Y08W27WR How My Friendship Group Really Works

Part 1

How to Write

Informative – Informative account

An informative account explains a real event or historical process for readers who were not present and need a clear picture. It is written for an audience seeking factual understanding rather than analysis or opinion. The tone is authoritative and accessible, presenting information in a logical order the reader can follow.

  • Ideas & content: Identify the most important events or stages and include enough detail to make the account meaningful. Prioritise significance — not every fact needs to be included.
  • Structure & cohesion: Organise your account in a clear sequence — typically chronological. Use time markers and connective phrases to move the reader smoothly from one point to the next.
  • Voice & audience: Write with calm authority in third person. Avoid expressing personal opinions; let the information speak for itself.
  • Language choices: Use precise vocabulary suitable to the subject. Write in the past tense for events and present tense for ongoing facts. Keep sentences clear and varied.
  • Conventions: Spell names and key terms accurately. Use full stops and commas to control the pace of information.

Common pitfalls: Listing events without explaining why they matter — connect each detail to the significance of the account. Starting too broadly before arriving at the actual subject.

Part 2

Your Task Plan for Today

The brief

Question: Write an informative account explaining how your friendship group actually communicates, makes decisions and handles conflict. Draw entirely on your own observation. Explain the real patterns, not the ideal image. Include how roles emerge and shift, what holds the group together and what creates tension.

Stimulus: A researcher at a university is conducting a study into how young people in friendship groups actually communicate and make decisions. The researcher is looking for honest accounts from Year 8 students about the real patterns of their groups — not how they think a group should work, but how it actually works. Your account will remain anonymous and contribute to the research.

Task Analysis: This task asks you to write an account explaining how your actual friendship group works — the real patterns, not the ideal image. You must move beyond generalisations to show the reader specific dynamics. A strong response reveals how decisions are made, how roles shift, and what holds the group together.

Quick Plan

Before you write, plan:

  • How your group communicates — the real patterns
  • How decisions get made — who has influence, how is disagreement handled?
  • Roles and relationships — who plays what part?
  • What holds the group together
  • What creates tension

Specificity

Move beyond generalisations. Instead of “we communicate well”, show the reader how you actually communicate — the patterns, habits, and unspoken rules.

Structure and focus

Organise your account into clear sections — perhaps how communication works, how decisions are made, how roles shift. Each section needs one clear focus.

Examples that reveal

Use specific moments to illustrate how your group really works. Show a conversation, a decision, a conflict.

Honesty

Be honest about what works and what doesn’t. Acknowledge dynamics that might not look good but are real.

Concluding insight

End with what you have learned about friendship or group dynamics from observing your own group.