Grade: Grade 2 Subject: Social Studies Unit: Timelines Lesson: 5 of 6 SAT: Information+Ideas ACT: Reading

Claim and Evidence Writing

Learn

When we learn about history, we need to share what we discover. We do this by making claims and supporting them with evidence.

What is a Claim?

A claim is a statement that answers a question or tells what you think is true. A good claim:

  • Answers the question you are asked
  • Says something specific, not too general
  • Can be proven with facts

What is Evidence?

Evidence is the proof that shows your claim is true. Evidence comes from sources like:

  • Pictures and photographs
  • Words from books or articles
  • Data from charts and tables
  • Information from maps and timelines

Putting Claim and Evidence Together

A good answer has both parts:

  1. State your claim - Tell what you think is true
  2. Give your evidence - Show the proof from a source
  3. Explain - Tell how the evidence supports your claim

Sentence Starters for Evidence

Try using these phrases when you share evidence:

  • "The picture shows..."
  • "According to the timeline..."
  • "The data tells us..."
  • "We can see that..."
  • "This proves that..."

Examples

Example 1: Using a Photo as Evidence

Question: How did children travel to school long ago?

Claim: Children walked to school long ago.

Evidence: The old photograph shows children walking on a dirt road with their school books. There are no buses or cars in the picture.

Explanation: This proves that children walked because the picture shows them traveling on foot, not in vehicles.

Example 2: Using a Timeline as Evidence

Question: Did the town grow over time?

Claim: Yes, the town grew bigger over time.

Evidence: According to the timeline, the town had 100 people in 1900, 500 people in 1950, and 2,000 people in 2000.

Explanation: The numbers got bigger each time, which shows the town was growing.

Example 3: Using a Map as Evidence

Question: How did the neighborhood change?

Claim: The neighborhood added new buildings for the community.

Evidence: The 1960 map shows only houses. The 2020 map shows houses plus a library, a school, and a park.

Explanation: This proves new buildings were added because they appear on the new map but not the old one.

Practice

Practice making claims and finding evidence.

1. What is a claim?

Think: It answers a question and tells what you think is true.

2. What is evidence?

Think: It is the proof that shows your claim is true.

3. A photo shows people using horses instead of cars. Write a claim about how people traveled long ago.

Start with: "Long ago, people..."

4. Which is a claim: "The photo is old" or "People wore different clothes long ago because styles change over time"?

Think: Which one makes a clear statement that can be proven?

5. A timeline shows: 1910 - First telephone, 1960 - First TV, 2000 - First computer. What claim can you make about technology?

Think: What pattern do you see?

6. Name two types of sources you can use as evidence.

Think: Photos, maps, timelines, books, charts...

7. Fill in the blank: "According to the _____, there were only 50 students in 1950."

Think: What type of source shows numbers over time?

8. Why is it important to give evidence when you make a claim?

Think: How does evidence help others believe you?

9. A map from 1900 shows no roads. A map from 2000 shows many roads. What is a claim you can make? What is your evidence?

Think: What changed? Use the maps as proof.

10. Write a complete answer with a claim and evidence: "Did your school change over the years?" (Imagine your school has old photos.)

Remember: State your claim, give evidence, and explain.

Check Your Understanding

Can you answer these questions about claims and evidence?

  • Can you explain the difference between a claim and evidence?
  • Can you write a claim that answers a question?
  • Can you find evidence from a source (photo, map, timeline, or chart)?
  • Can you use sentence starters to share your evidence?

Next Steps

  • Practice writing claims and finding evidence in other subjects too
  • Look for evidence in books you read at home
  • Continue to the Unit Checkpoint to review everything you learned