Y09W26PA - A Grant Application for a Practical Project

This week you wrote a grant application for a practical project that benefits your school or community. Now you'll read another student's piece and judge how strong it is. Working through how assessors evaluate grant writing sharpens your ability to apply the same lens to your own work.

Part 1

The Assessor Scorecard for

Practical – Grant application

A grant application is a practical persuasive document written to a funder. It answers: what is the project, why is it needed, what will money buy, and why trust you to deliver?

Ideas & Content

The project is described clearly: what will happen, who benefits, how long it takes. Benefits are specific and real, not vague or inflated. The budget is realistic and itemised, showing exactly where money goes. The applicant's capacity to deliver is established through planning and evidence.

  • Concrete project: explains action, benefit, timing and cost in practical terms.

Structure & Cohesion

A strong opening states the request directly. Sections develop the project, the need, the benefits, the budget and the applicant's qualifications in turn. Transitions connect sections logically. The closing reinforces why this project and applicant deserve funding.

  • Funding pathway: moves from request to need, benefits, budget and capability.

Audience & Purpose

Tone is respectful and professional throughout. The writer demonstrates understanding of the funder's priorities. The application shows respect for the funder's time and resources. The goal is to show the project is worthwhile, not to flatter the funder.

  • Funder respect: shows professionalism and understanding of the grantmaker’s priorities.

Language Choices

Language is precise, direct and professional. Claims are supported; jargon is avoided unless standard to the field. Numbers are accurate; verbs and nouns are specific. Hyperbole and exaggeration are avoided; emotional appeals are used sparingly.

  • Direct professionalism: supports claims with specific language, numbers and evidence.

Conventions

Spelling, punctuation and grammar are correct throughout. Formatting meets the funder's requirements; headings make the document easy to navigate. Budgets are presented in tables or lists where requested. Numbers are formatted consistently and the tone stays professional.

  • Application polish: uses accurate formatting, figures and mechanics throughout.

Part 2

Today’s Marking Targets

Task in one sentence

Write a grant application (315-385 words) to a youth foundation requesting up to two thousand dollars for a student-led project that benefits your school or community.

Let’s Focus

Three strands matter most this week: Audience & Purpose, Conventions and Language Choices. Audience awareness decides whether the funder feels respected. Conventions decide whether your document looks credible. Language decides whether each claim feels supported or oversold.

Audience & Purpose

A strong grant application speaks directly to the funder's priorities. The writer shows confidence in the project without overselling it. The applicant demonstrates understanding of the funder's role and values their investment. The application feels like a conversation between two people who both care about the project's success.

What markers scan for

  • Tone is respectful and professional; the applicant shows understanding of the funder's priorities.
  • The applicant demonstrates confidence in the project without exaggeration.
  • The writer shows genuine partnership rather than asking for charity.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Tone may be too casual or overly flattering; the applicant does not clearly show understanding of funder priorities.

  • Strong

    Tone is professional; the applicant shows respect for the funder and confidence in the project.

  • Excellent

    Tone is assured and respectful; the applicant clearly understands the funder's values and demonstrates genuine partnership.

Conventions

Professional grant applications follow formal conventions that signal credibility. Spelling and punctuation are flawless. The budget is itemised and clearly presented. Paragraphs are well-formed and sections are easy to navigate. A careful, error-free application builds funder confidence in the applicant.

What markers scan for

  • Spelling, punctuation and grammar are correct; no errors distract from the content.
  • Budget is itemised and easy to read; numbers are formatted consistently.
  • Formatting is professional and sections are clearly organised.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    The application may contain spelling or punctuation errors; formatting may be inconsistent or unclear.

  • Strong

    Conventions are secure; the document is formatted professionally and easy to read.

  • Excellent

    Conventions are flawless; formatting is professional and demonstrates organisation and care.

Language Choices

Strong grant applications use precise, direct language that inspires confidence. Specific verbs and nouns replace vague generalisations. Numbers are accurate. Claims are supported with reasoning or evidence. The writer avoids hyperbole and lets the project speak for itself.

What markers scan for

  • Language is specific and direct; claims are supported rather than exaggerated.
  • Verbs and nouns are precise; vague generalisations are avoided.
  • Hyperbole like 'amazing' or 'incredible' is replaced with concrete detail.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Language may be vague or exaggerated; claims may not be supported.

  • Strong

    Language is mostly precise and supported; exaggeration is minimal.

  • Excellent

    Language is precise and direct; every claim is supported; the applicant shows command of the project and its details.

Now read · Student sample

Grant Application: Wildflower Garden for Coburg Secondary School

Year 9 sample · \~350 words

Student sample for assessment

Written by a Year 9 student in Coburg, Victoria, Australia.

We request $1,900 to establish a native wildflower garden at Coburg Secondary School. This garden will create a pollinator habitat, provide outdoor learning space for Year 9 science classes, and contribute to campus biodiversity. Coburg Secondary's grounds are largely mown lawn with minimal native vegetation. Students spend most of their science learning indoors. A wildflower garden addresses both issues: it creates a habitat for native bees, butterflies and other pollinators that are declining in urban areas, and it provides a living classroom where students can observe ecological relationships firsthand. The garden will occupy an unused corner of the grounds (200 square metres) and will be designed to require minimal ongoing water and maintenance. Students will participate in planting and care, deepening their understanding of ecology, sustainability and local environmental issues. The project is fully planned and ready to begin. I have surveyed the site, consulted with the school grounds manager, and worked with a local native plant nursery to develop the planting design. The budget below accounts for all materials and installation. The school has committed space and will provide water during the establishment phase. This is not a proposal that requires significant school resources—it fills an existing gap with minimal disruption. Budget breakdown: - Native plants (200+ species-diverse selections): $1,200 - Mulch, soil preparation and edging materials: $400 - Labels and educational signage: $150 - Contingency (5%): $150 - Total: $1,900 I am well placed to lead this project. I have designed the garden, spent time at a local native plant nursery learning about species and care, and coordinated with the school grounds manager to ensure our plan fits school needs. I have also recruited and trained five Year 9 volunteers who will help plant and maintain the garden. We have committed to weekly care for the first term and monthly maintenance thereafter. The school's Year 9 science teacher has agreed to incorporate the garden into curriculum units on ecology and biodiversity. This is not a one-off activity—it is a permanent asset that will serve students for years. This project represents genuine partnership between student initiative, school resources and professional guidance from a local native plant nursery. We ask for your support to create a space where students experience the real world of ecology and where the school's ecological impact improves.