PSLE English Oral · Stimulus-Based Conversation

Losing a Match

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

Losing-a-match SBCs are a Q3 goldmine: 'is losing useful?'. A student who answers yes with a concrete lesson learned beats one who stays vague about sportsmanship.

Photograph stimulus: A school badminton court after a match.
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 school badminton court after a match. Two primary school students in school PE attire are standing at the net, shaking hands. The boy on the left has a disappointed expression — he has clearly just lost — but he is offering a firm handshake. The boy on the right looks both happy and slightly surprised at his win. In the background, teammates are watching and a coach is clapping.

Three questions the examiner might ask

  1. What is happening in this photograph? How do you think each boy is feeling?

  2. Tell me about a time you lost at something. What did you do afterwards?

  3. Do you think losing can be more useful than winning sometimes? 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 don't think schools should cut sports time to focus on studies.

Explain

Sports train habits — discipline, resilience, teamwork — that help students do better in academic work too.

Example

Before I joined the swimming team, I used to give up on hard Maths problems. After a year of 6am training, I found myself sticking with problems for much longer. My grades actually improved.

Link

So sports aren't time taken away from studies — for many students, they're the thing that makes studying work.

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

Common mistakes on this topic

  • Describing the sport instead of the picture. Q1 asks what's happening in the photo — a specific person, not a general sport.
  • Claiming you 'never give up' without a concrete story. Share the moment you almost gave up but didn't.
  • Saying sports and studies are 'equally important'. That's a non-answer — pick a side or explain your balance.

Vocabulary that works for this topic

  • perseverancekeeping going despite difficulty

    His perseverance paid off.

  • competitivewanting to win

    She's very competitive in badminton.

  • teamworkworking well with others

    Teamwork is the heart of any sport.

  • encourageto give someone confidence

    My teammates always encourage me.

  • achievementsomething completed successfully

    Finishing the race was my biggest achievement.

  • disciplineself-control

    Daily training requires discipline.

For parents

If your child isn't in a sports CCA, any physical challenge counts — learning to cycle, running the 2.4km, a school carnival game. Build the answer around one moment where they almost quit and didn't.

Practise this topic now

Run a full Stimulus-Based Conversation on “Losing a Match” 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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