Chapter 2: Facts, Opinions, and Strong Positions — CampusJourn
Chapter 2

Facts, Opinions and Strong Positions

Not all opinions are equal. Find out what makes one editorial position stronger than another.

🎯 Chapter Objective: By the end of this chapter, you will be able to tell facts and opinions apart and write strong, confident position statements for an editorial.
Student comparing two opinion statements on paper

What Makes One Opinion Stronger Than Another?

Imagine two students writing an editorial about homework.

Hanna writes: "I think homework is maybe a little too much sometimes."

Zion writes: "Students receive too much homework. It leaves no time for rest, play, or family. Schools must reduce homework load so students can stay healthy and focused."

Both students have an opinion about homework. But only one of them sounds like a real editorial writer. By the end of this chapter, you'll know exactly why Zion's version is stronger — and you'll be able to write like that, too.

First — Let's Talk About Facts

Definition
A fact is a statement that can be proven true or false. You can check it, look it up, measure it, count it, or observe it with your own eyes.

Here are some facts:

✅ "There are 30 students in Section Sampaguita."
✅ "The school flagpole was installed in 2019."
✅ "Last week, Typhoon Carina made landfall in Northern Luzon."

Now — Let's Talk About Opinions

Definition
An opinion is a statement that expresses what someone believes, thinks, or feels. Opinions cannot be proven true or false.

Here are some opinions:

💬 "Thirty students in one class is too many."
💬 "The flagpole should be repainted."
💬 "The government should have warned communities earlier about the typhoon."
💡Why both matter: Your opinion is your position — what you believe. Your facts are your evidence — why readers should believe you too. Without facts, your opinion is just a feeling. Without an opinion, your facts have no direction.
A chart on a classroom board showing the difference between facts and opinions in editorial writing

Weak vs. Strong Opinions

❌ Weak Opinion

"I think the school should maybe do something about the canteen."

✅ Strong Opinion

"The school must hire two more canteen staff so students aren't left waiting in line for 20 minutes every lunch break."

❌ Weak — Uniforms

"I think uniforms are okay but some students might not like them."

✅ Strong — Uniforms

"School uniforms should be required every day. They reduce distractions and help students focus on learning instead of clothing."

❌ Weak — Recess

"Maybe students should have more recess."

✅ Strong — Recess

"Recess must be extended to at least 30 minutes. Physical activity improves concentration and helps students perform better in afternoon classes."

How to Write a Strong Position Statement

A position statement is the sentence that clearly tells the reader your opinion. Think of it as the heart of your editorial.

⭐ Position Statement Formula
[Who] should/must [do what] because [reason].

Example:

"School administrators must repair the gymnasium roof before the rainy season because students cannot hold activities safely in a leaking building."

Who
School administrators
What
Repair the roof
When
Before rainy season
Why
Students can't hold activities safely

Avoid These Weak Words

Weak WordsStronger Alternatives
I think maybemust / should
kind ofclearly / definitely
a little bitsignificantly / greatly
sometimesconsistently / regularly
something should be done[specific person] must [specific action]

✏️ Practice Time

Sharpen your ability to identify facts, opinions, and strong positions.

1

Fact or Opinion DetectiveRead each statement. Write FACT or OPINION and explain your answer.

📋Ask yourself: Can I check this with a number, a record, or a direct observation? If yes, it's probably a fact. If it involves a judgment or belief, it's an opinion.
Statement 1: "Mabini Elementary has a total of 420 enrolled students this school year."
Statement 2: "Mabini Elementary should build a bigger covered court so all students can participate in events at the same time."
Statement 3: "The Department of Education released new reading materials for public schools last month."
Statement 4: "The new reading materials are too difficult for Grade 3 students and must be revised."
2

Fix the Weak OpinionRewrite each weak opinion using the position statement formula.

✍️Use the formula: [Who] should/must [do what] because [reason]. Click "See Sample" to compare your answer.
❌ Weak: "I think maybe the school should do something about the dirty bathrooms."
Your stronger version:
"School maintenance staff must clean and restock the student bathrooms every morning because dirty facilities spread germs and make students uncomfortable throughout the day."
❌ Weak: "Students kind of need more time to finish their exams."
Your stronger version:
"Teachers should give students at least 10 extra minutes to review their exam answers because rushing leads to careless mistakes that don't reflect what students actually know."
❌ Weak: "The barangay should maybe do something about the flooding."
Your stronger version:
"Barangay officials must clear and repair the drainage canals before the rainy season because flooded streets put students and residents at serious risk every time it rains."
3

Writing Strong OpinionsChoose a topic and write three strong opinion sentences.

✍️Select a topic below, then write three sentences: the main problem, your position statement using the formula, and one more supporting opinion.

Choose Your Topic:

✅ Sample (Topic: School canteen food quality)

Sentence 1: "Many students at our school eat unhealthy snacks from the canteen every day because healthier options are not available."

Sentence 2: "School administrators must require the canteen to offer at least two healthy meal choices because good nutrition directly affects how well students learn."

Sentence 3: "A student who eats a proper meal is more alert, more focused, and far less likely to fall asleep in the middle of a lesson."

Sentence 1 — State the main problem
Sentence 2 — Your position statement ([Who] must [do what] because [reason])
Sentence 3 — Add one supporting opinion

🔍 Self-Check Guide

What to CheckDone ✅Try Again 🔄
I wrote about a specific topic
My position statement names who should act and what they should do
I included a clear reason using "because"
I avoided weak words like "maybe" or "I think"

📊 Simple Rubric

4/4
You're writing like a real editorial journalist. 🗞️
3/4
Almost there. Fix the one missing part.
2/4
Good effort. Review the position statement formula and try again.
1/4
No problem. Re-read the lesson examples and give it another go.

🧠 True or False Blitz

Read each statement about facts, opinions, and position statements. Answer TRUE or FALSE!

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Score
Question 1 of 5
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Up Next

Chapter 3: Writing Strong Editorial Introductions

You know what to say. Now learn how to start saying it — with four types of leads that grab the reader's attention instantly.

Chapter 3 →