Y07W11PA - Staying Where I Felt Out of Place

This week you wrote a reflective piece about a time you felt out of place but chose to stay. Now you'll read another student's piece and decide how strong it is. Looking at someone else's work sharpens what you spot — and gives you moves to use in your own writing.

Part 1

The Assessor Scorecard for

Reflective – Reflective piece

Markers look for reflection that explores a moment and what it taught you, with honest thinking, specific detail and a clear move from experience to understanding.

Ideas & Content

A realisation that grows directly from the moment described. Thinking the reader can trace step by step. Understanding earned from the experience — not imposed.

  • Insight: the realisation should grow directly from the moment described.

Structure & Cohesion

A clear move from the event to the shift in understanding. Each part adds to why this moment mattered. A shape that feels considered, not circular.

  • Shift: the movement from event to understanding should be clear and purposeful.

Audience & Purpose

Real thought the reader can sense on the page. No rehearsed or borrowed lesson tacked on. Writing that feels discovered, not delivered.

  • Honesty: the reader should sense real thought, not a rehearsed lesson.

Language Choices

Concrete detail that makes thinking and feeling visible. Specific images, moments and words over abstract claims. Precise language that brings the reflection to life.

  • Specific detail: concrete detail should make the thinking and feeling visible.

Conventions

Accurate grammar, punctuation and spelling throughout. Control that supports the rhythm of careful thinking. Errors that interrupt engagement weaken the piece.

  • Control: conventions should support clarity and the rhythm of thinking.

Part 2

Today’s Marking Targets

Task in one sentence

Write about a time you felt out of place but chose to stay, then reflect on what you understand now that you did not understand then.

Let’s Focus

Two strands matter most this week: Ideas & Content and Structure & Cohesion. The piece needs a real insight earned from the moment. It also needs a clear shape so the reader can follow from event to understanding.

Ideas & Content

Strong writing this week shows a real insight — something the writer learned because of this moment, not a general truth everyone already knows. The realisation should be specific to this experience and grow from what actually happened.

What markers scan for

  • Something specific the writer learned or understood.
  • An insight tied to this experience, not a general idea.
  • A clear link between the moment and the new thinking.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    The reflection states an obvious or generic lesson; insight does not grow from the experience.

  • Strong

    The writer names something specific they learned; the insight is earned from the experience.

  • Excellent

    The reflection reveals a surprising, careful understanding; the reader is moved by the realisation.

Structure & Cohesion

Strong writing this week is shaped clearly: first the experience is described, then the writer steps back to reflect on what it meant. The reader always knows whether they're inside the moment or looking back. Transitions like 'I didn't understand then…' mark the shift.

What markers scan for

  • A clear point where description ends and reflection begins.
  • The two parts separated, not muddled together.
  • Transitions that help the reader follow the thinking.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Description and reflection are muddled; it's unclear when the writer is in the moment versus looking back.

  • Strong

    Description is distinct from reflection; a clear transition marks the shift; structure guides the reader.

  • Excellent

    Smooth movement between story and reflection; structure supports the deepening of understanding.

Now read · Student sample

Staying Where I Felt Out of Place

Year 7 sample · \~300 words

Student sample for assessment

Written by a Year 7 student in Cronulla, NSW, Australia.

My cousin had a group of friends and one of them was having a birthday party. My cousin invited me. Everyone there already knew each other. They had inside jokes. I arrived at the party and immediately felt different. I was wearing different clothes than everyone else. Everyone else was wearing trendy stuff and I was in jeans and a plain top. I sat on the edge of the couch while they were in the middle laughing at jokes I did not understand. They were talking about shows I had never watched and people from their school that I did not know. I wanted to leave. But my cousin had asked me to come and I did not want to hurt her feelings. So I stayed. I watched them and listened. After about an hour, my cousin noticed I was being quiet. She sat next to me and explained some of the jokes. She told me about the shows they were talking about. Then she introduced me to one of her friends who liked art like I do. We started talking about our favourite artists. The rest of the party got better after that. When I went home, I realised something. I had expected everyone to automatically include me. But that is not how groups work. People are already connected and new people have to find a way in. My cousin had to help me because I was not going to suddenly fit just by sitting there. Now I understand that being out of place is normal. It is not about your clothes. Everyone feels like that sometimes, even people who look confident. You do not automatically belong in every group, and that is okay. What matters is if you give the group a chance and if someone in the group wants to make space for you. I stayed because of my cousin, but also because I was willing to try.