Evidence-Based Writing in Science
Evidence-Based Writing in Science
Reasoning: (This is the most important part of your answer. It provides your reader
with the explanation for your claim, and it explains how your evidence supports your
claim. This is also where you should draw on key ideas and concepts from the discipline
to tie your evidence to your claim.)
The evidence shows:
I know (relevant disciplinary ideas i.e., scientific facts and concepts that help answer
the question):
I can apply (relevant crosscutting concepts i.e., big ideas that connect the concepts
and evidence):
Evidence-Based Writing in Science by Jeremy S. Peacock is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0
International License.
Reasoning:
The evidence shows:
The evidence shows that increasing amounts of light produced increasing
amounts of growth in the seedlings. The evidence also shows that seedlings were
able to survive only for a short time without light.
I know (relevant disciplinary ideas i.e., scientific facts and concepts that help answer
the question):
Sunlight is a form of energy
Plants need light to make their own food through to survive (photosynthesis)
Seeds can store energy
I can apply (relevant crosscutting concepts i.e., big ideas that connect the concepts
and evidence):
Energy is required for all processed in living organisms
Energy can be converted from one form to another (lightchemical)
Evidence-Based Writing in Science by Jeremy S. Peacock is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0
International License.
Practice
Select a writing prompt from the OAS sample items that is most relevant to your subject
area. Then use the Q-CER graphic organizer to analyze both an extended-response test
item.
Question:
Claim:
Evidence:
Reasoning:
The evidence shows:
I know (relevant disciplinary ideas i.e., scientific facts and concepts that help answer
the question):
I can apply (relevant crosscutting concepts i.e., big ideas that connect the concepts
and evidence):
Claim-Evidence-Reasoning Rubric
Claim
A statement or
conclusion that
answers the original
question/ problem.
4
3
2
1
Advanced
Proficient
Progressing
Beginning
Makes a claim that
Makes a claim that is
Makes a relevant and Does not make a
is
relevant, accurate,
accurate but
claim, or makes an
Relevant (Directly & clearly
and complete.
incomplete claim.
inaccurate or
responds to question)
irrelevant claim.
Contrasts the claim to
Accurate
(Consistent with
an alternative claim.
evidence and scientific
principles)
Complete
(Complete
sentence that stands alone)
Evidence
Provides appropriate
Scientific data that
and sufficient
supports the claim.
evidence to support
The data needs to be
claim.
appropriate and
Discusses evidence
sufficient to support
that would support
the claim.
alternative claim.
Reasoning
Explanation provides Provides reasoning
Provides reasoning
Does not provide
A justification that
that clearly connects reasoning that is
that connects the
reasoning, or only
connects the evidence
the evidence to the Clear (Clearly communicated
evidence to the
provides
and
goes
beyond
repeating
to the claim. It shows
claim.
claim. May include
inappropriate
claim and evidence)
why the data counts Includes appropriate
some scientific
reasoning.
Connected (Explains why
as evidence by using
principles or
and sufficient
the evidence is important or
appropriate and
justification for why
why it is relevant)
scientific principles
sufficient scientific
Integrated
(Links
the
the evidence
to explain why the
evidence
to
an
important
principles.
supports the claim,
evidence supports
disciplinary idea and
but not sufficient.
the claim.
crosscutting concept)
Explains why the
alternative claim is
inaccurate.
References:
Graphic Organizer & Supporting Information
Claim-Evidence-Reasoning Mini-tasks in the LDC Curriculum Library
CSQT Framework, Downloaded from: http://www.teacherweb.com/de/christianahighschool/corsello/csqt_dstp_prep.ppt
Llewelyn, D., & Rajesh, H. (2011). Fostering argumentation skills: Doing what real scientists really do. Science Scope, 35
(1), 22-28.
Sampson, V., and Schleigh, S. (2012). Scientific Argumentation in Biology, 30 Classroom Activities. Arlington, VA: NSTA
Press
Rubric Adapted from
McNeill, K.L., and Krajcik, J. (2012). Supporting grade 5-8 students in constructing explanations in science: The claim,
evidence, and reasoning framework for talk and writing. Boston: Pearson.
Rewitz, W. (2011). Make Your Probe Explanation Cl-Ev-R. Downloaded from
http://www.uncoveringstudentideas.org/resources/tips-and-strategies.
Sampson, V., and Schleigh, S. (2012). Scientific Argumentation in Biology, 30 Classroom Activities. Arlington, VA: NSTA
Press.