventions: Spell all technical terms accurately. Use commas, colons and full stops correctly to present information clearly.
Common pitfalls: Including facts without connecting them to your purpose — each sentence should build the reader’s understanding, not just add detail. Losing paragraph structure — keep each paragraph focused on one clear idea.
Part 2
Your Task Plan for Today
Question: Write a three-paragraph informative piece explaining what antibiotics are, how they work, why antibiotic resistance is a problem and why it matters. Write for a Year 8 audience in your own words.
Stimulus: A Year 8 health magazine is publishing a feature on threats to modern medicine. Your audience is a Year 8 student who knows antibiotics are important but understands little about how they work or why overuse is dangerous.
Task Analysis: This task asks you to explain what antibiotics are, how they work, and why resistance matters in three paragraphs for a Year 8 audience. You must explain the mechanism, the problem of resistance, and why overuse is dangerous. A strong response is clear and helps readers understand this significant public health issue.
Quick Plan
Plan your three paragraphs:
- Paragraph 1: What antibiotics are and how they work
- Paragraph 2: What antibiotic resistance is and how it develops
- Paragraph 3: Why resistance is dangerous and what can be done
- Focus on clarity and Year 8-level understanding.
Define the key concept
Explain what antibiotics are and how they work to fight infection. Use clear language and analogies if helpful.
The problem
Explain how resistance develops when antibiotics are overused. Help readers understand the mechanism.
Why it matters
Explain why antibiotic resistance threatens modern medicine. Help readers see the stakes.
Tone & voice
Write clearly for a Year 8 reader. Avoid jargon or explain terms as you go.
Closing perspective
Close with why understanding this matters for future health and medicine.
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