Why Certain Topics Keep Appearing
SPM English examiners draw from a pool of themes that align with the national curriculum’s moral values and social awareness objectives. This means certain topics cycle through every few years.
Knowing these themes won’t let you predict the exact question — but it lets you prepare strong vocabulary, examples, and essay frameworks for the most likely areas.
The 10 Recurring Themes
1. The Importance of Education
Why it recurs: Central to Malaysia’s development narrative.
Sample opening: “My grandmother left school at twelve to work in a rubber estate. My mother finished Form 5 but couldn’t afford university. I’m the first in my family to dream of a degree — and I understand, bone-deep, why education isn’t a luxury but a lifeline.”
Key vocabulary: aspire, persevere, opportunity, disadvantaged, transformative
2. Technology’s Impact on Society
Why it recurs: Increasingly relevant; examiners want students to think critically about tech.
Sample opening: “The notification popped up at 2am: another friend posting about their ‘perfect life.’ I stared at the screen, thumb hovering between ‘like’ and ‘close.’ When did a phone become the first thing I reach for each morning and the last thing I see each night?”
Key vocabulary: digital literacy, screen time, cyberbullying, connectivity, artificial intelligence
3. Environmental Conservation
Why it recurs: Global relevance, ties to Science syllabus themes.
Sample opening: “The river behind my grandmother’s kampung house used to run clear enough to see fish darting between rocks. Last Raya, I visited and found murky brown water carrying plastic bottles downstream. In twenty years, a river died — and nobody seemed to notice.”
Key vocabulary: deforestation, pollution, sustainable, biodiversity, carbon footprint
4. Friendship and Relationships
Why it recurs: Relatable to teenagers; tests narrative and reflective writing.
Sample opening: “‘You’ve changed,’ she said, and walked away. Three words. Three seconds. Three years of friendship, apparently, meant nothing. Standing alone in the school corridor, I wondered — had I changed, or had I simply grown?”
Key vocabulary: loyalty, betrayal, empathy, companionship, reconciliation
5. Overcoming Challenges
Why it recurs: Universal theme; allows diverse personal narratives.
Sample opening: “The rejection letter arrived on a Tuesday. ‘We regret to inform you…’ I didn’t read the rest. I folded it into a paper plane and launched it from my bedroom window. It crashed into the drain. Appropriate, I thought.”
Key vocabulary: resilience, perseverance, determination, setback, triumph
6. Health and Fitness
Why it recurs: Aligned with government health initiatives.
Sample opening: “Fourteen. That’s how many steps I could climb before gasping for air at the start of last year. Fourteen steps — in a building with forty. Something had to change, and it started with those fourteen steps.”
Key vocabulary: sedentary, nutrition, discipline, stamina, well-being
7. National Unity and Diversity
Why it recurs: Core Malaysian theme; appears in various forms.
Sample opening: “Three languages at one dinner table — that’s normal in my family. Appa speaks Tamil to Amma, who replies in Malay. My brother and I switch between English and Malay mid-sentence. My classmates think it’s confusing. I think it’s Malaysia.”
Key vocabulary: harmony, tolerance, multicultural, integration, heritage
8. Moral Values (Honesty, Kindness, Respect)
Why it recurs: Moral education is a curriculum pillar.
Sample opening: “I found the wallet on the bus seat. RM500 in crisp notes, an IC card, and a photo of two small children. For exactly four seconds, I considered walking away. Then the children in the photo stared up at me, and I knew what I had to do.”
Key vocabulary: integrity, conscience, virtue, accountability, selfless
9. Ambitions and Dreams
Why it recurs: Aspirational theme suitable for young writers.
Sample opening: “Everyone in my family expected me to be a doctor. My father is a doctor. My sister is studying medicine. My cousin just started her housemanship. When I told them I wanted to be a chef, the dinner table went silent for the first time in years.”
Key vocabulary: aspiration, passion, determination, unconventional, pursue
10. Social Media and Its Effects
Why it recurs: Highly relevant to current student experience.
Sample opening: “217 likes. I refreshed the page again — 218. Each notification sent a tiny spark of satisfaction through my brain. Then I put the phone down and looked around the empty room. 218 people ‘liked’ my photo, but not one of them was actually here.”
Key vocabulary: validation, comparison, authenticity, curated, disconnect
How to Use This List
- Pick 5 topics that feel most natural to you
- Write a practice essay for each one (under timed conditions)
- Get each essay marked with specific feedback
- Revise based on feedback and rewrite the weakest two
- Build a vocabulary bank for each topic (10-15 words)
By exam day, you’ll have strong frameworks for half the likely topics. That’s not cheating — it’s preparation.