Y07W20PA - When My Words Had an Unexpected Effect

This week you wrote a reflective piece about a time your words had an unexpected effect. Now you'll read another student's piece and decide how honestly they show their thinking. Looking at someone else's reflection sharpens your own.

Part 1

The Assessor Scorecard for

Reflective – Reflective piece

Markers look for a clear personal moment, honest thinking about what it meant, and language that shows feeling rather than telling it.

Ideas & Content

One real moment chosen and developed in detail. Why the moment mattered — what the writer realised. A shift in thinking the reader can follow. No list of events without meaning.

  • Discovery: what the writer realised or understood differently.

Structure & Cohesion

Opening anchors the moment clearly. Middle develops what happened and how impact was discovered. Closing shows changed thinking, not just a tidy end. Connections feel natural, not forced.

  • Journey: event — discovery — reflection — new understanding.

Audience & Purpose

Writer speaks directly to the reader in a thoughtful voice. Honest, unguarded thinking trusted to the reader. Shared insight, not performance for a mark.

  • Honesty: the reader senses honest reflection, not performance.

Language Choices

Precise words bring the moment and feelings to life. Show the physical sensation or the image that stuck. No flat phrases like "I felt bad." Word choice reveals personality and voice.

  • Precision: specific words that show rather than tell.

Conventions

Careful punctuation, accurate spelling and correct tenses. Sentences are varied — slow for key moments, quick for less. Clean writing keeps the reader on the reflection.

  • Clarity: correct spelling, punctuation, and varied sentence control.

Part 2

Today’s Marking Targets

Task in one sentence

Write a reflective piece about a time your words affected someone more than you expected, and explain what it changed in your thinking.

Let’s Focus

Two strands matter most this week: Language Choices and Ideas & Content. You must tell a clear, specific story so the reader sees the moment. The real power comes from honest reflection that shows what you learned and how it changed you.

Language Choices

Strong writing this week uses words that feel both precise and personal. Markers look for language that brings moments and feelings into focus. Specific verbs, sensory detail and honest phrasing reveal your voice and connect with the reader.

What markers scan for

  • Specific words used to show feelings or actions.
  • Sensory detail rather than broad description.
  • Details the writer chooses to linger on.
  • Honest language — not generic or inflated.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Language is general; feelings are described in broad terms like "bad."

  • Strong

    Language is precise and personal; feelings are shown through chosen detail.

  • Excellent

    Language is vivid and authentic; sensory detail brings moments into sharp focus.

Ideas & Content

Strong writing this week uncovers what a moment meant — not just what happened. Markers look for honest reflection: where did the writer's thinking shift? What did they realise? The strongest pieces show that this experience actually changed how the writer thinks.

What markers scan for

  • The moment where the writer realises the impact.
  • Reflection that goes beyond retelling events.
  • A clear shift in thinking or behaviour.
  • The significance of the moment is shown.

Score Bands

  • Basic

    Ideas are general; events are told but meaning is not explored.

  • Strong

    Ideas are specific; impact is shown; reflection feels earned.

  • Excellent

    Ideas are rich; a true realisation is shown and its lasting impact explored.

Now read · Student sample

When My Words Had an Unexpected Effect

Year 7 sample · \~250 words

Student sample for assessment

Written by a Year 7 student in Thornbury, Victoria, Australia.

I said something small without thinking. It was a Tuesday morning before school, and my friend Morgan was wearing a new haircut. I didn't mean it badly, but I looked at it and said, 'Wow, that's... really short.' That was it. I wasn't trying to be mean. I just said what I was thinking. Morgan didn't say anything back. They kind of smiled and went quiet. I didn't realise at the time, but I found out two days later from another friend that Morgan had been worried about the haircut already. They'd had it cut the day before and wasn't sure about it. My comment made them feel worse. When I found out, I felt sick. Not dramatically — just this slow, awful feeling in my stomach like I'd made a mistake I couldn't take back. What got me was that Morgan hadn't even told me they were upset. They just went quiet. I replayed that moment over and over in my head, trying to hear how my voice sounded when I said it. I apologised, and Morgan said it was fine, but I knew I'd changed how they felt about their haircut, maybe just for a moment. That's the part that stuck with me. I wasn't trying to hurt anyone. I was just being careless. Now when something comes out of my mouth before I think about it, I hear that moment again. I check myself. I think about whether what I'm about to say might land differently than I mean it to. It's made me slower to speak sometimes, and I think that's okay.