
Lesson Line of Reasoning I Am Malala
Presentation
•
English
•
6th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Hard
Caroline Salvadore
Used 8+ times
FREE Resource
13 Slides • 0 Questions
1
Argument: The conclusion (position) supported by a series of connected premises (claims or reasons) that are supported by evidence.
Thesis: A strong thesis statement states a clear position on the issue, often signals an opinion with words like “should, ought to, need to, have an obligation to, must, had better” etc.
A Claim persuades, argues, convinces, proves, or suggests something to a reader who may or may not initially agree with you.
Reasoning is the justification an author uses for why the claim is correct
Deductive/Inductive
Evidence is the logic, proof, or support an author uses to support their claim.
A strong argument contains sufficient and relevant evidence along with sound reasoning.
Rhetorical Devices: Strategy/Tool used by speaker to convince others. Rhetoric is the art of persuasive speaking/writing, btw.
Ethos: Attempt to persuade using trust, credibility, or authority
Pathos: Attempt to convince using emotional appeal
Logos: Attempt to persuade using facts, evidence, statistics
Bell-Ringer: Type these using 2-3 words/phrases per definition into today's assignment or handwrite on packet/sheet of paper
Grade
2
ELA.6.R.2.4
Track the development of an argument, identifying the types of reasoning used.
Today, you will turn in the following in order to receive full-credit for this assignment: Bell-Ringer, The People Vs. School System Warm-Up, Notes on thesis, notes on transitions, Activity 1 annotations, Activity 1 Responses (Questions 1-5), Activity 2 Annotations, Activity 2 Responses (Questions 1-8)
As you watch the next slide, track the Claim(s), Evidence, Reasoning, and Rhetorical Devices
3
4
Grade
5
Grade
6
7
8
Annotation Key
1) Claims: Highlight in Yellow or Green
2) Reasoning: Bold or draw a “squiggly line” underneath. Label INDUCTIVE or DEDUCTIVE
3) Evidence: Underline
4) Ethos: Appeal to Authority (Red)
5) Pathos: Appeal to Emotion (Blue or draw a heart)
6) Logos: Appeal to Logos (Facts/evidence/statistics) Draw a star next to LOGOS or change the font size by selecting evidence and clicking ctrl + shift + >
9
I DO/WE DO GRADE
10
Activity 1 Quiz
1. What is the author's claim?
2. Identify two pieces of evidence he uses to back this up.
3. Where does he address the counterclaim?
4. Identify two rhetorical strategies the author uses (Ethos, Pathos, Logos)
5. What is the author's overall purpose in this piece?
WE DO GRADE
11
YOU DO
12
Directions: Respond to the following questions entirely. If handwriting, you will need to use a separate sheet of paper.
1. Central Claim/Thesis:
2. Claim #1:
3. Specific Supporting Evidence:
4. How does the claim/evidence support the thesis?
5. Claim #2:
6. Specific Supporting Evidence:
7. How does the Claim/Evidence connect to the previous claim? How does the claim/evidence support the thesis?
8. EVALUATION: In what ways does the speaker sufficiently and relevantly support her claim? Why is this line of reasoning effective? Explain while citing evidence and adhering to ACES format.
9. Extra-Credit: Identify Fallacies
10. Extra-Credit: Identify Figurative Language/Unknown Words and Phrases
YOU DO
13
Upload/Turn-In Your Work
Non-Negotiable
In order to receive credit for today's work, you should upload your word document into Focus, making sure that it is the proper document and not blank. At the beginning of class, I explicitly informed you, verbally and in writing, of the specific components you will need to turn in for today.
It is not my responsibility to answer these questions during the last five minutes of class, as it is Q3 and that was our first assignment--uploading into Focus.
Once done, let me know, and I will then provide you with further instruction.
YOU DO
Argument: The conclusion (position) supported by a series of connected premises (claims or reasons) that are supported by evidence.
Thesis: A strong thesis statement states a clear position on the issue, often signals an opinion with words like “should, ought to, need to, have an obligation to, must, had better” etc.
A Claim persuades, argues, convinces, proves, or suggests something to a reader who may or may not initially agree with you.
Reasoning is the justification an author uses for why the claim is correct
Deductive/Inductive
Evidence is the logic, proof, or support an author uses to support their claim.
A strong argument contains sufficient and relevant evidence along with sound reasoning.
Rhetorical Devices: Strategy/Tool used by speaker to convince others. Rhetoric is the art of persuasive speaking/writing, btw.
Ethos: Attempt to persuade using trust, credibility, or authority
Pathos: Attempt to convince using emotional appeal
Logos: Attempt to persuade using facts, evidence, statistics
Bell-Ringer: Type these using 2-3 words/phrases per definition into today's assignment or handwrite on packet/sheet of paper
Grade
Show answer
Auto Play
Slide 1 / 13
SLIDE
Similar Resources on Wayground
12 questions
Possessive Nouns
Presentation
•
6th Grade
12 questions
Setting
Presentation
•
6th Grade
10 questions
Holes Chapters 22 & 23
Presentation
•
6th Grade
7 questions
There was / There were
Presentation
•
6th Grade
10 questions
Verb to be - negative
Presentation
•
6th Grade
11 questions
PLOT
Presentation
•
6th Grade
10 questions
Pronouns and Antecedents
Presentation
•
5th Grade
10 questions
Summarizing- Mini lesson
Presentation
•
6th Grade
Popular Resources on Wayground
16 questions
Grade 3 Simulation Assessment 2
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
19 questions
HCS Grade 5 Simulation Assessment_1 2526sy
Quiz
•
5th Grade
10 questions
Cinco de Mayo Trivia Questions
Interactive video
•
3rd - 5th Grade
17 questions
HCS Grade 4 Simulation Assessment_2 2526sy
Quiz
•
4th Grade
24 questions
HCS Grade 5 Simulation Assessment_2 2526sy
Quiz
•
5th Grade
13 questions
Cinco de mayo
Interactive video
•
6th - 8th Grade
20 questions
Math Review
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
30 questions
GVMS House Trivia 2026
Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
Discover more resources for English
20 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Figurative Language Review
Quiz
•
6th Grade
14 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
4th - 6th Grade
12 questions
Final Figurative Language Review
Presentation
•
6th - 8th Grade
60 questions
FAST Reading Review #3
Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
55 questions
SC READY Reading Review
Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
35 questions
SBAC Prep: ELA
Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
39 questions
6th Grade Reading SOL Review Terms
Quiz
•
6th Grade