MAP 8th Grade Reading

A comprehensive course designed to prepare 8th graders for the MAP Reading assessment by building advanced reading comprehension, analysis, and real-world literacy skills.

Advanced Topics

Evaluating Arguments and Evidence

What is an Argument?

An argument in reading is a claim the author makes, supported by reasons and evidence.

Spotting Good Evidence

  • Facts: Can be proven true (statistics, dates, quotes).
  • Examples: Real-life events or situations.
  • Expert Opinions: What professionals say.

Evaluating Strength

Ask yourself:

  • Is the evidence reliable and up-to-date?
  • Does it really support the claim?
  • Are there any missing facts or one-sided information?

Real-Life Use

These skills help you decide if news, ads, or social media posts are trustworthy. They also make you a stronger debater and writer.

Examples

  • A persuasive essay about recycling uses statistics to show its benefits.

  • A commercial claims their cereal is the best, but provides no evidence.

In a Nutshell

Strong arguments use solid evidence; weak ones rely on opinions or faulty facts.