Years 9–10 · The Pre-Senior Years

Year 9 and 10 is where “more detail” stops being the answer.

Senior English assumes a student can argue a position, build an evidence chain, weigh a counterargument and hold a formal tone. Years 9–10 is where those habits are built — deliberately, before they are assessed.

See what the Pre-Senior Years should do ↓
A Year 9 or 10 student writing at a desk

Does this sound familiar?

The things Year 9–10 parents quietly notice.

If two or three of these land, you are seeing the Pre-Senior Years — the stretch where competent writing has to become controlled, evidence-aware, senior-ready writing.

“Her essays are competent — but they describe. They don’t actually argue.”

“He has opinions, but he can’t back them up on the page.”

“The feedback says ‘needs more analysis’ — and we don’t know what that means.”

“Senior English is two years away, and I can’t tell if she’s ready.”

“He writes a lot — but it’s all assertion. No evidence, no other side.”

“She reads an article and takes it at face value — strong evidence and weak look the same to her.”

None of this means your child is behind. It means the bar has moved. Years 9–10 is the point where a task stops being solved by “more detail” — it now needs a clear position, a real evidence chain, a fair reckoning with the other side, and control of tone for a genuine audience. That is the work senior English assumes a student already has. The rest of this page is what WritePath does about it.

A Year 9–10 week

Five modules a week — each aimed at senior readiness.

Every week moves through five module types, one a weekday, across 44 weeks a year. In the Pre-Senior Years they are the most demanding in the program — pitched at controlled argument, critical reading and formal writing on real social, civic, scientific and ethical material.

Writing

Answers: “it describes, it doesn’t argue”

Every week is a full extended response built on a real stimulus and a defined audience — a parliamentary submission, an analytical essay, a technical explanation, an expression of interest. Your child is taught to make a claim, build an evidence chain, explain complexity and answer the other side — the formal forms that influence real decisions, with personalised feedback on the finished piece.

Reading Comprehension

Answers: takes a text at face value

Demanding texts — case studies, commentary, explanation pieces, policy extracts, debate transcripts, professional email threads. The questions move past comprehension to evaluating claims and evidence, recognising framing and bias, and supporting a judgement with textual evidence — the analytical reading senior English requires.

Vocabulary

Answers: “needs more analysis”

Abstract, analytical vocabulary and the sentence moves of senior analysis — “this perpetuates”, “X contends that”, “paradoxically” — plus the precise distinctions students lose marks over: evaluate / analyse / assess, systematic / systemic, explicit / implicit. The language a strong analytical sentence is actually made of.

Grammar

Answers: “all assertion, no evidence”

Senior-readiness grammar: qualifying a claim to what the evidence supports, synthesising sources without distorting them, avoiding hype, and revising systematically. Your child learns to turn an exaggerated claim into a careful, evidence-based one — grammar as credibility and critical thinking made practical. Aligned with the Australian Curriculum: English.

Peer Assessment

Answers: “needs more analysis” — named

Your child judges a sample piece against senior-school criteria — ideas, structure, audience, language, conventions — and learns the difference between basic, strong and excellent work in each. It builds the assessor’s eye: the ability to see a rubric in a real piece of writing and carry that lens straight back to their own drafts.

The topics are deliberately real — AI and its risks, media regulation, the voting age, misinformation, social-platform liability. Senior-ready English and an informed, articulate young person are built by the same work.

See it for yourself

Look inside real Year 9–10 modules.

Not a description of the program — the program itself. These are genuine modules from the Year 9–10 curriculum. Pick a module type to see one.

Reading Comprehension

Misinformation Machines

Year 9 · a real module

An explanation text on why corrections to false claims so often fail — how familiarity, emotion and identity shape what people believe. The questions run from main idea and vocabulary-in-context through to evidence-weighted judgement: which factor most helps misinformation persist, supported with evidence drawn from two different sections of the text.

Module preview

A screenshot of the real module page slots in here.

Writing

Should Social Media Platforms Be Legally Liable for Harmful Content?

Year 10 · a real module

Your child writes a submission to a parliamentary inquiry, balancing free expression against accountability. The learning page teaches the form first — a submission must be formal, measured and credible, and must not argue from passion alone without evidence or reasoning. They take a clear position, support it, and engage with at least one argument from the other side. The finished piece receives real, personalised feedback.

Module preview

A screenshot of the real module page slots in here.

Vocabulary

The verbs of analysis: evaluate, analyse, assess

Year 10 · a real weekly set

A week’s vocabulary built for senior assessment: abstract academic words, a writing-function phrase that does analytical work — this perpetuates, X contends that — a discipline-connected morpheme, and the near-synonym distinctions students lose marks over, such as evaluate / analyse / assess and systematic / systemic. An applied task asks your child to use the words so the meaning is clear from the writing itself.

Module preview

A screenshot of the real module page slots in here.

Grammar

Claims with Limits (Anti-Hype)

Year 10 · a real module

Your child learns to turn an exaggerated claim — “This app completely transforms learning for every student” — into a careful, evidence-based one: “This app may help some students organise their learning more effectively.” Grammar taught as credibility: scoping a claim to what the evidence actually supports, so a senior argument holds up rather than overreaching.

Module preview

A screenshot of the real module page slots in here.

Peer Assessment

Assessing a submission on the voting age

Year 10 · a real module

Paired with a writing task on whether the federal voting age should be lowered to 16, your child evaluates a sample submission — judging specific reasoning, evidence that genuinely supports the claim, how objections are handled, and whether the framing is calibrated for a parliamentary committee. They explain why a precise analytical distinction is stronger than a flat assertion. This is how a student learns to see writing the way an assessor does.

Module preview

A screenshot of the real module page slots in here.

The module titles and descriptions above are genuine Year 9–10 curriculum content. The preview panels will carry real screenshots of each module page once they are exported — the free week opens the full versions.

The wider picture

Years 9–10 is the run-up to senior English.

WritePath is not a Year 9–10 product — it is one continuous program on a single subscription. The control your child builds now is sequenced so that senior English, when it arrives, is a continuation of work already underway rather than a sudden jump.

Years 5–6

Foundation Years

Strong foundations and good habits before high school.

Years 7–8

Bridge Years

The bridge into analytical, evidence-based secondary English.

Years 9–10

You are here

Essay-level argument and analysis, ready for senior English.

Years 11–12

Senior Years

Applied, analytical writing on ideas worth thinking about.

The first week is free

See a real Year 9–10 week before you decide.

One full weekly cycle of the real program — five modules, real feedback — free. Your child does the work; you get the same feedback in your inbox. Then you decide, with evidence in front of you.

  • A complete weekly cycle: reading, writing, vocabulary, grammar and peer assessment.
  • The same personalised feedback a paying member receives — sent to you and your child.
  • No credit card. No time limit. No automatic charge when the week ends.

Start the free week

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We’ll email a sign-in link — no password to remember. Your email is also how we send your child’s feedback, so it is worth getting right.

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Give your Year 9 or 10 the control senior English will assume.

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