What the examiner sees
Photograph description
The photograph shows a classroom scene. A girl is standing at the teacher's desk, holding up a wallet she has found on the floor. The teacher is smiling and looks pleased. Other students at their desks are watching. On the whiteboard behind them, the words 'Our School Values' are written, with 'Integrity' circled.
Three questions the examiner might ask
What do you think is happening in this photograph? Why do you think the teacher looks pleased?
Have you ever been in a situation where you had to make an honest choice, even though it was difficult? What happened?
Why do you think honesty is important? What might happen in a school or community where people are not honest with each other?
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 honesty matters most in friendships, even when it's uncomfortable.
Explain
A friend who only says nice things eventually becomes a stranger, because you can't rely on their view.
Example
Last year, my best friend told me my English oral practice answer was too short and not specific. I was upset at first, but I rewrote it using her feedback. I ended up scoring better in the mock than she did.
Link
So her honesty wasn't just helpful — it's the reason I trust her more now than before. That's what a good friend does.
Swap in your own example — the structure stays the same. Examiners reward concrete detail over polished phrasing.
Common mistakes on this topic
- Saying 'honesty is important' three ways. Name a consequence — what happens in a school or family without honesty?
- Describing a perfect friendship without any difficulty. Real friendships have moments where honesty is hard.
- Confusing a generic friend with a specific friend. Q2 asks for a real person and a real story.
Vocabulary that works for this topic
honest— truthful
“An honest apology is always appreciated.”
respect— treating others well
“I show respect to my elders.”
integrity— doing the right thing quietly
“She has a lot of integrity.”
gratitude— feeling thankful
“I showed gratitude by writing a card.”
supportive— helping others
“My friend is very supportive.”
trust— belief in someone
“Trust takes years to build.”
For parents
Ask 'What's the hardest thing you've ever had to be honest about?' — and then stay quiet. The story that comes out is usually the gold that Q3 is looking for.
Practise this topic now
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More topics in Values, Manners & Friendship

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Elderly-care SBCs test values through inference. Start by naming the small, thoughtful gesture in the photo, then anchor the opinion answer in a real grandparent or neighbour.

A Good Friend
Friendship SBCs let students bring a specific friend into the answer. A one-line story about a real friend who helped you scores higher than any vocabulary bank.

Never Give Up
The swim-race photograph is an inference exam in disguise. Describe the strain on the swimmer's face and the teammates' reaction, then tell a real story of almost giving up.
