11+ Creative Writing Checklist for Entrance Exam Success

If your child is sitting the 11+ or an entrance exam for schools like Altrincham Grammar, Sale Grammar, Manchester Grammar School, or a local independent, there’s a good chance they’ll face a creative writing task.

This section often makes the difference between an average and an exceptional result, but it’s not just about having a good imagination. To score top marks, children need to structure their writing carefully, use specific techniques, and follow exam instructions precisely.

This checklist breaks down everything they need to remember - before, during and after writing - to approach creative tasks with confidence.

Before You Write

✅ Read the question carefully.

✅ Highlight or underline key instructions (e.g. describe, write a story opening, persuade).

✅ Spend 2–3 minutes making a quick plan:

  • Who/what is your writing about?

  • Where is it happening?

  • What happens?

  • How will it end?

As You Write

✅ Start with an engaging opening sentence to hook the reader.

✅ Use varied sentence openers (adverbs, time phrases, description, actions).

✅ Include at least:

  • 1 simile

  • 1 metaphor or personification

  • 1 powerful verb or ambitious adjective

✅ Check every new idea or scene starts on a new paragraph.

✅ Keep the story or description focused — avoid overcomplicating.

Before You Finish

✅ End with a clear, controlled final sentence (a reflection, a twist or a link to the opening).

✅ Leave 3–5 minutes for a careful check:

  • Capital letters and full stops

  • Commas in lists

  • Paragraph breaks

  • Spell tricky words correctly

✅ Check you’ve followed the instructions on the question paper.

Top Tips

⭐ Plan quickly - it saves time later.

⭐ Quality over quantity - neat, organised writing beats rushed, messy work.

⭐ Stay calm - you’ve practised this before!

⭐ Use ideas or vocabulary from your summer reading for extra impact.

Would your child benefit from expert 11+ creative writing practice and exam skills coaching?

I have a limited number of one-to-one tutoring slots available both online and in-person across Stockport, Cheshire, Trafford and surrounding areas.

Visit my Contact page to enquire.

Next
Next

Who Is Juliet in Romeo and Juliet? What You Need to Know for GCSE English