Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 9 student in Brunswick, Victoria, Australia.
Educator A values difficulty. The harder students work, the stronger their reading muscles become. Vocabulary, syntax, comprehension—these are tools, and tools need resistance to develop. An easy book is like lifting a feather: your arm doesn't get stronger. Educator B values motivation. If a student finishes school having learned to read but decided they hate it, Educator A has built a reader who will never read again. Engagement matters more than difficulty because without engagement, there is no continuation. At first, these positions seem to contradict. One prioritises building capacity; the other prioritises building a relationship with reading. But the disagreement is not really about difficulty or engagement. It's about what comes first, and what each educator is afraid of. Educator A is afraid that if we make reading too easy, students won't develop the resilience they need for complex texts later. Educator B is afraid that if we demand too much too soon, we'll create readers who see texts as obstacles rather than invitations. Both fears are real. Where each falls short is in acknowledging that the other's goal actually depends on theirs. Educator B is right that without engagement, capacity building becomes punishment. But Educator A is also right that engagement without growth becomes passive consumption—which isn't actually a relationship with literature, it's a relationship with comfort. A genuinely effective approach would need to scaffold difficulty carefully enough that it feels like challenge, not defeat. It would match students to texts they can grow into, not texts they can already handle. This requires knowing each student, understanding what they need, and being willing to let difficulty feel easy because the engagement is there to support it.