Master the Short Story for Leaving Cert

✍️ Leaving Cert English Paper 1

How to Write a High-Scoring Short Story


📌 What I’m Looking For

As an examiner, I don’t expect perfection — but I do expect control.

A strong short story shows:

  • Clear structure 🏗️
  • Engaging detail 🎯
  • A focused idea 💡

If your story feels real, controlled, and purposeful, you’re already heading toward top marks.


🎬 1. Build Your Story Like a “Tension Mountain”

Your story should rise, peak, and fall — like a mountain.

🟢 Stage 1: Exposition (The Opening)

This is where you set everything up quickly and clearly.

✔ Name your main character straight away
✔ Show when and where the story happens
✔ Hook me with something interesting

💡 Examiner Tip:
If I’m confused in the first paragraph, you’ve already lost marks.


🟡 Stage 2: Rising Action (Build the Pressure)

Now introduce a problem or conflict.

✔ Something must go wrong
✔ Characters should react and develop
✔ Tension should slowly increase

💡 Think: arguments, secrets, fear, decisions, pressure.


🔴 Stage 3: Climax (The Big Moment)

This is the most important part of your story.

✔ Your character must make a difficult choice
✔ The tension should be at its highest

💡 Examiner Tip:
No big decision = no real climax = lower marks.


🔵 Stage 4: Falling Action (Aftermath)

Show what happens immediately after the big moment.

✔ Let things settle
✔ Show consequences


Stage 5: Resolution (Ending)

Finish your story properly.

You can:

  • ✔ Solve everything (The Fix)
  • ✔ Add a twist (The Trapdoor)
  • ✔ Show change (The Shift)

💡 Examiner Tip:
A rushed ending is one of the most common mistakes.


🎨 2. Master “Show, Don’t Tell”

This is where top students stand out.

❌ Don’t Tell Me:

“She was old.”

✅ Show Me:

“Her hands trembled as she gripped the curved wooden cane, her thin, spotted skin catching the light.”


🔍 How to Do It:

✔ Use sensory details (what we see, hear, feel)
✔ Describe actions, not just facts
✔ Let the reader figure things out

💡 Examiner Tip:
If you just list adjectives, it feels lazy.
If you describe actions, it feels real.


⚠️ 3. Avoid These Common Mistakes

🚫 Melodrama

Don’t try to write a movie plot.

❌ Too much: murders, explosions, dramatic twists
✔ Better: a small, realistic moment done well


🚫 Pre-Learned Stories

I can spot these instantly.

❌ Forcing a memorised story into the title
✔ Adapting your idea to fit the question properly


🚫 Overcomplicated Plots

Keep it simple.

✔ Focus on one main idea
✔ One key conflict
✔ One clear character journey


🧠 4. Final Examiner Advice

If you remember nothing else, remember this:

Clarity beats complexity
Control beats chaos
Detail beats generalisation


🏁 Your Goal

Write a story that feels:

  • Focused 🎯
  • Real 🧍‍♂️
  • Controlled ✍️

If I enjoy reading it and can follow it easily, you’re already pushing into top marks.