Y07W13WR What Peer Assessment Is Really Like
Part 1
How to Write
An informative piece shares knowledge or experience on a topic with readers who need clear, practical understanding. It is written for an audience who expects the writer to know the subject and present it helpfully. The tone is knowledgeable, direct and accessible — not academic or detached.
- Ideas & content: Choose what is most useful for your reader. If drawing on personal experience, focus on what is specific and real rather than general observations.
- Structure & cohesion: Organise ideas into a clear flow — an opening that establishes the topic, a middle that develops it with specific detail, and a close that leaves the reader with something useful.
- Voice & audience: Write as someone who genuinely knows this topic. Stay consistent in tone — confident but not preachy, clear but not simplistic.
- Language choices: Use vocabulary that is precise without being unnecessarily formal. Write in the present tense for ongoing truths and anchor abstract ideas with specific examples.
- Conventions: Spell key terms accurately. Use punctuation to control sentence rhythm — commas and full stops are your most useful tools.
Common pitfalls: Staying too general — specific detail is what makes an informative piece actually useful. Repeating the same point in different words rather than adding new information.
Part 2
Your Task Plan for Today
Question: Write an informative piece explaining what peer assessment involves and what it is actually like to do. Draw entirely on your own experience. Explain the process, what you are expected to do, what is difficult about it and what you have found useful.
Stimulus: A student at another school has written to your class asking for help understanding peer assessment. Their school is about to introduce it and they are not sure what it actually involves or how it feels to do it. Your teacher has asked you to write a response explaining peer assessment honestly and practically.
Task Analysis: This task asks you to explain something from real experience to someone who has never done it. Your audience is genuinely curious and slightly anxious. A strong response will give an honest picture of what peer assessment actually involves — including what is uncomfortable or difficult — rather than just describing an idealised version.
Quick Plan
Before you write, plan:
- The process — what actually happens, step by step?
- What is expected of you as the assessor
- What is difficult — be honest
- What you have found useful — a specific strategy or approach
Opening strategy
Open by acknowledging what the reader is probably thinking — they have questions about something new. Establish immediately that you are going to give them an honest, practical picture.
Process / steps
Walk the reader through what peer assessment actually involves, in order. Don’t skip awkward parts — a student who is about to experience it needs the real picture, not just the positive version.
Examples that teach
Use at least one specific example from your own experience — a moment when peer assessment was useful, or when it felt difficult. Concrete examples teach more than general descriptions.
Ending technique
Close with the most important thing you would want a student to know before their first experience of peer assessment. Keep it practical and honest.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.