PSLE English Oral · Stimulus-Based Conversation

Protecting Our Environment

High frequencyChallenge2-min SBCBased on 9 years of PSLE oral data

Environment Q3 often asks if one person makes a difference. Disagree politely, name the ripple effect in your own block or school, and refuse to flip when the examiner pushes.

Photograph stimulus: A beach clean-up event at East Coast Park.
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 beach clean-up event at East Coast Park. Students and parent volunteers are picking up plastic bottles, straws, and other rubbish from the sand. One student is holding up a large tangled fishing net pulled from the water's edge. A display board nearby shows facts about marine pollution and its effects on sea turtles and fish.

Three questions the examiner might ask

  1. What are the people in this photograph doing? What kind of rubbish can you see on the beach?

  2. What do you and your family do to reduce waste and help the environment?

  3. Some people say that one person's actions cannot make a difference to the environment. Do you agree? What would you say to encourage others to do their part?

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

In my opinion, young people today should take more responsibility for their community.

Explain

This is because we live in a small, shared space, so one person's actions affect many neighbours.

Example

For example, during the last school holidays, my class organised a block-wide recycling drive and collected over 200 kilograms of paper.

Link

As a result, the residents thanked us and even helped out on the second weekend — which shows that small actions can inspire others.

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

Common mistakes on this topic

  • Memorising a full paragraph and trying to recite it — examiners can tell and will ask a follow-up you haven't prepared for.
  • Jumping straight to an opinion without describing the photograph first. Q1 always starts with what is in the picture.
  • Giving a one-line answer. Aim for 3–4 sentences: Point → Explain → Example → Link.

Vocabulary that works for this topic

  • responsibilitya duty someone is expected to do

    Taking care of my little sister is a big responsibility.

  • communitya group of people living or working together

    Our HDB estate has a very close community.

  • consideratethinking about other people's feelings

    It was considerate of him to give up his seat.

  • prioritysomething more important than other things

    Homework should be a priority on weekdays.

  • in my opinionphrase for sharing your view

    In my opinion, screen time should be limited.

  • for examplephrase for giving a specific instance

    For example, my grandfather walks 30 minutes daily.

For parents

After every practice answer, ask three questions — 'Why?', 'Can you give an example?', and 'So what does that mean?' — in that order. It trains the P.E.E.L. structure without needing to coach content.

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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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