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Learn how to back up your ideas with proof straight from the text β both for what it says directly and what you can figure out on your own.
Imagine you're having a debate with a friend about whether a movie character is a hero or a villain. You wouldn't just say, "Trust me β they're bad." You'd point to specific moments in the movie to prove your point. Reading works the same way. When you make a claim about a text, you need evidence β actual words and details from the passage β to back it up.
This skill didn't appear out of nowhere. Humans have been arguing with evidence for thousands of years. Let's look at how this idea has grown over time.
So here's the big question this lesson answers: How do you find, choose, and use multiple pieces of evidence from a text to support what you think β including ideas the author didn't say directly?
Before we dive in, let's make sure you know the key vocabulary. These four ideas are the foundation for everything else in this lesson.
Notice the standard says "several pieces" of textual evidence β that means you need more than one. One piece of evidence can be a coincidence. Several pieces build a strong, convincing argument.
Here's a visual map showing how textual evidence flows from the passage to your analysis. Follow the arrows to see the process from start to finish.
Notice two important things in this diagram. First, evidence comes from two sources: what the text says explicitly (the left branch) and what you can infer (the right branch). Second, several pieces of evidence flow together to support your claim. That's what makes your analysis strong and convincing.
Let's break down the step-by-step process for finding and using evidence. Think of it as a recipe you can follow every time you read an informational text and need to support an idea.
Here's each step in more detail:
Don't rush. Read the passage at least twice. The first time, get the main idea. The second time, underline or highlight key sentences and details that stand out. Pay attention to facts, data, quotes, and descriptions.
A claim is a statement about what the text means. It could answer a question your teacher gave you, or it could be your own observation. For example: "The author believes that recycling alone won't solve pollution."
Go back to the text and find sentences that directly support your claim. You should be able to point right at them. These are your explicit pieces of evidence. Try to find at least two.
Now look for details that don't say your claim word-for-word but still support it when you connect the dots. Maybe the author uses a specific word choice, gives a statistic, or describes something in a particular way that leads you to your conclusion.
This is the part many students skip β and it's the most important! After you present each piece of evidence, explain how and why it supports your claim. Don't just drop a quote and move on. Tell the reader what it means.
The signal phrases in the diagram above are great tools. They help you introduce evidence smoothly in your writing. Explicit signal phrases point to exactly where the information is. Inferential signal phrases show the reader that you're using clues to draw a conclusion.
Not all evidence is the same. When you're reading an informational text, you can pull different types of proof from the passage. The more variety you use, the stronger your analysis will be. Here's a breakdown of the most common types.
| Type of Evidence | What It Looks Like | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Quotation | The exact words from the text, placed inside quotation marks. | "Over 8 million tons of plastic enter the ocean each year." |
| Paraphrase | The author's idea restated in your own words. Still counts as evidence! | The article explains that millions of tons of plastic end up in the sea annually. |
| Statistics / Data | Numbers, percentages, or measurements from the text. | According to the passage, plastic production increased by 200% since 1990. |
| Specific Details | Particular facts, descriptions, or examples the author includes. | The author describes sea turtles found with plastic bags in their stomachs. |
| Author's Word Choice | Specific words or phrases the author uses that reveal tone, purpose, or meaning. | The author calls the situation a "crisis," suggesting urgency. |
Here's an important tip: when the standard says "several pieces," aim for at least two or three pieces of evidence. Mix it up! Use a direct quote and a statistic. Use a specific detail and an inference based on word choice. The variety shows your teacher that you truly understand the text.
Let's walk through a complete example together. First, read the short passage below. Then we'll go through each step of finding evidence and writing an analysis.
Now let's say your teacher asks: "How does the author show that the wolf reintroduction at Yellowstone was beneficial?"
Not all evidence is equally convincing. Some evidence hits hard and makes your point crystal clear. Other evidence is vague or doesn't really connect to your claim. Let's compare.
| β STRONG EVIDENCE | β WEAK EVIDENCE |
|---|---|
| Uses exact quotes or specific details from the text. | Vague summaries like "the text talks about wolves." |
| Directly connects to the claim you're making. | Interesting but off-topic (doesn't support your specific point). |
| Includes your explanation of why it matters. | Drops a quote with no explanation ("hit-and-run" quoting). |
| Comes from the text itself, not your personal opinion. | "I think wolves are cool" (that's an opinion, not evidence). |
| Provides variety β mixes quotes, data, and inferences. | Repeats the same point in different words. |
One of the most common mistakes 7th graders make is "hit-and-run" quoting. That's when you paste a quote into your paragraph and then move on without explaining it. Always follow your evidence with a sentence that tells the reader what this means and how it supports your claim.
Another common mistake is using evidence that doesn't match your claim. If your claim is about how wolves helped the ecosystem, don't use a quote about how ranchers were worried about livestock. That quote is interesting, but it doesn't support this particular claim.
You're learning an incredibly important skill right now. As you move into 8th grade, high school, and beyond, this same skill will grow with you β but the expectations will get tougher. Here's a preview of how citing evidence evolves.
| Skill Level | 7th Grade (You Now) | 8th Grade & High School |
|---|---|---|
| Amount of evidence | Cite several pieces of evidence | Cite the strongest and most relevant evidence |
| Evidence selection | Find evidence that supports your point | Evaluate which evidence is most convincing and explain why |
| Inference depth | Draw reasonable inferences from text clues | Analyze how the author builds an argument and evaluate its strength |
| Explanation | Explain how evidence supports your claim | Analyze how evidence connects across multiple texts and perspectives |
Here's the exciting part: the skills you're building now are the foundation for everything that comes next. In high school, you'll write research papers where you cite evidence from multiple sources. In college, you'll analyze complex arguments. Even in everyday life β evaluating news articles, making decisions at work, or debating with friends β the ability to say "here's my proof" will make you more persuasive and more thoughtful.
For now, focus on the basics: find several pieces of evidence, include both explicit details and inferences, and always explain your thinking. If you master this, you're already ahead of the game.
Time to practice! Read the passage below and then answer the five questions that follow. Each question gets a little harder. Try your best before clicking "Show Answer."
In this lesson, you learned that citing textual evidence means using specific words, sentences, and details from a passage to prove your ideas. You now know the difference between explicit information (what the text says directly) and inferences (conclusions you draw from clues in the text plus your own reasoning). The 7th-grade standard asks you to cite several pieces of evidence β not just one β to build a stronger, more convincing argument. You practiced identifying different types of evidence, including direct quotations, paraphrases, statistics, specific details, and word choice.
Remember the key process: start with a claim, gather several pieces of evidence (mixing explicit and inferential), and then explain how each piece of evidence supports your point. Avoid common pitfalls like "hit-and-run" quoting (dropping a quote without explanation) and choosing evidence that doesn't match your claim. These skills will serve you in every class, every grade, and every time you need to prove a point with solid proof.