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  1. 7th Grade Reading
  2. Author's Point of View, Purpose & Distinguishing Positions

7TH GRADE ELA • READING INFORMATIONAL TEXT

Author's Point of View, Purpose & Distinguishing Positions

Learn how to figure out what an author thinks, why they wrote a text, and how they set their ideas apart from everyone else's.

Section 1

Why Understanding an Author's Position Matters

Every time you read a news article, a blog post, or even a textbook, a real person made choices about what to include, what to leave out, and which words to use. Those choices come from that person's point of view (what they believe) and their purpose (why they are writing). Learning to spot those things turns you from a passive reader into a detective who can evaluate whether an argument is strong or weak.

People have been studying this skill for a very long time. Let's look at a few milestones that show how thinkers throughout history learned to read more carefully.

~350 BCE
The Greek philosopher Aristotle wrote Rhetoric, one of the first guides to understanding how speakers persuade an audience. He identified three tools of persuasion: logic (logos), emotions (pathos), and the speaker's credibility (ethos).
1440s CE
The printing press was invented by Johannes Gutenberg. Suddenly, ideas could spread fast. Readers needed new skills to judge which printed texts were trustworthy and which were not.
1700s–1800s
Newspapers and opinion columns became popular. Editors realized they should separate "news" (facts) from "editorials" (opinions). Readers began asking, "Is this writer trying to inform me or persuade me?"
1900s
Schools started teaching critical reading as a formal skill. Teachers asked students to identify bias, purpose, and point of view—exactly the skills you are learning now.
Today
With social media and the internet, you encounter more writing than any generation before you. Being able to figure out why someone wrote something and what side they're on is more important than ever.

The big question this lesson answers is: How do you figure out what an author believes, why they wrote a text, and how they separate their own ideas from the ideas of people who disagree with them?

Section 2

Core Concepts & Definitions

Before we dig in, let's lock down four key ideas. Each one is a building block you'll use every time you analyze an informational text.

1

Point of View

An author's point of view is their personal opinion or position on a topic. It's what they believe to be true. For example, an author might believe that school lunches should include more fresh fruits and vegetables.
2

Purpose

An author's purpose is the reason they wrote the text. The three most common purposes are to inform (teach facts), to persuade (change your mind), or to entertain (make you enjoy reading).
3

Distinguishing Positions

Good authors don't just state their own opinion. They also mention opposing viewpoints (what other people think) and then explain why their own position is stronger. This is called distinguishing their position from others.
4

Evidence & Rhetoric

Authors use evidence (facts, statistics, quotes) and rhetorical techniques (word choice, tone, structure) to support their point of view and push back against opposing ideas.
✦ Key Takeaway
Think of it like a class debate. Your point of view is the side you're arguing for. Your purpose is whether you're trying to convince the judges, teach the audience, or make them laugh. And distinguishing your position is when you say, "My opponent says X, but here's why I disagree." Great writers do the same thing on the page.
Section 3

Visual Guide: How Authors Build & Distinguish Their Position

The diagram below shows how an author constructs their argument in an informational text. Notice how the author's own position sits at the center, surrounded by the tools they use and the opposing viewpoints they address.

AUTHOR'SPOINT OF VIEWPURPOSE(Inform, Persuade,or Entertain)EVIDENCEFacts, statistics,expert quotesRHETORICWord choice, tone,emotional appealsOPPOSINGVIEWPOINT AOPPOSINGVIEWPOINT B↕ DISTINGUISHES FROM ↕The author acknowledges other positions, then counters them.
The author acknowledges other positions, then counters them.

Look at the arrows in the diagram. The author pulls in evidence and rhetoric to support their central point of view. They also reach down to acknowledge opposing viewpoints, but then they show why their own position is different—and, they argue, better. That's how an author distinguishes their position from the positions of others.

Section 4

How It Works: A Step-by-Step Process

When you sit down with an informational text, follow these steps to uncover the author's point of view and purpose, and to see how they separate their position from others.

