Nonfiction Features
Claims & Evidence
Reasoning & Logic
Author's Purpose
Analyzing Arguments
100
What is Nonfiction?

Writing based on facts, real events, and true information rather than imagination or made-up stories

100

What is a claim?

A statement or assertion that the writer believes to be true and wants to convince others.
100

What does it mean to use facts to support your reasoning?

Using true, proven information instead of opinions to back up your claims and make your argument stronger.

100

What are the 4 main purposes for writing nonfiction

Inform, explain,persuade,and describe

100

What makes an argument strong?

It has a clear claim, solid evidence, logical reasoning, and addresses counterarguments.

200

Name 3 types of Nonfiction texts

Biography, autobiography, memoir, essay, article, news report, how-to-guide, research paper, blog post, documentary
200

What are 3 types of evidence to support a claim?

Facts, statistics, expert opinions, direct quotations, examples, research, logical reasoning

200

Why is it important to use logical connections between your evidence and your claim?

It helps readers understand how and why the evidence proves your point; without clear connections, the argument doesn't make sense

200

What is authors purpose in argumentative texts?

To persuade: to convince the reader to believe or agree with their claim

200

What is a counterargument?

An opposing viewpoint or argument that contradicts the main claim
300

What is the Difference? (argumentative & expository)

Expository nonfiction informs and explains facts, argumentaive tries to convince thereader to believe or do something

300

T/F: a writer can support a claim with only personal opinions

False - strong arguments require factual evidence

300

Identify logical fallacy: Everyone at school eats pizza for lunch, so it must be the healthiest food

Overgeneralization or faulty reasoning: popularity does not equal nutritional value

300

How can you identify an authors purpose?

Look for clues like the tone, the type of evidence used, the main idea, and what the claim is

300

Why should a writer include and address a counterargument?

It shows the writer understands other perspectives and makes their argument more credible and persuasive

400

What is the Text Structure? (Organizational Structure)
First, Next, Then

Sequence (Logical Order)

400

"Students learn better when they have recess" What type of evidence would support this?

Statistics or scientific evidence

400

What is faulty reasoning?

Logic that doesn't properly support a claim; includes hyperbole, emotional appeals, and stereotypes

400

What is the authors purpose? "Recycling reduces waste and protects our planet for future generations"

To convince readers that recycling is important
400
Identify the logical fallacy: "You should trust my opinion on climate change because I'm really good at sports" 

Faulty reasoning: being good at sports does not make someone an expert in climate change

500

What are Nonfiction Text Features? 

Headings, Subheadings, and bold text 

500

Explain how a writer should connect evidence to a claim

The writer must explain how the evidence proves the claim, they shouldn't just list facts without explanation 

500

How can you strengthen your reasoning in an argumentative essay?

Use clear facts and evidence, explain how each piece of evidence connects to your claim, avoid emotional language, and consider multiple perspectives.
500
How does understanding author's purpose help you view an argument as strong?

It helps recognize what the author wants you to believe and allows you to critically examine whether the evidence actually supports that purpose

500
How do you reflect on and adjust your response to an argument when you get new evidence?

Reconsider original position, acknowledge the new information, and update your understanding based on facts; be willing to change your mind if evidence supports it.

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