Y06W17PA - When Reality Felt Different from Expectation

This week you wrote a reflective piece about a time reality felt different from what you expected. Now you'll read another student's piece and decide how strong it is. Each module sharpens how you spot honest reflection — and helps your own.

Part 1

The Assessor Scorecard for

Reflective – Reflective piece

Markers look for reflection grounded in one real moment, with honest thinking about what it revealed.

Ideas & Content

One specific moment, not vague claims about growth. What you expected and what actually happened. An honest insight the moment revealed to you.

  • Honest insights grounded: in specific moments.

Structure & Cohesion

A clear move from expectation, to event, to meaning. Each paragraph builds on the one before — no jumps. The ending connects back to the opening idea.

  • Clear progression from: experience through thinking to meaning.

Audience & Purpose

A voice that sounds like real thinking, not preaching. Questions or pauses that show you're still working it out. Honesty about confusion, not pretend certainty.

  • Questioning voice that: invites readers into thinking.

Language Choices

Words that capture small shades of feeling. No tired phrases like "life-changing" or "taught me a lot." Questions and pauses that show your thinking.

  • Precise language that: captures complexity.

Conventions

Sentence lengths varied for emphasis and pace. Dashes or ellipses used on purpose to mark thinking. Punctuation that supports the reflective tone.

  • Supported by punctuation: that enables reflection.

Part 2

Today’s Marking Targets

Task in one sentence

Write a reflective piece about a time when reality turned out very different from what you expected.

Let’s Focus

Two strands matter most this week: Ideas & Content and Structure & Cohesion. Your reflection must rest on a real moment, not a vague claim. Then your thinking must move clearly from expectation, through event, to meaning.

Ideas & Content

Strong reflection this week shows one specific moment — what you expected, what happened, and what the gap revealed. The more exact the moment, the bigger the insight feels. Vague claims about "growth" do not land with a reader.

What markers scan for

  • Can you picture the moment the writer is reflecting on?
  • Is the gap between expectation and reality clear?
  • Does the insight feel honest, not clichéd?
  • Does it show how the writer thinks, not just what happened?

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Reflection stays vague; few specific moments; insights feel general or clichéd.

  • Strong

    Specific moments ground the reflection; the gap is clear; insights feel honest.

  • Excellent

    Reflection is detailed and layered; the gap shows complexity; insights feel honest and surprising.

Structure & Cohesion

Strong writing moves from "I expected" to "but actually" to "and that shows." Each paragraph builds on the one before. The closing idea connects back to the opening so the whole piece feels like one journey of thinking.

What markers scan for

  • Can you trace the writer's thinking across the piece?
  • Does it move from expectation, through event, to insight?
  • Does each thought connect to the one before it?
  • Does the ending tie back to the opening?

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Reflection jumps between ideas; links between thoughts stay unclear.

  • Strong

    Reflection moves from expectation through event to insight; each paragraph builds on the last.

  • Excellent

    Reflection progresses with smooth links; layers of thinking show; the piece builds to a complex close.

Now read · Student sample

The Sleepover That Wasn't What I Thought

Year 6 sample · \~250 words

Student sample for assessment

Written by a Year 6 student in Northcote, Victoria, Australia.

I was nervous about the sleepover, but not for the reason you'd think. I wasn't worried about being away from home or missing my parents. I was worried because Mira and I had been best friends since Year 3, and I expected the night to be perfect—like it had always been. We'd stay up late laughing, share secrets, and go to sleep happy. That's how it always went. What actually happened was different. We arrived at Mira's house and her older brother was home with his friends, all loud and chaotic. Mira wanted to hang out with them, to seem cool. So we did. We sat on the edge of the lounge room while they played video games, watching but not really part of it. Then Mira's mum made dinner and we ate quickly so Mira could get back to watching her brother. I felt small. Invisible. This wasn't the plan. That night, lying in the dark, I realised something. I'd expected the sleepover to be about me and Mira, like it always had been. But Mira was changing. She wanted to be around her brother's friends, to be older, cooler. And I was still just... wanting to be around her. The gap between my expectation and what was happening wasn't about the sleepover. It was about us growing at different speeds. I didn't say anything to Mira that night. But the next morning, something shifted in how I understood friendship. I realised that expecting things to stay the same is a way of trying to hold onto people as they change. The sleepover wasn't ruined. It was real. And real friendship, I think, means letting people grow even when it makes you sad.