Ideas & Content
The key facts a new reader needs, not everything you know.
The goal, the rules, the gear, and what makes it fun or hard.
Exact, useful information — not just "it's fun."
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Useful facts: exact facts chosen so a new reader can really picture the game.
You are writing for readers your own age who have never tried the activity you are explaining. Your task is to provide all the information they would need to understand the activity: what the objective is, how it works, what equipment or space is required, and what skills or challenges are involved. You are not writing instructions for how to play (which would be step-by-step: first do this, then this); you are writing an explanation of how the activity works overall. Specificity matters: do not assume readers know what a 'point' means in your sport, or what equipment is standard. Explain as if your readers know nothing. The tone should be encouraging and informative, inviting readers to understand and perhaps try the activity.
Ideas & Content
Strong writing this week picks the right facts. A new reader needs the goal, the rules, the gear or space, the skills, and what makes the game fun or hard. Leaving out scoring or rules makes the picture incomplete. Each fact should be exact, not vague.
What markers scan for
- The goal of the game named clearly.
- The basic rules so a reader can picture play happening.
- Gear and space — named exactly, not vaguely.
- What makes the game fun or hard for the people playing.
Score Bands
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Basic
Some key facts are clear but others are missing or vague, leaving gaps in the picture.
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Strong
Goal, rules, gear and what makes it fun are all covered with exact, useful detail.
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Excellent
All key facts fit together so the reader fully pictures the game and sees its appeal.
Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 5 student in Werribee, Victoria, Australia.
Basketball is a sport played by two teams of five players on a rectangular court. The object is to shoot the ball through the hoop at each end of the court. The team that scores the most points wins the game.
The game needs a ball, two hoops mounted ten feet above the ground, and a hard flat court. You can play outdoors or indoors. The court is marked with lines that show where players can stand and shoot from.
Basketball is enjoyable because it is fast and exciting. Players must run, jump, and move quickly to get the ball. You can play alone to practise, or with friends on a team. The game teaches you teamwork because players must pass to each other to score.
Basketball is challenging because you need to be accurate when you shoot. The ball must go through the hoop from a distance. It requires strength in your arms and legs. Defence is also hard because players must watch the other team carefully and stop them from scoring.
Many people enjoy basketball because it is fun to play with a group. You can start learning at any age.