PSLE English Oral · Stimulus-Based Conversation

Recycling at Home

Medium frequencyStandard2-min SBCBased on 9 years of PSLE oral data

Recycling Q3s often test whether students know which materials go where. A confident sort plus a real home routine beats a generic 'recycling is good'.

Photograph stimulus: A corridor of a Singapore HDB flat with three clearly labelled recycling bins — blue for paper, green for plastic, and yellow for metal.
Photograph stimulus in the style of the 2025 PSLE English Oral SBC — AI-generated for practice.

What the examiner sees

Photograph description

The photograph shows a corridor of a Singapore HDB flat with three clearly labelled recycling bins — blue for paper, green for plastic, and yellow for metal. A primary school girl is bending down, placing a flattened cardboard box into the blue bin. Next to her, a younger sibling is holding a plastic bottle, about to drop it into the green bin. A small pile of clean recyclables sits on the floor waiting to be sorted.

Three questions the examiner might ask

  1. What do you see in this photograph? How can you tell the children know what they are doing?

  2. Do you and your family recycle at home? Tell me about how you sort your waste.

  3. Some people say recycling only helps a little and is not worth the effort. Do you agree? Why or why not?

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 disagree with the idea that one person cannot make a difference to the environment.

Explain

Small individual habits add up across a neighbourhood, and they also influence other people to join in.

Example

At my block, my mother started bringing her own bag to the wet market. Within six months, three of our neighbours had copied her, and now the whole floor does it.

Link

So one person's action didn't just reduce plastic — it created a small ripple effect that is still going today.

Swap in your own example — the structure stays the same. Examiners reward concrete detail over polished phrasing.

Common mistakes on this topic

  • Listing environmental problems in a panic without choosing one. Pick the most personal example and go deep on it.
  • Saying 'we should recycle' without describing what your family actually does. Vague answers score low on content.
  • Conceding immediately when the examiner pushes back. Defend your view politely — 'I see your point, but…' — instead of flipping.

Vocabulary that works for this topic

  • sustainableable to continue without harming the environment

    We need a sustainable way to dispose of plastic.

  • pollutionharmful substances in the environment

    Air pollution affects children's health.

  • conserveto protect and use carefully

    We should conserve water during dry months.

  • reduce, reuse, recyclethe three Rs for waste

    Reduce, reuse, recycle is a daily habit at home.

  • environmentthe natural world around us

    Protecting the environment is everyone's job.

  • disposablemeant to be used once and thrown away

    Disposable cutlery creates a lot of waste.

For parents

Walk around the estate together and ask your child to spot three examples of waste or recycling. Then ask which one is the most pressing and why. That's exactly the Q3 opinion muscle the exam rewards.

Practise this topic now

Run a full Stimulus-Based Conversation on “Recycling at Home” with an AI examiner.

Three real opinion questions, instant scoring on the 2025 SEAB rubric, and a parent-friendly breakdown of what to improve. Free for your first 10 sessions.

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