What the examiner sees
Photograph description
The photograph shows students in a school hall during a Teachers' Day celebration. A boy is presenting a handmade card to his teacher, who looks touched and is smiling warmly. Other students behind him are holding flowers and small gifts. The hall is decorated with streamers and a large 'Thank You, Teachers!' banner.
Three questions the examiner might ask
What is happening in this photograph? How do you think the teacher feels?
Who is someone you are grateful to? Tell me what they have done for you and how you showed your appreciation.
Do you think saying 'thank you' is enough to show gratitude, or should we do more? What are some meaningful ways to show appreciation?
Q1 tests what you see in the photograph. Q2 tests a personal experience. Q3 tests your opinion — the hardest of the three since 2025.
A model opinion answer (P.E.E.L.)
Point
I strongly agree that students should take part in community service.
Explain
Helping others teaches us skills and empathy that we can't get from textbooks.
Example
Last year, my CCA visited a nursing home once a month. At first I was shy, but by the third visit I was chatting in Mandarin with one of the residents about her old kampong.
Link
That made me realise service is not just about giving — it's about listening, which is something every student should learn.
Swap in your own example — the structure stays the same. Examiners reward concrete detail over polished phrasing.
Common mistakes on this topic
- Claiming to volunteer every weekend when you don't. Examiners can spot exaggeration and will ask follow-ups.
- Saying 'It's good to help' three different ways. Pick one clear point and back it with a real example.
- Forgetting to mention how the person being helped felt. That's usually Q1.
Vocabulary that works for this topic
volunteer— to offer to help without being paid
“I volunteered at the food bank last weekend.”
grateful— feeling thankful
“The elderly residents were grateful for our help.”
contribute— to give or do something to help
“Every small action contributes to the community.”
initiative— taking action without being told
“She showed great initiative by organising the cleanup.”
generous— willing to give time or help
“My neighbours are generous with their time.”
support— to help someone
“We should support each other in difficult times.”
For parents
If your child hasn't done formal volunteering, any act of helping counts — carrying groceries for a neighbour, tutoring a younger sibling, clearing the hawker tray. Build the answer around one real story.
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More topics in Community & Social Responsibility

Helping in the Community
Community-service stimuli appear in most PSLE cycles. The high-scoring answer names how the person being helped felt — not just what the volunteers did.

Keeping Our School Clean
The 'students should clean up' Q3 is a classic trap. Agreeing is fine — but the score comes from naming what your class actually does, not what it should do.

Food Donation Drive
Food-drive SBCs test whether a student understands who benefits. Name a real recipient — low-income families, elderly residents — rather than saying 'poor people'.
