AQA Persuasive Writing Guide
No text, no quotation, just you and an opinion
Persuasive writing feels different to the rest of GCSE English, and that’s exactly what throws students off. There’s nothing to analyse, no quotation to remember, no plot to recall. Instead, you’re the one doing the persuading, and that can feel oddly exposing.
Here’s the reassuring part: persuasive writing is one of the most learnable parts of the whole exam, because it runs on a small set of reusable techniques and a structure you can plan in minutes. This guide gives you both, with worked examples throughout and a full practice task at the end.
Four parts, built to be used, not just read
Built for students who freeze on the “write to persuade” question
You’re unsure which techniques actually persuade, versus which just decorate a sentence.
You struggle to structure a persuasive response under timed conditions.
You want to see exactly what separates a Grade 4 answer from a Grade 9 one.
You want a genuine practice task, not just explanations to read.
Everything in the AQA Persuasive Writing Guide
- What examiners are actually looking for, beyond just sounding confident
- Six rhetorical devices explained with worked examples, and when to use each one
- How to build and hold a consistent, confident persuasive voice
- A reliable 5-paragraph structure for any persuasive prompt
- A 3-minute planning method built specifically for this question
- Grade 4, 6, and 9 model paragraphs on the same prompt, fully explained
- A full practice task: plan and write a complete persuasive response
- A final persuasive writing checklist
Part of the Quiet Help GCSE approach, created by an experienced GCSE English teacher with over 35 years of teaching experience. The goal is simple: explain GCSE English clearly, so students understand what actually earns marks.
AQA Persuasive Writing Guide
- Rhetorical devices that actually persuade
- A reliable 5-paragraph structure
- A 3-minute planning method
- Grade 4, 6, and 9 model paragraphs