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Essay Writing

SPM English Directed Writing: All 5 Formats You Must Know

Master every Directed Writing format for SPM English — formal letters, articles, speeches, reports, and reviews. With examples and marking criteria.

By Teacher Daletha · 7 min read · 1 Feb 2025
8 Years Teaching
2,000+ Students
83% Improve 2+ Grades
SPM English Specialist

Directed Writing: The Most Predictable Part of SPM English

Guided Writing (Paper 2, Part 2) is worth 20 marks. It’s also the most predictable section — the format barely changes year to year. Master the 5 formats and you’re guaranteed strong marks.

Format 1: Formal Letter

When it appears: Almost every year. This is the most common format.

Structure:

Your address (top right)
Date

Recipient's name and address (left)

Dear Sir/Madam, (or Dear Mr/Mrs ___)

[Subject line in bold/underline]

Paragraph 1: State your purpose
Paragraph 2-3: Content points
Final paragraph: Closing remark

Yours faithfully, (if Dear Sir/Madam)
Yours sincerely, (if you used a name)

[Your name]

Common mistakes:

  • Forgetting the subject line (-1 mark for format)
  • Using informal language (“gonna,” “wanna,” “hey”)
  • Not matching faithfully/sincerely to the greeting

Format 2: Article

When it appears: Very common, especially for school magazine contexts.

Structure:

[Title — catchy and relevant]

By [Your name]

Paragraph 1: Hook + introduce the topic
Paragraphs 2-4: Content points with examples
Final paragraph: Conclusion/call to action

Scoring tip: Articles should have a more engaging tone than formal letters. Use rhetorical questions: “Have you ever wondered why…?”

Format 3: Speech/Talk

When it appears: Typically for assembly, event, or campaign contexts.

Structure:

A very good morning to [audience].

I am [name], and today I would like to talk about [topic].

[Body paragraphs with content points]

Thank you for your attention.

Key difference from articles: Speeches use direct address (“you,” “we”), and feel more personal. Include transitions like “Now, let me move on to…” or “My next point is…”

Format 4: Report

When it appears: Usually for events, incidents, or surveys.

Structure:

[Title: Report on ___]

Prepared by: [Name], [Position]
Date: [Date]

1.0 Introduction
[Purpose and scope of the report]

2.0 Findings
2.1 [First point]
2.2 [Second point]
2.3 [Third point]

3.0 Recommendations/Conclusion
[Suggestions or summary]

Scoring tip: Reports must be formal and structured. Use numbered sections. Avoid personal opinions unless asked.

Format 5: Review

When it appears: Less common but appears every few years.

Structure:

[Title of review]

By [Your name]

Paragraph 1: What you're reviewing and overview
Paragraph 2: What works well (with specifics)
Paragraph 3: What could be better (balanced view)
Paragraph 4: Recommendation

Key: Reviews need your opinion backed by evidence. Don’t just say “it was good” — explain WHY.

The Content Points Checklist

Regardless of format, every Directed Writing question gives you content points (usually in bullet form). Here’s your strategy:

  1. Read every bullet point before writing
  2. Number them on the question paper
  3. Tick each one off as you include it in your essay
  4. Elaborate each point with 1-2 sentences of explanation

Missing content points is the #1 reason students lose marks in Directed Writing. It’s also the easiest to fix.

How to Get 30+ Out of 35

To score above 30, you need:

  • All content points addressed (12-14 marks)
  • Correct format throughout (3-4 marks)
  • Good language with varied sentence structures (15-17 marks)
  • Appropriate tone for the format

The difference between 25 and 32 is usually language quality — varied vocabulary, correct grammar, and smooth flow between paragraphs.

That’s exactly what personalised feedback helps with. When someone marks your Directed Writing and tells you “this sentence loses marks because…” — that’s how you improve fast.


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Teacher Daletha
8 years teaching SPM English · 2,000+ students tutored · 83% of students improve by 2+ grades · Bilingual teaching (English & Mandarin) · SPM English subject matter specialist

Teacher Daletha founded SPMEnglish.com.my to help Malaysian students — especially those from Chinese-medium and Malay-medium backgrounds — score higher in their SPM English exam. She breaks down complex English concepts into clear, practical steps using both English and Mandarin, so students actually understand before they apply.

directed writing paper 1 spm english formal letter article writing

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