Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 6 student in Moonee Ponds, Victoria, Australia.
The message was on Zara's phone, glowing in the darkness of her locker. She had been reaching for her maths textbook when she knocked the phone out, and it landed screen-up, open to a text thread. The sender was her close friend Emma. The recipient was their other friend Jamie. Before Zara could turn away, her eyes caught a phrase: 'Zara is being annoying lately.' Her stomach dropped. She wanted to stop reading but her eyes kept moving across the words. Emma was tired of Zara. Emma thought Zara talked too much. Emma had been pretending to enjoy their friendship. Zara's heart pounded. The message was not meant for her. Reading it felt wrong. But she had already seen it. The words were burned into her mind. She picked up the phone with shaking hands and put it back in the locker, her mind racing. What should she do? She could pretend she never saw it. Life could go on as normal. Emma would never know. Zara and Emma could keep being friends, and Zara would know the truth underneath. But that felt dishonest. If she pretended, she would be lying every day. She would watch Emma's face and wonder if everything was fake. Or she could confront Emma. But Zara knew what would happen. Emma would feel caught and angry. The friendship would crack. Jamie might pick sides. Zara might lose both of them. The thought made her feel sick. That afternoon, Zara found Emma at lunch. Before she could lose her nerve, she said quietly, 'I saw a message you sent to Jamie. I didn't mean to read it, but I did. I want to know what's really going on.' Emma's face went pale. For a long moment, no one spoke. Then Emma said something unexpected: 'I was stressed about my parents' divorce. I needed someone to talk to and I was scared to talk to you because you are so upbeat and I didn't want to burden you.' Zara realised then that Emma was not annoyed with her. Emma was scared. And now Emma was scared that Zara hated her for the message. Zara and Emma talked for a long time. They did not fix everything that afternoon, but they began to. Zara learnt that sometimes reading a message not meant for you can hurt, but ignoring it would have hurt worse. The truth, even when painful, was better than a lie.