Welcome back, friends!

Do you like work? Or do you think that maybe it’s one of those things you’d rather run away from?

Well, I guess your attitude about it depends on how you think about it – is it only work when you lift something heavy, or if you type at your computer? In a way, when you play video games for hours on end, trying to get resources to build up your character, your castle, or anything else, isn’t that work as well? And if it isn’t, why? If it is, then how exactly do you get paid? Food for thought!

For what it’s worth, English has this peculiar way of making physical labor sound almost recreational when we add certain modifiers. “Working outdoors” sounds like fresh air and freedom—like you’re choosing to be outside rather than being required to be there regardless of weather, heat, or danger. Compare that to “outdoor work” or “outdoor labor,” which sound more honest but somehow less respectable. We’ve built an entire vocabulary around softening the reality of difficult jobs: “sanitation worker” instead of “garbage collector,” “hospitality staff” instead of “cleaner.” It’s not just political correctness—it’s how language helps us look away from the people whose labor makes our comfort possible. The person working outdoors isn’t having a pleasant experience of nature; they’re enduring exposure to it so that the rest of us can enjoy the roads, buildings, and infrastructure we take for granted.

This week’s essay prompt: “Describe someone working outdoors.”; it’s question 3 from Variant 3 of the May 2025 Paper 2 series.

Here’s what makes this prompt deceptively loaded: it sounds neutral, observational, almost gentle. But the strongest responses understand that “working outdoors” is rarely about communing with nature—it’s about exposure, vulnerability, and the physical cost of labor that happens in public view but somehow remains invisible. Most students will write about farmers, gardeners, or construction workers, focusing on the physical actions: digging, lifting, building. But here’s the sophistication test: can you write a description where the outdoor setting isn’t just backdrop but an active force? Can you show how weather, terrain, and physical elements aren’t neutral—they’re obstacles that must be constantly negotiated? The best responses understand that describing someone working outdoors is actually about power: who has to be outside and who gets to stay in air-conditioned comfort? Who builds the infrastructure and who uses it? This prompt tests whether you can use sensory detail not just to show what someone is doing, but to reveal the invisible class dynamics, the quiet expertise, and the dignity in labor that our language often works so hard to obscure.

You’ll find the essay here!

The full essay is available for our premium members and is also marked and graded according to the IGCSE First Language English official rubrics and marking criteria. By reading it, you can get a clear picture of what works, as always. If you haven’t signed up already, then make sure to sign up over here!

Thank you all, and look forward to seeing you in the next one!

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