Step 1 — Identify the Topic & Claim
Ask yourself: What is this text mainly about, and what does the author seem to believe about it?
Look at the title, the introduction, and any thesis statement (a sentence that sums up the author's main argument).
Step 2 — Determine the Purpose
Ask yourself: Is the author trying to inform me, persuade me, or entertain me?
Clues: Persuasive texts use strong opinion words ("should," "must," "best"). Informational texts present balanced facts. Entertaining texts use humor or storytelling.
Step 3 — Find Evidence & Rhetoric
Ask yourself: What facts, examples, or emotional language does the author use to support their claim?
Underline specific data, expert quotes, or loaded words (words designed to make you feel a certain way).
Step 4 — Spot Opposing Viewpoints
Ask yourself: Does the author mention what other people think? How do they respond?
Look for phrases like "Some people argue…," "Critics say…," or "Others believe…" These signal an opposing viewpoint. Then read what comes next—the author will usually counter it.
Step 5 — Analyze How the Author Distinguishes
Ask yourself: How does the author prove their position is different from (or stronger than) the other side?
They might use counter-evidence, point out flaws in the other argument, or appeal to your values and emotions.
✦ Key Takeaway
Imagine you're watching a cooking competition. Each chef (author) has their own recipe (point of view) and a goal—winning the judges over (purpose). A smart chef doesn't just say, "My dish is great." They taste the other chef's dish and explain specifically why theirs is better: "Their sauce is too salty, but mine uses fresh herbs for a brighter flavor." That's exactly what good authors do when they distinguish their position.
Section 5

Detailed Breakdown: Techniques Authors Use

Authors have a toolbox full of techniques for building their own argument and responding to opposing ones. The flowchart below shows how those techniques connect, and the table that follows gives you specific things to look for.

1. State the Claim2. Support with Evidence3. Use Rhetorical Techniques4a. AcknowledgeOpposing Viewpoints4b. Counter / RefuteThose Viewpoints5. Strengthened Position(Conclusion restates claim withadded authority)This is the flow most persuasive informational texts follow.
This is the flow most persuasive informational texts follow.

Now let's look at specific signal words and techniques you can watch for while reading.

TechniqueWhat It DoesSignal Words / Clues
Direct Statement of OpinionThe author clearly states what they believe."I believe…" "In my view…" "The best solution is…"
Citing EvidenceThe author backs up claims with facts, data, or expert quotes."According to…" "Research shows…" "A 2023 study found…"
Loaded LanguageThe author uses emotionally charged words to sway readers."Devastating," "incredible," "dangerous," "groundbreaking"
Acknowledging the Other SideThe author mentions what opponents think."Some people argue…" "Critics claim…" "Opponents say…"
Counterargument / RebuttalThe author explains why the opposing view is flawed."However…" "On the other hand…" "But this ignores…" "Nevertheless…"
ConcessionThe author admits the other side has a small valid point, then explains why their view still wins."While it is true that… the bigger issue is…" "Although…"

Skilled readers keep an eye out for these signals. When you spot them, you know exactly how the author is building their case and setting it apart from what other people think.

Section 6

Worked Example: Analyzing a Short Text

Let's practice with a short passage. Read it, and then follow along as we break it down step by step.

📝 Sample passage for analysis
"Schools across the country should replace traditional homework with project-based learning. According to a 2022 report from the National Education Association, students who engage in hands-on projects retain information 30% longer than those who complete worksheet-style homework. Some parents argue that daily homework builds discipline, and there is some truth to that idea. However, discipline can also be developed through meaningful, long-term projects that challenge students to manage their time over weeks, not just one evening. Project-based learning doesn't eliminate hard work—it makes the work matter more."

Analyzing the Passage

Step 1 — Identify the Topic & Claim

The topic is homework vs. project-based learning. The author's claim (point of view) is that schools should replace traditional homework with project-based learning. You can spot this in the very first sentence.

Step 2 — Determine the Purpose

The word "should" in the opening sentence is a strong clue. The author is trying to persuade you that project-based learning is better than traditional homework.

Step 3 — Find Evidence & Rhetoric

The author cites a 2022 report from the National Education Association and a specific statistic: students retain information 30% longer. They also use loaded language like "makes the work matter more," which appeals to your emotions.

Step 4 — Spot the Opposing Viewpoint

The phrase "Some parents argue that daily homework builds discipline" introduces the opposing viewpoint. This is the other side's position.

Step 5 — Analyze How the Author Distinguishes Their Position

The author uses a concession first: "and there is some truth to that idea." They admit the other side has a small point. Then they counter with "However, discipline can also be developed through meaningful, long-term projects…" This shows that the author's position can still deliver the benefit (discipline) that the opposition cares about—plus extra advantages. The final sentence drives the point home.

Final Takeaway

The author's point of view is clear: project-based learning beats traditional homework. Their purpose is to persuade. They distinguish their position by acknowledging the opposition's strongest argument (discipline) and then proving that their own approach handles it too. That's a strong, well-structured argument.
Section 7

Strengths & Limitations of This Skill

Being able to analyze an author's point of view and purpose is incredibly useful—but like any skill, it has limits. Let's compare what this skill can do and what it can't do.

