What the examiner sees
Photograph description
The photograph shows children at a school library book exchange event. Students are sitting on the floor in a circle, each holding books. Some are swapping books with each other, while others are reading. A librarian is helping a student find a book on a shelf. There is a banner that reads 'Book Swap Day'.
Three questions the examiner might ask
Look at this photograph. What do you think is happening? How do the students seem to feel about this event?
Do you enjoy reading? What kind of books do you like to read?
Do you prefer reading physical books or e-books? Why?
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 think working in a group is more useful than working alone, but only when the group is well-organised.
Explain
A good group is faster and brings more ideas, but a messy group slows everyone down.
Example
During our last science project, our team split the work — one person researched, one built the model, and two of us wrote the script. We finished in two sessions instead of five.
Link
So the benefit of group work isn't automatic — it depends on how clearly the group divides the work.
Swap in your own example — the structure stays the same. Examiners reward concrete detail over polished phrasing.
Common mistakes on this topic
- 'Group work is always great.' It isn't. Admit the hard parts — different paces, disagreements — and show how you handled them.
- Claiming to do all the work yourself in group projects. Humility scores higher than bragging.
- Giving textbook definitions. Describe a real class or real project you were in.
Vocabulary that works for this topic
collaborate— to work together
“We collaborate on the science project every week.”
perspective— a way of seeing things
“Group work brings different perspectives.”
responsibility— what you're accountable for
“Each of us has a clear responsibility.”
disagreement— when people don't share a view
“Our disagreement helped us find a better idea.”
contribution— what you give to the group
“Her contribution was the best design.”
engaged— fully focused
“The students were engaged in the activity.”
For parents
After school, ask 'What was the hardest part of group work today — and what did you do about it?'. That question triggers the exact kind of concrete story that Q3 loves.
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More topics in School & Education

Teamwork in School
Almost every student will say group work is great. The ones who score higher admit the hard parts — different paces, disagreements — and describe how they handled them.

Outdoor Learning
Learning-journey photographs reward observation. Name three things you see — a teacher gesture, a student activity, the setting — before the examiner prompts you.
