Y08W20PA - Pulled in Two Directions

This week you wrote a short story about a character caught between two conflicting demands. Now you'll read another student's story and judge how strong it is. Working through how assessors evaluate narrative writing builds your ability to apply the same lens to your own work.

Part 1

The Assessor Scorecard for

Narrative – Short story

A narrative short story is built on character and conflict. The form works when the reader cares about a character placed in a situation where they must choose, and understands why that choice matters.

Ideas & Content

A character real and complex enough to face a genuine dilemma. The conflict arises naturally from what the character values, not from plot tricks. The story shows the character thinking about the choice, not just making it.

  • Complex character whose: conflict arises naturally from what they value.

Structure & Cohesion

Early scenes establish the character and what each side wants from them. Later scenes intensify the conflict until a choice becomes unavoidable. The ending feels inevitable for this character in this situation.

  • Building tension that: makes the character's choice feel inevitable.

Audience & Purpose

The writer trusts the reader to read subtext without explanation. Tone matches the seriousness or lightness of the conflict. Emotion is shown through action and dialogue, not declared in summary.

  • Voice and tone: that trust the reader to understand subtext.

Language Choices

Sensory detail grounds the story in the real, physical world. Dialogue sounds like real speech, not artificial or over-written. Short sentences create tension; longer ones show thought; clichés are avoided.

  • Sensory detail and: authentic dialogue that bring the conflict to life.

Conventions

Dialogue is punctuated correctly and attributed so the speaker is always clear. Sentence structure varies — short for impact, longer for reflection. Missing quotation marks, run-ons or spelling errors distract from the story.

  • Accurate dialogue punctuation: and varied sentence structure.

Part 2

Today’s Marking Targets

Task in one sentence

Read a short story about a character pulled between two people with opposite demands and assess how well the writer developed character, conflict and the moments of decision.

Let’s Focus

Three strands matter most this week: Ideas & Content, Structure & Cohesion and Audience & Purpose. Ideas decide whether the character feels real. Structure decides whether tension builds. Audience decides whether the reader feels the weight of the choice.

Ideas & Content

Strong writing this week centres on a believable character and a real conflict. Each of the two people pulling at the character has a genuine claim. The reader understands what the character values and what they stand to lose either way.

What markers scan for

  • The character feels real — you can picture them and sense what they value.
  • Both people pulling at them have a legitimate claim, not a one-sided one.
  • There's a moment where the reader sees what the character really fears.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    The character feels flat or generic; the conflict is one-sided and the reader doesn't see what the character truly values.

  • Strong

    The character is believable; both people have genuine claims and the reader understands what matters to the character.

  • Excellent

    The character feels real and complex; both demands are legitimate and the reader senses what the character fears most.

Structure & Cohesion

Strong writing this week pulls the reader forward through building tension. Early scenes establish the character and the conflicting demands. Later scenes intensify the pressure. The story has momentum that carries it toward an earned choice.

What markers scan for

  • Tension builds across the story rather than staying flat.
  • Transitions between moments are smooth, not jarring.
  • The ending shows the character changed by the conflict.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    The story lacks clear structure; events feel random or disconnected and tension doesn't build.

  • Strong

    The story follows a clear path; tension builds and the reader stays engaged with the conflict.

  • Excellent

    Tension builds carefully and inevitably; each moment builds on the last and the ending feels earned.

Audience & Purpose

Strong writing this week speaks directly to the reader's emotions. The writer shows rather than tells — the reader feels the character's fear or loyalty through action and dialogue, not summary. The reader cares what happens and feels the weight of the choice.

What markers scan for

  • Feelings are shown through action and dialogue, not announced by the narrator.
  • Dialogue sounds natural, like real conversation between real people.
  • The reader cares about the character and feels the weight of the choice.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Feelings are explained rather than shown; dialogue sounds artificial and the reader doesn't engage emotionally.

  • Strong

    Feelings are mostly shown through action and dialogue; the reader understands and cares about the character.

  • Excellent

    Emotion is shown powerfully through action and dialogue; the reader feels emotionally invested in the character's struggle.

Now read · Student sample

Pulled in Two Directions

Year 8 sample · \~450 words

Student sample for assessment

Written by a Year 8 student in Carina, Queensland, Australia.

Marcus's mum wanted him to go straight home after school. She had been working double shifts at the hospital, and when he walked in without his younger brother, her face did something that made his chest tight. 'Where is Kai?' she asked. He was at soccer, Marcus said. With the team. The good team, the one that might take him somewhere. His little brother had started the season desperate to make the rep squad. Eight years old, and already he understood what it meant to be chosen. Mum had driven him to tryouts three times, worked around the hospital schedule, done the thing where you pretend you are not tired. When Kai made the team, she had cried. But his best friend Alex had been benched. Dropped from the regular squad for poor fitness. Alex had texted Marcus during lunch: 'I'm quitting.' Marcus knew Alex wasn't quitting—he was waiting for Marcus to say something. To call him. To tell him he was not just a fitness number. So Marcus found himself driving both directions at once. If he went home, Mum would relax—her shoulders would drop the way they only did when Kai was there and accounted for. If he went to Alex, he would save his friend from the decision that would echo through the whole of Year 9. Alex would not quit if Marcus turned up. Marcus knew this. He sat in his car outside the fields where Kai's training happened, watching his brother sprint through a drill. Kai had no idea Mum was at work worrying. He was just happy. Marcus's phone buzzed: a message from Mum. 'Coming home soon?' His phone buzzed again: Alex, sending the message Marcus could already read—'Still waiting.' Marcus thought about the word 'home'. For his mum, home was knowing both her boys were safe. For Alex, home was having someone who would choose him. And for Marcus, home was both and neither, impossible. He turned the ignition off. He sat in the quiet car and understood that whatever he did next, someone would be disappointed. Mum would wait. Alex would make his decision alone. Kai would finish his training and be driven home by someone else. And Marcus would be the person who chose one direction while looking back at the other. He put his phone away without answering either of them. Not yet. First, he sat in the quiet and let himself understand that he was not responsible for fixing this. Both people he loved had claims on him, and both claims were real. But the choice, finally, was his. That realisation didn't make it easier. It just made it his.