Why Planning Matters More Than You Think
Section 1: What Good Writers Do in the First 3–5 Minutes
1. Understand the Question Prompt
Ask yourself:
• What is the main event or feeling I need to show?
• What kind of story would best suit this theme?
These questions help students define a clear story direction early on.
2. Analyse the Pictures Effectively
Next, turn to the pictures. Don’t just glance and move on. Observe:
• What actions or objects are shown?
• What emotions are being expressed?
• Which moment is most important?
Pick one main picture to anchor your plot. This picture should appear in at least two to three parts of the story, not just be mentioned once.
3. Build a Quick Story Plan
Think about:
• Who is the main character?
• What problem will they face?
• How will it be resolved?
• What lesson will they learn?
If your idea fits both the question and the chosen picture, you’re ready to write.
Section 2: What Does WRITERS AT WORK Planning Actually Look Like?
A. Unpack the Question
We help students define key words like “fear” or “responsibility” using age-appropriate language. Then, we break the theme into three parts:
• What caused the event?
• What happened during the event?
• What was the consequence or takeaway?
This helps avoid vague stories and creates a clear storyline.
B. Use the PPP Strategy to Analyse the Picture
C. Plot Using the Story Curve
Every story must have a shape. We teach students to visualise a story curve:
• Start with a problem or conflict
• Build tension toward a turning point
• End with a resolution and thoughtful reflection
This helps prevent rushed endings or unrelated plot points.
D. Plug in Powerful Phrases
Before writing, students highlight a few useful:
• QSPs (Question-Specific Phrases)
• PPPs (Picture Precise Phrases)
By including these in the plan, they become part of the final story naturally. This improves language quality and strengthens the link to the theme and picture.
Section 3: Borrow Ideas from Your Mental ‘STORYBANK’
When planning, students learn to:
• Recall a story that matches the new theme
• Adjust the characters or setting to suit the picture
• Reuse strong paragraphs or reflections from past writing
This saves time during exams and gives students a sense of direction when planning under pressure.
Section 4: Final Thoughts – Planning as a Habit, Not a Step
Ready to Help Your Child Master the Art of Planning?
At WRITERS AT WORK, we go beyond correcting grammar. Our curriculum helps students develop strong story structures, build a rich bank of ideas through our signature STORYBANKING® method, and write compositions that are clear, engaging, and purposeful.
Whether your child needs weekly practice or an intensive holiday boost, our programmes are designed to build confidence and improve performance—step by step.
👉 Explore our Pure Composition Writing Programme for P4–P6 students
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q1: My child always skips planning. How can I convince them it's important?
Q2: How long should my child spend on planning during the PSLE exam?
Q3: What if my child can't think of any ideas during planning?
Q4: Can planning really help with scoring higher in PSLE English?
Yes. PSLE markers look for clear structure, relevant content, and meaningful reflection. Good planning helps students meet all three expectations confidently.