Evidence Supporting Ideas
Identify scientific evidence that has been used to support or refute ideas or arguments, evaluating the strength of evidence
Typical age: 9–11 years
“When your child reads a science claim — like 'plants grow faster with music' — can they evaluate whether the evidence actually supports it or if the test wasn't fair?”
0 / 3 mastered
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Needs first
- Science Can Be Revised
Evaluating evidence strength and arguing for or against scientific claims requires understanding that all scientific knowledge is provisional and subject to revision
- Drawing conclusions from evidence (age 9+)REQUIRED
Must present own findings before evaluating strength of others' evidence
- Learning from Mistakes
Evaluating the strength of evidence and refuting arguments draws on the universal error-analysis habit — asking why a claim might be wrong
- Inferring Characters' Feelings and Motives
Evaluating scientific evidence to support or refute arguments draws on the inference and evidence-reading skills developed in English comprehension
- Correlation vs Causation
Evaluating the strength of scientific evidence requires recognising when apparent correlations might not be causal — a key dimension of evidence quality