Y07W15PA - What I Need from a Mentor

This week you wrote a needs statement for a mentoring program, explaining what would actually help you. Now you'll read another student's statement 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

Transactional – Needs statement

Markers look for honest, specific writing that tells the reader exactly what you need and why — no flattery, no generic statements, just practical detail.

Ideas & Content

Concrete, personal needs named clearly. An explanation of why each need matters to the writer. No vague requests for 'support' that could apply to anyone.

  • Specific needs: identifies concrete, personal needs with explanation of why they matter.

Structure & Cohesion

A clear order: overview, each need with reasons, then a close. Ideas that connect and build on each other. No fragmented or disorganised writing that leaves the reader unsure.

  • Organisation: presents needs in logical order; transitions connect ideas clearly.

Audience & Purpose

Writing aimed at a program coordinator making a match. A direct, honest and respectful tone throughout. Language clear enough that a stranger understands the need.

  • Reader-aware: written for the coordinator; honest and clear enough to guide matching.

Language Choices

Straightforward language that says exactly what you mean. Specific nouns and active verbs that make needs tangible. No flowery, vague or cliché phrasing.

  • Clarity: straightforward and precise; specific words convey real needs without cliché.

Conventions

Accurate spelling, punctuation and grammar throughout. No errors that obscure meaning or distract the reader. Control that shows respect for the coordinator's time.

  • Technical: spelling, punctuation and grammar are accurate and don't distract.

Part 2

Today’s Marking Targets

Task in one sentence

Write a needs statement for the mentoring program explaining what would genuinely help you as a Year 7 student — honest, specific, and clear.

Let’s Focus

Two strands matter most this week: Audience & Purpose and Language Choices. The coordinator must know exactly what you need and feel confident they can match you. Vague writing leaves them guessing. Both strands serve one job — getting you the right mentor.

Audience & Purpose

Strong writing this week shows the coordinator exactly what you need so they can match you well. The tone is honest and direct, not flattering or rehearsed. You explain not just what you need but why it matters to you. The reader should finish knowing who to pair you with.

What markers scan for

  • Needs stated clearly so the coordinator can act on them.
  • An explanation of why each need matters to you.
  • A direct, honest tone — not rehearsed or vague.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Needs mentioned but vague or generic; little explanation of why they matter; the reader is unclear.

  • Strong

    Clear needs with some explanation; honest tone; the coordinator could match the student.

  • Excellent

    Specific needs with strong explanation of why each matters; the coordinator can match with confidence.

Language Choices

Strong writing this week is precise. Replace vague words ('help', 'support', 'advice') with language that says exactly what you need. Use concrete examples. Avoid phrases that sound like a form or something you think you should say. The coordinator needs your real situation, not a template.

What markers scan for

  • Specific nouns replacing generic words like 'help' or 'support'.
  • Concrete examples of real situations or challenges.
  • A voice that sounds like the student — not borrowed.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Vague language throughout; the writing sounds generic or rehearsed; needs stay unclear.

  • Strong

    Generally specific language; some concrete examples; voice sounds more real; needs come through.

  • Excellent

    Precise language throughout; examples show the real situation; voice is honest; needs are unmistakable.

Now read · Student sample

What I Need from a Mentor

Year 7 sample · \~250 words

Student sample for assessment

Written by a Year 7 student in Glen Waverley, Victoria, Australia.

I'm writing to explain what would actually help me in a mentoring relationship this year. I've been thinking about what I struggle with and what would make a real difference, and here's what I've come up with. I need someone who understands what it's like to move schools. I moved from Brisbane last year, and while I've made friends, I still feel outside things sometimes. I don't talk about it much, but when conversations happen about primary school memories or knowing people outside school, I'm the person who doesn't know anyone. A mentor who moved schools would get this. They wouldn't try to fix it; they'd just understand that I'm still finding my place. I also need help with academic confidence. I'm not struggling with marks, but I second-guess myself a lot. I'll finish an assignment and immediately think it's not good enough. In classes where I don't know the teacher well yet, I'm quiet because I'm worried my ideas are obvious or wrong. I need someone who can help me see that my work is actually okay, and that speaking up in class isn't as risky as my brain tells me it is. Last thing: I'd want someone who gets that Year 7 is busy and I'm figuring out what matters. I don't need a mentor to sit with me and do homework. I just need someone I can text sometimes if something comes up — maybe advice, maybe just knowing someone older gets the same worries I do. Flexible is important. I wouldn't want to commit to a structured meet-every-week thing right now.