Saying something strongly is not the same as proving it. Learn how to back up arguments with facts, real-life situations, and sources.
In Chapter 5, you learned how to write strong reason paragraphs using the reasonβexplanationβconnection formula.
You practiced staying focused β one paragraph, one reason. You can now write body paragraphs that are clear, organized, and confident.
But here's the next challenge: How do you make a reader actually believe your arguments?
Saying something strongly is not the same as proving it. That's what this chapter is all about.
Imagine two students writing an editorial about the school's broken water fountain. Contrast these two styles:
"The school must fix the water fountain because students need water. Water is very important. Everyone knows that."
"The school must fix the water fountain immediately. According to the school clinic, more than 30 students complained of headaches last week β and the nurse linked most cases to dehydration. That is a health crisis the school has the power to prevent."
Both students made the same argument β students need water. But only Daisy made you feel the urgency. Daisy used evidence. JM used feelings. Evidence wins every time.
Evidence is information that proves your argument is true.
Think of evidence as your proof. It shows the reader that your argument is not just an opinion β it is backed by something real.
In editorial writing, evidence comes in three main forms:
A common mistake is dropping evidence into a paragraph and walking away without explaining what it means. You must tell the reader what the evidence proves using a two-step move:
Step 1: Present evidence (e.g. "For example...") → Step 2: Explain proof (e.g. "This shows that...")
"For example, last month, more than 40 students from Grade 6 visited the clinic complaining of headaches during the first week of April. This shows that the extreme heat inside classrooms is already affecting student health β not just their comfort."
Every time you use a fact or a number, tell the reader where it came from. This is called attributing your source β naming the person, record, or document that gave you the information. A fact with a named source is far more convincing:
"The classrooms are very hot. Students feel bad when it is hot. It is hard to study. The school should do something about the fans."
"For example, according to a temperature reading taken by the school's science teacher during the first week of April, classrooms without fans reached 36 degrees Celsius by 10 AM. Several students reported headaches and could not finish their morning activities. This shows that the heat is not just uncomfortable β it is already getting in the way of learning. Installing fans in every classroom is a basic step the school can and must take right now."
Evaluate evidence strength, add source attributions, and write complete evidence paragraphs.
| What to Check | Done β | Try Again π |
|---|---|---|
| My paragraph contains a specific, logical reason | β | β |
| I introduced my evidence using 'For example' or 'According to' | β | β |
| I explicitly named the source of my fact or number | β | β |
| I used 'This shows that' to clearly explain what the evidence proves | β | β |
Read each piece of evidence and decide if it represents STRONG SUPPORT (sourced, specific) or WEAK SUPPORT (vague, sourceless) for the given argument.
Now your body paragraphs are packed with solid proof. Next, discover how to use transition words to connect your claims and create a smooth, persuasive reading flow!