Claim-Evidence Writing: Ecosystems
Learn to write scientific arguments about ecosystems using the CER framework: Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning.
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Scientists don't just discover facts - they also need to communicate their findings clearly. One of the most important skills in science is writing arguments that explain what you've learned. The CER framework helps you organize your scientific writing.
What is CER?
CER stands for Claim, Evidence, and Reasoning. It's a framework scientists use to communicate their conclusions based on data and observations. This same structure is used in scientific papers, lab reports, and even on standardized tests!
The CER Framework
What do you think?
A claim is a statement that answers the question or problem. It's your conclusion or main idea based on what you've observed or learned.
What data supports it?
Evidence includes specific data, observations, or facts that support your claim. This might include numbers, measurements, or descriptions from experiments.
Why does it matter?
Reasoning explains WHY your evidence supports your claim. It connects your evidence to scientific principles and concepts.
Example: Energy Flow in Ecosystems
Question: Why are there fewer top predators than producers in an ecosystem?
There are fewer top predators than producers in an ecosystem because energy is lost at each level of the food chain.
In a grassland ecosystem, there are approximately 10,000 kg of grass (producers), but only 1,000 kg of rabbits (primary consumers), 100 kg of foxes (secondary consumers), and just 10 kg of hawks (top predators). The energy pyramid shows that only about 10% of energy transfers from one level to the next.
This pattern occurs because organisms use most of the energy they consume for their own life processes like movement, growth, and reproduction. Since only 10% of energy passes to the next level, each level can support fewer and fewer organisms. That's why top predators are always the smallest population in an ecosystem - there simply isn't enough energy to support more of them.
Practice Writing Prompt
Question: What would happen to an ecosystem if all the decomposers disappeared?
Write a CER response explaining the impact on the ecosystem.
Practice Quiz
Test your understanding of the CER framework and ecosystem concepts.
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Reasoning is the part that explains WHY your evidence supports your claim. It connects the data to scientific concepts and principles.
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This is evidence - it's a factual observation or data point. Evidence describes WHAT happened, not why or what it means.
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A claim is a statement that answers a question and can be supported with evidence. "Removing predators will cause herbivore populations to increase" is a testable claim about ecosystems.
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Specific numerical data provides stronger evidence because it's precise and verifiable. Saying "population decreased by 50%" is more convincing than "population decreased a lot."
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Only about 10% of energy transfers from one trophic level to the next. The other 90% is used by organisms for life processes or lost as heat.
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Reasoning connects evidence to scientific principles. "This happens because consumers depend on producers" explains WHY something occurs using ecosystem concepts.
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Producers are the foundation of all food webs. If they disappear, herbivores lose their food source, then carnivores lose theirs - the entire food web is affected.
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A complete CER response requires all three parts: a claim (your answer), evidence (supporting data), and reasoning (explanation of why the evidence supports the claim).
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Decomposers break down dead organisms and waste, releasing nutrients back into the soil. These nutrients are then used by producers to grow, continuing the cycle.
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Strong claims are specific, testable, and can be supported by evidence. Vague claims like "ecosystems are important" are weak because they're hard to prove with specific data.
Check Your Understanding
C = Claim
Your answer to the question - a statement that can be supported.
E = Evidence
Data, observations, or facts that support your claim.
R = Reasoning
Explanation of WHY evidence supports claim using scientific concepts.
Key Takeaways
- CER helps you write clear, organized scientific arguments
- Always include specific data in your evidence
- Reasoning connects evidence to scientific principles
- This framework is used on standardized tests like SAT and ACT
Next Steps
- Practice writing CER responses about other science topics
- Use CER in your lab reports and science projects
- Complete the Unit Checkpoint to test your ecosystem knowledge