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Exam Strategy

SPM English Marking Scheme Explained: What Examiners Actually Look For

A breakdown of how all 4 SPM English papers are marked under KSSM. Understanding the marking scheme helps you write what examiners want to see.

By Teacher Daletha · 7 min read · 20 May 2025
8 Years Teaching
2,000+ Students
83% Improve 2+ Grades
SPM English Specialist

Why Understanding the Marking Scheme Changes Everything

Most students write SPM English papers blindly — they do what they think is good and hope for the best. Students who understand how each paper is marked write strategically.

Under the KSSM format, SPM English has 4 papers, each worth 25% of your total grade. Here’s how each one is marked.

Paper 1: Reading & Use of English (40 Marks, 90 min)

Paper 1 has 5 parts with 40 questions total. Most are MCQ or limited-response.

PartQuestion TypeMarks
Part 1Short text MCQs (ads, notices) — 3 options8
Part 2Cloze passage (grammar/vocabulary) — 4 options10
Part 3Reading comprehension MCQs — 4 options8
Part 4Gapped text — choose 6 sentences from 86
Part 5Match statements to paragraphs + complete sentences8

Key insight: Parts 1-3 are straightforward MCQ. Parts 4-5 require deeper reading skills. Budget your time — don’t get stuck on Part 4 (the hardest) when easier marks wait in Part 5.

How to maximise: For cloze passages, read the WHOLE passage first before filling blanks. Context clues in later sentences often reveal the answer for earlier blanks.

Paper 2: Writing (60 Marks, 90 min)

The Writing paper has 3 parts, each worth 20 marks.

Part 1: Email / Short Note (20 Marks)

Write a short communicative message (email or note) in less than 80 words. Marked on:

  • Content — did you address all required points?
  • Language — grammar accuracy, appropriate register
  • Format — correct email/note conventions

How to maximise: This is the easiest 20 marks on the exam. Learn the email format, address every content point clearly, and keep it under 80 words. Practice 5 past questions and you’ll be confident.

Part 2: Guided Writing (20 Marks)

Write 125-150 words based on given notes or prompts. Includes letters, reports, articles, speeches.

Marked on:

  • Content — addressed all content points (about 2 marks each)
  • Format — correct format for the text type
  • Language — grammar, vocabulary, coherence

How to maximise: Number the content points on the question paper. Write a clear sentence for each one. Don’t combine two points into one vague sentence. Format marks are free marks — memorise formats for all text types.

Part 3: Extended Writing / Essay (20 Marks)

Write about 200-250 words based on a stimulus with 3 prompts. You must address all 3 prompts.

Marked using band descriptors:

BandDescriptionMarks
Band 5Excellent — varied vocabulary, complex sentences, minimal errors17-20
Band 4Good — generally accurate, some variety in structure13-16
Band 3Satisfactory — mostly understandable, some errors9-12
Band 2Fair — frequent errors but meaning partly clear5-8
Band 1Weak — major errors throughout0-4

How to move up one band: Use transition words between paragraphs, one complex sentence per paragraph (using “although,” “despite,” or “which”), and replace at least 5 common words with stronger alternatives.

Paper 3: Speaking (24 Marks, 13 min)

This is a paired test (2 candidates with an examiner).

PartTaskTimeMarks
Part 1: Interview4 questions about yourself, family, interests3-4 min7
Part 2: IndividualSpeak on a topic for 1 min (20 sec prep)~2 min8
Part 3: DiscussionPaired discussion, reach a conclusion~2 min5

Marked on: Grammar, Vocabulary, Communicative Competence (fluency, coherence, interaction).

Key insight: You don’t need perfect grammar. Examiners reward confident communication with reasonable accuracy. A student who speaks fluently with some errors scores higher than one who speaks hesitantly with perfect grammar.

How to maximise: Practise speaking English for 10 minutes daily. Record yourself answering common interview questions. Do mock speaking tests with a friend or tutor at least monthly.

Paper 4: Listening (30 Marks, 40 min)

Audio is played only ONCE. You must answer while listening or immediately after.

PartTaskMarks
Part 1Listen to 7 short situations, answer questions7
Part 2Listen to a conversation, answer 8 questions8
Part 3Listen to 5 short extracts, choose correct answers5
Part 4Listen to texts, complete missing information10

Key insight: Read ALL questions before the audio starts. When you know what to listen for, your brain filters the relevant information automatically.

How to maximise: Train your ear daily — listen to English news, podcasts, or YouTube at natural speed. Practise note-taking while listening. Part 4 (note completion) is worth the most marks — practise filling in gaps quickly.

How This Knowledge Helps You Score Higher

Once you understand the marking scheme, you can:

  1. Allocate time based on marks — don’t spend 30 minutes on a 20-mark section when another 20-mark section takes half the time
  2. Write to the rubric — if format is worth marks in guided writing, nail the format before worrying about vocabulary
  3. Target the next band — identify what separates your current band from the one above
  4. Prepare for Speaking and Listening — most students ignore these because school doesn’t practise them, but they’re worth 50% of your grade combined

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T
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.

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