Strengths (What It Helps You Do)Limitations (Where It Gets Tricky)
Helps you decide if a source is trustworthy before you use it for a report.An author can be biased and still have some valid points. Spotting bias doesn't mean everything they say is wrong.
Makes you a stronger writer because you learn techniques you can use in your own essays.Some texts are very subtle. The author's purpose might blend persuasion and information, making it hard to pin down just one purpose.
Protects you from being manipulated by misleading arguments or emotional tricks.You might over-analyze neutral texts and "find" bias that isn't really there. Balance is key.
Lets you compare multiple sources on the same topic and choose the strongest argument.Without background knowledge on a topic, it's harder to judge whether the author's evidence is actually accurate.
✦ Key Takeaway
Think of this skill like a metal detector at the beach. It's great for finding hidden objects (hidden opinions, sneaky persuasion). But it can't tell you whether the ring it found is real gold or just shiny metal. You still need background knowledge and multiple sources to make a final judgment about whether an author's argument is actually correct.
Section 8

Connecting to Bigger Ideas

The skills you've learned in this lesson are the foundation for even more advanced reading and writing you'll do in high school and beyond. Here's a quick look at how this concept connects to more sophisticated work.

What You're Learning NowWhere It Leads
Identifying the author's point of view.Analyzing bias and perspective in primary sources (history class) or media literacy courses.
Determining the purpose (inform, persuade, entertain).Studying rhetorical analysis in high school English, where you break down how an author persuades and evaluate whether their methods are ethical.
Spotting how the author distinguishes from others.Writing your own argumentative research papers where you must address counterarguments to earn top scores.
Recognizing loaded language and emotional appeals.Studying propaganda techniques and logical fallacies — tricks in reasoning that can fool readers if they aren't careful.

Every time you practice the steps from this lesson, you're building the muscles you'll need for tougher texts later. A historian reading a 200-year-old letter uses the same basic questions you just learned: What does this person believe? Why did they write this? Who are they arguing against? You're already thinking like a scholar.

Section 9

Practice Problems

Try these five questions on your own. Click "Show Answer" to check your work and read the explanation.

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
What is the difference between an author's point of view and an author's purpose? Explain each in your own words.
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC IDENTIFICATION
Read the following sentence: "Clearly, the city must invest in more bike lanes to reduce traffic and protect the environment." What is the author's point of view? What is their purpose? What word is a strong clue?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Read the passage below: "Many people believe that zoos are harmful because they keep animals in small enclosures. While some older zoos did have poor conditions, modern zoos play a critical role in conservation. The San Diego Zoo, for example, has helped bring the California condor back from near extinction." Identify: (a) the opposing viewpoint the author mentions, (b) the author's own point of view, and (c) the technique the author uses to distinguish their position.
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED / MULTI-STEP
Imagine you are reading two articles about screen time for teenagers. Article A says: "Teens should limit screen time to two hours a day. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends this limit based on research linking excessive screen time to sleep problems." Article B says: "While some health organizations recommend strict screen time limits, technology is an essential part of modern education. Students who use educational apps improve their test scores by 15%, according to a Stanford study. Rather than setting rigid limits, families should focus on the quality of screen time." Compare the two articles. For each, identify the point of view and purpose. Then explain how Article B distinguishes its position from Article A's position.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING / SYNTHESIS
Think of a topic you feel strongly about (for example: school uniforms, longer recess, year-round school, or any topic you choose). In 3–4 sentences, write a mini-paragraph where you: (1) State your point of view. (2) Mention an opposing viewpoint using a signal phrase. (3) Counter the opposing viewpoint with a reason or piece of evidence. Then label each part of your paragraph (point of view, opposing viewpoint, counter).
Summary

Lesson Summary

In this lesson, you learned that every informational text is shaped by two things: the author's point of view (their personal belief about the topic) and their purpose (whether they aim to inform, persuade, or entertain). You explored a five-step process for uncovering these elements: identify the claim, determine the purpose, find the evidence and rhetorical techniques, spot opposing viewpoints, and analyze how the author distinguishes their own position. Along the way, you learned to watch for signal phrases like "Some people argue…" and "However…" that mark where the author is engaging with the other side.

You also practiced the difference between a concession (admitting the other side has a small point) and a counterargument (explaining why your position is still stronger). These are the same tools used by journalists, historians, scientists, and lawyers. The more you practice spotting them, the better you'll become at evaluating the texts you read every day — and the more powerful your own argumentative writing will become. Keep asking: What does this author believe, why did they write this, and how do they handle the other side? Those three questions will unlock any informational text you encounter.

Varsity Tutors • 7th Grade English Language Arts (Common Core) • Author's Point of View & Purpose