Claims and Evidence - Teacher Guide

Grade 6 English Language Arts | FL B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.6.R.2.4

FL B.E.S.T. Standard ELA.6.R.2.4

Track the development of an argument, identifying the claim(s), evidence, and reasoning in texts.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this unit, students will be able to:

Essential Vocabulary

Term Definition Student-Friendly Explanation
Claim An arguable statement that requires evidence to support it The main point the author is trying to convince you to believe
Evidence Facts, data, or information used to support a claim The proof the author gives to back up their argument
Reasoning The logical explanation of how evidence supports the claim How the author explains why the evidence proves their point
Relevant Directly connected to and supporting the claim Evidence that actually relates to what the author is arguing
Sufficient Enough evidence to adequately support the claim Having enough proof - not just one weak example
Credible From a trustworthy, reliable source Evidence from sources we can trust to be accurate
Counterclaim An opposing argument that challenges the main claim The "other side" of the argument that the author might address

Types of Evidence Students Should Recognize

Type Description Example
Statistics/Data Numbers, percentages, research findings "75% of students reported improved grades"
Expert Testimony Quotes or citations from authorities "According to Dr. Smith, a nutritionist..."
Examples Specific instances that illustrate the point "For instance, Lincoln High School adopted..."
Anecdotes Personal stories or experiences "When I was in sixth grade, I experienced..."
Facts Verifiable, objective information "The human brain continues developing until age 25"

Lesson Sequence (5-10 Minute Mini-Lessons)

Day Focus Activities
1 Fact vs. Opinion vs. Claim Distinguish these three. Claims are arguable opinions that can be supported. Use Student Concept Worksheet.
2 Identifying Claims Find central and supporting claims in short argumentative passages.
3 Types of Evidence Introduce statistics, examples, expert testimony, anecdotes. Identify in texts.
4 Evaluating Evidence (R.S.C.) Apply Relevant, Sufficient, Credible criteria. Complete Practice Worksheet.
5 Assessment Administer FAST Format Quiz. Review and reteach as needed.

Teaching Strategies

Strategy 1: The R.S.C. Evidence Check

Teach students to evaluate every piece of evidence with three questions:
R - Relevant? Does this evidence actually connect to the claim?
S - Sufficient? Is there enough evidence, or just one weak example?
C - Credible? Is this from a trustworthy source?
If evidence fails any of these tests, it's weak evidence.

Strategy 2: Claim-Evidence-Reasoning (C.E.R.) Mapping

Have students create visual maps showing:
- The CLAIM (what the author is arguing)
- The EVIDENCE (proof provided)
- The REASONING (how the author connects evidence to claim)
Draw arrows showing how evidence supports claims through reasoning.

Strategy 3: Evidence Strength Ranking

Give students a claim and several pieces of evidence. Have them rank the evidence from strongest to weakest and justify their rankings. This builds critical evaluation skills and shows that not all evidence is equally strong.

Strategy 4: "Would a Skeptic Accept This?"

Teach students to read argumentative texts as skeptics. Ask: "If someone disagreed with this claim, would this evidence convince them?" This shifts perspective from passive acceptance to active evaluation.

Common Misconceptions

Misconception: All opinions are claims

Correction: Claims are specific arguable assertions that CAN be supported with evidence. "Pizza is delicious" is just an opinion. "Schools should serve healthier lunches" is a claim because it can be argued with evidence. Claims make an argument that others might disagree with and need proof.

Misconception: More evidence is always better

Correction: Quality matters more than quantity. Three strong pieces of evidence (statistics from reputable sources, expert opinions) are better than ten weak ones (personal anecdotes, vague references). Teach students to evaluate evidence quality, not just count pieces.

Misconception: If evidence is true, it's good evidence

Correction: Evidence must be both true AND relevant. A true fact that doesn't connect to the claim is irrelevant evidence. "The sky is blue" is true, but it doesn't support a claim about school lunch policies.

Misconception: Personal stories are not real evidence

Correction: Anecdotes ARE a form of evidence, but they're usually weaker than statistics or expert testimony because they represent only one person's experience. They can be powerful for emotional appeal but shouldn't be the only evidence.

Differentiation Strategies

For Struggling Learners

For Advanced Learners

FAST Test Connection

On the FAST assessment, claims and evidence questions typically ask students to:

Key Strategy: Teach students to ask "What is the author trying to prove?" (claim) and "What proof do they give?" (evidence) for every argumentative text.

Materials Checklist