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C1 · Unit 5
Multi-source reading · perspectives, claims, evidence
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Multi-Source Reading

In this unit, students read two or more sources on the same topic, compare perspectives, track claims, and evaluate evidence quality. Students use structured note-taking to prepare for synthesis writing.

Objectives Lesson Setup Reading Strategy Claim Tracking Evaluate Evidence Note-Taking Final Output Materials

SWBAT (Objectives)

  • Identify each source’s main claim, purpose, and intended audience.
  • Compare perspectives: points of agreement, disagreement, and missing information.
  • Track claims and support (data, examples, expert opinion, reasoning).
  • Evaluate evidence quality (relevance, reliability, bias, limitations).
  • Take structured notes to prepare for synthesis writing and discussion.

Lesson Setup (Sources + Topic)

Source types (recommended)
  • News analysis or feature article
  • Research summary or report excerpt
  • Opinion piece with clear stance
  • Policy brief or organizational statement
Suggested topics

AI in education · remote work · public transit funding · social media regulation · renewable energy policy

Teacher prep

Provide 2–3 short texts (350–700 words each) with different perspectives. Include titles, dates, and author/organization.

Source Pack A (PDF) Source Pack B (PDF)

Reading Strategy (3 Passes)

Pass 1: Map the text
  • Title → topic + angle
  • Intro → main claim
  • Headings → structure
  • Conclusion → recommendation/implication
Pass 2: Track claims
  • Underline claims (what the author says is true)
  • Circle evidence (data/examples/expert quotes)
  • Note hedging (“may”, “suggests”, “likely”)
Pass 3: Evaluate & compare
  • What is missing?
  • What assumptions are made?
  • Where do sources agree/disagree?
  • Which evidence is strongest?
3-Pass Method (PDF)

Claim Tracking (What is being argued?)

Claim Table (student-friendly)
Claim: _______________________
Evidence: ____________________
Type: data / example / expert / logic
Confidence: strong / medium / weak
Notes: assumptions / missing info
Signal words for claims

suggests · indicates · argues · claims · implies · concludes · recommends · warns · highlights

If you see one of these verbs, it’s likely a claim is nearby.

Claim Tracker (PDF)

Evaluate Evidence (Quality Checklist)

1) Relevance

Does the evidence directly support the claim, or is it only loosely related?

2) Reliability

Who is the author/organization? What is their expertise? Is the source reputable?

3) Sufficiency

Is there enough evidence, or is it one example? Is it cherry-picked?

4) Limitations & bias

What is not measured? Who benefits from the argument? What assumptions are hidden?

Evidence Checklist (PDF)

Note-Taking (Compare Sources Fast)

Two-Source Comparison Grid
Source A: claim / evidence / stance / limitations
Source B: claim / evidence / stance / limitations

Agreement: ___________________________
Disagreement: ________________________
Missing info: _________________________
My evaluation: ________________________
Source tags (quick shorthand)

C=claim · E=evidence · R=reasoning · L=limitation · B=bias risk · Q=quality (1–5)

Example: “C + E + L (Q=4)” = clear claim, good evidence, stated limitation.

Comparison Grid (PDF) Notes Template (PDF)

Final Output (Speaking or Written)

Option A: 60–90 sec summary

Summarize both sources: main claim + strongest evidence + one limitation. End with your evaluation.

Option B: Synthesis notes

Create a one-page “synthesis sheet” (claims, evidence quality, agreement/disagreement, your conclusion). This prepares students for Unit 6 writing/speaking tasks.

Success criteria
  • Clear comparison (not two separate summaries)
  • Specific evidence (not “the author says…”)
  • One thoughtful evaluation sentence
  • Accurate stance language (may, suggests, appears)
Synthesis Sheet (PDF)

Materials & Downloads

  • Unit 5 Slides — PPTX
  • Source Pack A — PDF · Source Pack B — PDF
  • 3-Pass Method — PDF
  • Claim Tracker — PDF
  • Evidence Checklist — PDF
  • Comparison Grid — PDF · Notes Template — PDF
  • Synthesis Sheet — PDF

Swap placeholders with real file paths. Keep links consistent: /levels/c1/assets/.