Grade: Grade 9 Subject: Social Studies Unit: World History Introduction Lesson: 5 of 6 SAT: Information+Ideas ACT: Reading

Claim-Evidence Writing

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This lesson develops your claim-evidence writing skills for historical arguments. You will learn to construct clear historical claims and support them with specific evidence from primary and secondary sources about early civilizations and the classical era.

Strong historical writing requires making a clear claim about the past, providing relevant evidence from reliable sources, explaining how the evidence supports your claim, and considering alternative interpretations.

Examples

Work through these examples to see the concepts in action.

Example problems and worked solutions will appear here.

✏️ Practice

Test your understanding with these practice questions.

Practice Questions

0/3 correct
Question 1

What is a primary source?

A A textbook
B A firsthand account from the time
C A summary by a historian
D An encyclopedia entry
Explanation: A primary source is an original document or firsthand account from the time period being studied.
Question 2

What are the three branches of the U.S. government?

A Army, Navy, Air Force
B Federal, State, Local
C Legislative, Executive, Judicial
D Democratic, Republican, Independent
Explanation: The three branches are Legislative (makes laws), Executive (enforces laws), and Judicial (interprets laws).
Question 3

What is a democracy?

A Rule by one person
B Rule by the military
C Rule by the people
D Rule by the wealthy
Explanation: In a democracy, citizens have the power to choose their leaders and participate in government.

Check Your Understanding

Test yourself with these review questions.

1. What makes a historical claim effective?

View Answer

Answer: An effective historical claim is specific (focused on particular people, places, or time periods), arguable (not just a statement of fact), supported by available evidence, historically significant, and addresses causation, change over time, or comparison. It should answer a "how" or "why" question about the past.

2. How should you introduce historical evidence in your writing?

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Answer: Historical evidence should be introduced with context: identify the source (author, type, date), present the relevant information, and explain its significance. Example: "According to Herodotus, writing in the 5th century BCE, the Egyptians..." followed by the specific evidence and analysis of its meaning.

3. What types of evidence are most valuable for historical arguments?

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Answer: Valuable historical evidence includes: primary sources from the period (documents, artifacts, inscriptions), multiple sources that corroborate each other, sources from different perspectives, quantitative data when available, and scholarly interpretations based on rigorous research. The best arguments use multiple types of evidence.

4. Why is reasoning important in historical writing, not just presenting evidence?

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Answer: Evidence alone does not prove a historical claim - you must explain the logical connection between your evidence and your argument. Reasoning demonstrates historical thinking skills: understanding context, recognizing cause and effect, and interpreting significance. It shows you understand why evidence matters, not just what it says.

5. How do you address historical complexity in your writing?

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Answer: Address complexity by: acknowledging multiple causes for events, recognizing different perspectives, noting limitations of sources, considering alternative interpretations, and avoiding oversimplification. Use qualifiers like "primarily," "significantly," or "in part" rather than absolute statements.

6. What is historical contextualization and why does it matter?

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Answer: Contextualization means placing events, people, or sources within their broader historical circumstances - the political, social, economic, and cultural conditions of the time. It matters because it helps explain why things happened, avoids presentism (judging the past by modern standards), and shows sophisticated historical understanding.

7. How should you handle counterarguments in historical writing?

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Answer: Acknowledge alternative interpretations held by historians, explain the evidence supporting those views, then explain why your argument is more persuasive. This demonstrates you understand historical debate and can evaluate competing claims. Strong historical arguments anticipate and address objections.

8. What is the difference between causation and correlation in historical analysis?

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Answer: Correlation means two things happened together or in sequence; causation means one thing directly caused another. Historical writing should establish clear causal links with evidence, not assume that because X preceded Y, X caused Y. Multiple factors usually contribute to historical outcomes.

9. How do you evaluate the reliability of historical sources in your writing?

View Answer

Answer: Evaluate sources by considering: authorship and perspective, purpose and intended audience, when it was created relative to events described, corroboration with other sources, and potential biases. Acknowledge source limitations in your writing while still extracting useful historical information.

10. How should you conclude a historical argument?

View Answer

Answer: A strong conclusion restates your main claim (in different words), summarizes how your evidence supports it, addresses the broader historical significance, and may suggest implications or connections to larger patterns. Avoid simply repeating your introduction or introducing new evidence.

Next Steps

  • Review any concepts that felt challenging
  • Move on to the next lesson when ready
  • Return to practice problems periodically for review