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Learn how to prove your ideas by pointing directly to the words in the text.
Imagine you're telling a friend that a movie was scary. Your friend asks, "What made it scary?" If you just shrug and say, "It just was," that's not very convincing. But if you describe the creepy music, the dark hallway, and the surprise ending, now your friend understands why you felt that way. Reading works the same way. When you make a claim about a text, you need to show evidence (specific words, sentences, or details from the text) to back it up.
The skill of citing textual evidence means pointing to exact parts of a passage to prove what you're saying. People have been practicing this skill for a very long time. Here is a brief look at how the idea of "proving it with the text" developed over the centuries.
So here's the big question this lesson answers: How do you find the right evidence in a text, and how do you use it to support what you're saying—even when the answer isn't spelled out word for word?
Before we dive in, let's make sure you understand four key ideas. These are the building blocks of everything else in this lesson.
One of the trickiest parts of citing evidence is knowing the difference between explicit meaning and an inference. The diagram below shows you how each one works. Notice that explicit meaning is like reading a sign that tells you exactly what's there. An inference is like being a detective—you gather clues and figure out what the author is really saying.
On the left, the text explicitly states the size of the Amazon. You just copy the words. On the right, the text gives you clues—"acres are cleared" and "species are disappearing"—and you combine those clues with what you already know about habitat loss to infer that the ecosystem is in trouble. Both kinds of answers need evidence from the text to be convincing.
Now that you understand the difference between explicit and inferred meaning, let's look at the actual steps you follow when citing evidence. Think of it as a simple recipe.
Step 1 — Read the question carefully. Figure out what you're being asked. Is the question asking for something the text says directly, or something you need to figure out on your own?
Step 2 — Go back to the text. Re-read the passage. Look for sentences or phrases that connect to the question. Underline or highlight them.
Step 3 — Choose the best evidence. Sometimes more than one sentence could work. Pick the one that most clearly supports your answer.
Step 4 — Write your response using the C-E-E pattern. State your Claim (what you believe), include your Evidence (an exact quote or paraphrase from the text), and add your Explanation (why this evidence supports your claim).
Following these steps keeps your writing organized. Your teacher will see that you read the text closely and thought carefully about what it means.
Not all evidence looks the same. Here are the main types you'll use when working with informational texts. Understanding the difference will help you pick the strongest proof for your ideas.
| Type of Evidence | What It Looks Like | When to Use It |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Quotation | The author's exact words placed in quotation marks. Example: The article states, "Honeybees pollinate 80% of flowering plants." | When the exact wording matters or is especially powerful. |
| Paraphrase | You restate the author's idea in your own words. Example: According to the article, honeybees are responsible for pollinating most flowering plants. | When the original sentence is long or complex, and you want to simplify it. |
| Specific Detail | A fact, statistic, or example from the text. Example: The author mentions that bee populations have dropped by 40% since 2006. | When a number or detail makes your point more convincing. |
| Summary of a Section | A brief overview of a whole paragraph or section. Example: In the second paragraph, the author describes several threats to bee habitats. | When your claim relates to a big idea across multiple sentences. |
In most school assignments, you'll use direct quotations and specific details the most. They give your reader the clearest proof because they point to exact words or data in the text.
Let's walk through a full example using a short passage. Read the passage below, then watch how we apply the C-E-E pattern.
Notice how the response doesn't just copy sentences from the passage. It includes the evidence and explains why that evidence matters. That explanation part is what turns a simple answer into a strong analysis.
Citing evidence is a powerful skill, but there are some common traps students fall into. Let's look at what works well and what to watch out for.
| ✓ STRONG MOVES | ✗ COMMON PITFALLS |
|---|---|
| Quoting the most relevant sentence that directly supports your point. | Dropping in a random quote that doesn't connect to your claim. |
| Explaining why the evidence matters (the "E" in C-E-E). | Quoting the text and stopping—leaving the reader to guess what you mean. |
| Using signal phrases like "The author states…" or "According to the text…" | Pasting a quote with no introduction, so it feels disconnected. |
| Combining text clues with your own knowledge when making an inference. | Making a wild guess that has no support in the text at all. |
| Choosing evidence for both explicit and inferential questions. | Only answering literal questions and skipping the deeper "why" or "how" questions. |
Citing textual evidence is one of the most important skills you'll build in school, and it only gets more interesting as you move forward. Here's how this skill grows with you.
| What You're Learning Now (6th Grade) | What Comes Next (7th–8th Grade & Beyond) |
|---|---|
| Cite evidence for what the text says and what you can infer. | Cite the strongest evidence from several possible choices and explain why it's the best. |
| Use one text at a time. | Compare evidence across multiple texts on the same topic. |
| Identify explicit vs. inferred meaning. | Analyze the author's purpose, tone, and bias using evidence. |
| Write short C-E-E paragraphs. | Write full argumentative and research essays with evidence from many sources. |
In high school, you'll use this skill in history class to analyze primary sources, in science to evaluate research, and even in everyday life to spot strong and weak arguments in the news. The foundation you're building right now—finding evidence, making inferences, and explaining your thinking—will serve you everywhere.
Use the passage below to answer all five questions. Remember to cite evidence from the text!
Citing textual evidence means pointing to specific words, sentences, or details from a text to prove your ideas. There are two kinds of meaning you'll need to support: explicit meaning (information stated directly in the text) and inferences (conclusions you draw by combining text clues with your own knowledge). Strong evidence can take several forms, including direct quotations, paraphrases, and specific details like facts or statistics.
When writing your analysis, follow the C-E-E pattern: state your Claim, provide Evidence from the text, and add an Explanation of why the evidence supports your point. Always use signal phrases (like "The text states…" or "According to the author…") to introduce your evidence smoothly. Avoid common pitfalls like dropping in a random quote without explanation or making claims that have no support in the text. This skill is the foundation for everything from book reports to research papers—and it will make you a stronger, more convincing reader, writer, and thinker.