Y06W44PA - The Conversation I Was Not Meant to Hear

This week you wrote a short story about a character who overhears something not meant for them. Now you'll read another student's story and decide how strong it is. Every module sharpens how you spot strong writing — and helps you fix your own.

Part 1

The Assessor Scorecard for

Narrative – Short story

Markers look for stories that build real tension and use varied language to bring the moment alive. Check each strand below to see what strong work looks like.

Ideas & Content

A situation that creates real tension and stakes. A character facing a genuine choice or problem. No flat sequence of events — there must be conflict.

  • Genuine conflict that: creates tension and stakes.

Structure & Cohesion

A setup, then rising tension, then a resolution. Cause and effect that the reader can follow. Each scene leads into the next without jumps.

  • Logical story progression: with clear cause and effect.

Audience & Purpose

A dilemma the reader understands and feels. Moments that pull the reader into the character's thoughts. A story that moves the reader, not just informs them.

  • Engaging story that: involves and moves readers.

Language Choices

Vivid, precise words — not vague or basic ones. Varied sentence openings, not always starting with "I." Language that brings the scene alive for the reader.

  • Vivid, precise language: that brings moments to life.

Conventions

Spelling and grammar that don't trip the reader up. Punctuation placed with care to support meaning. A pattern of mistakes lowers the mark — one or two does not.

  • Accurate mechanics that: support readability.

Part 2

Today’s Marking Targets

Task in one sentence

Write a short story about a character who overhears something not meant for them and must choose what to do.

Let’s Focus

Two strands matter most this week: Ideas & Content and Language Choices. The conflict decides whether the story feels real. The words decide whether each scene comes alive on the page.

Ideas & Content

Strong writing this week builds a real moral dilemma. The character knows something that puts them in a hard spot. Telling it would break trust. Keeping quiet feels wrong too. The choice has real stakes and the inner conflict feels honest.

What markers scan for

  • Look for the scene where the character overhears.
  • Notice how the knowledge changes the character's choices.
  • Check how the character wrestles with telling or keeping quiet.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Situation is clear but the tension feels weak.

  • Strong

    Real tension with a real dilemma; the conflict feels clear.

  • Excellent

    Strong tension throughout; the dilemma is powerful and the choice feels earned.

Language Choices

Strong writing this week picks precise words. Repeating "said," "walked," or "felt" flattens the story. Sentences shouldn't all start with "I." Descriptions need specific detail, not general ones. Every word should pull its weight in the scene.

What markers scan for

  • Notice repeated simple words like "said" or "walked."
  • Look at sentence openings — too many start with "I."
  • Check if descriptions are vivid or stay general.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Language is simple or repetitive; descriptions feel flat.

  • Strong

    Language is clear with some variety; words fit the moment.

  • Excellent

    Language is precise and vivid; word choice brings scenes alive.

Now read · Student sample

The Conversation I Was Not Meant to Hear

Year 6 sample · \~350 words

Student sample for assessment

Written by a Year 6 student in Brunswick, Victoria, Australia.

I was walking to the library after lunch when I heard voices coming from the office. One was Mr Chen, my teacher. The other was my best friend's dad. I stopped to listen. I know I shouldn't have, but I wanted to know what they were talking about. 'Her parents are getting divorced,' Mr Chen said. 'She doesn't know yet. They're going to tell her this weekend. I'm telling you because she might struggle when she comes back to school. Can we support her?' My heart stopped. My best friend is Maya. Maya doesn't know that her parents are getting divorced. And now I know. This is the biggest secret I have ever held. For two days, I acted normal around Maya. We sat together at lunch. We did our work together. But inside, I felt confused and sad and worried. I couldn't tell her because I wasn't supposed to know. But I couldn't not know, either. The secret sat inside me like a heavy weight. On Monday, Maya came to school looking sad. Her parents had told her. She walked straight to me at lunch and started crying. 'My parents are getting divorced,' she said. And I held her hand and listened to everything she said. But then Maya asked me, 'Did you know? Did anyone tell you?' I had to make a choice. I could lie and protect the secret. Or I could tell her the truth. I thought about how she would feel if she knew I had kept this from her. 'Yes,' I said. 'I heard Mr Chen talking to your dad. I'm sorry I didn't tell you. I wanted to, but I didn't know how.' Maya was quiet. Then she said, 'I'm glad you know. I'm glad I don't have to explain everything because you already understand.' And she squeezed my hand. That moment taught me something. Keeping a secret can be the right choice. But sometimes honesty is more important than keeping quiet. And sometimes the person you're protecting will understand your choice, even if it was hard.