Language Choices
Simple language balanced with moments of precision.
No clichés or vague, abstract phrases.
Words chosen for exact meaning, not for sound.
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Precise word choice: that captures exact meaning.
Ideas & Content
This writer picks a small, everyday moment — a look from a parent at lunch — and explores what it means. The reflection is honest and specific. Sensory details (the apple, the silence, the look) anchor the thinking in something real.
What markers scan for
- Notice the choice of a small moment, not a dramatic event.
- Look for specific details that anchor the reflection.
- See how the thinking deepens across the piece.
- Check if the writer moves from event to meaning.
Score Bands
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Basic
Picks a moment but stays vague about why it matters.
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Strong
Picks a specific moment and reflects honestly, with supporting detail.
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Excellent
Picks a subtle moment, explores it with insight and precise detail.
Language Choices
This writer uses simple, clear language. However, words like 'thinking,' 'moment,' and 'felt' repeat often. Sentence shapes are similar — many start with 'I.' The language serves the reflection but doesn't yet use variety or precision to make the thinking feel as strong as it is.
What markers scan for
- Notice the repetition of 'thinking' and 'moment.'
- See how many sentences begin with 'I.'
- Look for places where more precise words could help.
- Check if sentence shapes vary or stay the same.
Score Bands
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Basic
Uses very simple words; repetition flattens the reflection.
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Strong
Uses clear, purposeful language with some variety in choices.
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Excellent
Uses precise, varied language; words strengthen the reflection.
Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 6 student in Coburg, Victoria, Australia.
I was sitting at the lunch table with my parent, eating an apple, and my parent looked at me in a way I had never seen before. It wasn't a happy look or a sad look. It was a kind of knowing look. I felt like they could see inside my head and they knew something I was still thinking about. The apple was cold and I held it in my hand but I wasn't really eating it anymore. I was thinking about that look. I kept wondering why that moment stayed with me. It was just lunch. Nothing big happened. But something about the way my parent looked at me made me feel like maybe I was growing up and they could see it happening. It was like they were watching me change and they were sad about it, but also happy. I didn't understand it at that moment, but now when I think about it, I know what I was feeling. I was understanding that my parent was knowing something I wasn't ready to know yet. Now when I think about that moment at the lunch table, I understand more. I think my parent was seeing who I was becoming. And I was just eating an apple and thinking about a look. But that look changed something in my thinking about time and growing up. That ordinary moment at lunch showed me that sometimes people can see us better than we see ourselves.