Claim-Evidence-Reasoning

Claim-Evidence-Reasoning

Activity Overview

Students make a claim, provide evidence to support it, and explain their reasoning connecting evidence to the claim.

Grade Levels

4th Grade5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

ScienceHistoryEnglish

Activity Types

AnalyticalWritingIndividual

Detailed Example

Moon Phases Investigation (Science - 6th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • CER (Claim-Evidence-Reasoning) graphic organizers
  • Moon phase observation data (images or charts)
  • Scientific explanations reference sheet
  • Sentence starters for each CER component
  • Moon phase simulation or model materials
  • Peer review checklist
  • Sample CER responses of varying quality

Preparation

Prepare moon phase observation data spanning a month. Create a CER graphic organizer with sections for each component. Develop a reference sheet explaining the difference between evidence and reasoning. Gather examples of strong scientific explanations.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Introduce the CER framework as a method scientists use to explain phenomena:

Claim: A statement that answers the question or explains the phenomenon

Evidence: Scientific data that supports the claim

Reasoning: Explanation connecting the evidence to the claim using scientific principles

2.

Model the process using a simple example unrelated to the moon:

Question: 'Why do ice cubes melt faster in warm water than in cold water?'

Claim: 'The temperature of water affects how quickly ice melts.'

Evidence: 'In our experiment, ice in 80°F water melted in 3 minutes, while ice in 40°F water took 12 minutes to melt.'

Reasoning: 'When water molecules have more thermal energy (higher temperature), they collide with the ice more energetically, transferring heat faster and breaking the solid bonds in the ice more quickly.'

3.

Present the moon phase investigation question: 'What causes the moon to appear to change shape throughout the month?'

4.

Evidence collection (10-15 minutes):

Students analyze moon phase observation data

Use moon phase models or simulations to investigate the Earth-Moon-Sun system

Record relevant data and observations

5.

Individual CER development (15 minutes):

Students write a claim about what causes moon phases

List specific evidence from observations and simulations

Develop reasoning that connects evidence to their claim using scientific principles about light, shadows, and the Earth-Moon-Sun relationship

6.

Peer review process (10 minutes):

Partners exchange CER responses

Use checklist to evaluate strength of each component

Provide specific feedback for improvement

7.

Revision and finalization (10 minutes):

Students revise their CER based on feedback

Ensure reasoning clearly connects evidence to claim

Add diagrams if helpful for explanation

8.

Class discussion: Compare different approaches to reasoning and discuss how the same evidence can be used to support claims.

Differentiation Strategies

For struggling students, provide sentence frames for each CER component. For English learners, allow drawing and labeling to supplement written responses. For advanced students, challenge them to address counter-arguments or alternative explanations.

Assessment Guidelines

Evaluate completed CER responses using a rubric that assesses accuracy of claim, relevance and specificity of evidence, and depth of reasoning. Note common misconceptions about moon phases to address in future lessons.

Send Feedback