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Claim, Evidence, Reasoning (CER) Strategy

5 MINUTES TO SPARK

Claim, Evidence, Reasoning (CER) Strategy

Strategy Parameters

  • Genres: Persuasive and Argumentative
  • Grade Levels: 6-8
  • Writing Process Stage: Planning, Drafting

At-A-Glance

The Claim, Evidence, Reasoning (CER) framework provides students with a structured methodology to construct robust written arguments and explanations by requiring a clear claim supported by evidence and justified through logical reasoning.

Infographic titled "CER." C stands for Claim (What is your main point or answer?). E stands for Evidence (What facts or data support your claim?). R stands for Reasoning (How does your evidence support your claim and why does it matter?).
Overview

CER systematically guides students through three distinct steps: stating a claim, providing relevant evidence to back it up, and articulating the reasoning that links the evidence to the claim. This framework is highly effective in content-specific subjects like science and social studies, where students must logically connect concepts and justify their conclusions. By making the expectations for strong, evidence-based writing transparent, the CER strategy fosters critical thinking and elevates student responses beyond simple descriptions.

Purpose and Benefits

This strategy helps students:

  • Develop the ability to articulate a clear, defendable position or statement (the Claim).
  • Learn to discern and select relevant, supportive data or information (the Evidence) from source materials.
  • Practice explaining the connection (the Reasoning) between their supporting facts and their original assertion.
  • Transition from making surface-level observations to constructing thoughtful, justified arguments.
  • Apply critical thinking skills to content areas by demanding proof and logical explanation for their stated beliefs.
Why It's Effective
  • Structural Clarity: It provides a highly visible three-part scaffold that demystifies the structure of formal academic arguments, making expectations transparent.
  • Focus on Justification: The requirement for both Evidence and Reasoning forces students to think critically, moving them past simple fact recall to deep conceptual understanding.
  • Cross-Curricular Applicability: It is easily transferable to diverse content areas (e.g., science, history), establishing a consistent standard for evidence-based communication.
  • Reduced Ambiguity: By defining the roles of the three components, it helps students avoid common errors such as providing evidence without explanation or stating claims without support.
  • Cognitive Scaffolding: Breaking the complex task of argumentation into three manageable steps supports students in organizing their thoughts and producing a coherent final product.

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