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Choosing the best text evidence | Reading | Khan Academy

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    - [David] All right, readers,
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    I wanna talk about choosing text evidence
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    to support a claim.
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    Readers have to do this all the time.
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    You come across a question that asks you
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    for the best text
    evidence to prove a point.
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    You've got a passage in front of you.
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    Maybe it's a thousand words,
    maybe it's a paragraph,
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    but you have to support a claim
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    using the best text
    evidence you can muster.
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    Let's get to our main
    example for this video,
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    which let me just warn you up top
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    is a pretty spicy topic, okay?
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    A real friendship ender. You ready?
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    Deep breath. Here we go.
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    Defining question of our time.
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    Is a tomato a fruit or a vegetable?
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    It sounds silly, but this
    fully went to the Supreme Court
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    of the United States in 1893.
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    Nix versus Hedden was the name
    of the case. Some background.
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    An 1883 law imposed
    heavy taxes on vegetables
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    imported from other
    countries, but not fruit.
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    Now, scientifically speaking,
    tomatoes are fruits.
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    They grow out of a flower
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    and they've got seeds on the inside.
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    This is the argument that
    John Nix brought to the court.
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    If a tomato is a fruit, you
    can't tax it as a vegetable.
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    Now in his decision,
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    Supreme Court Justice Horace Gray wrote,
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    "Botanically speaking, tomatoes
    are the fruit of a vine
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    just as are cucumbers
    squashes, beans and peas.
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    But in the common language of
    the people, whether sellers
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    or consumers of provisions,
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    all these are vegetables which
    are grown in kitchen gardens
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    and which whether eaten cooked or raw,
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    are like potatoes,
    carrots, parsnips, turnips,
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    beets, cauliflower, cabbage,
    celery, and lettuce,
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    usually served at dinner in
    with or after the soup, fish
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    or meats, which constitute the
    principle part of the repast
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    and not, like fruits
    generally, as dessert."
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    And what's a repast? It's an
    old fashioned word for meal.
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    So the principle part of a
    repast is the main course
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    of a meal.
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    Which evidence from
    this text best supports
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    the court's claim that
    tomatoes are vegetables?
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    And we'll just make it easy,
    pare it down to three choices.
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    Which of these three
    best supports that claim
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    that tomatoes equal vegetables?
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    Pause the video here and discuss. 3, 2, 1.
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    (bright music)
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    Okay, and we're back.
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    Let's break down some of the evidence
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    that Justice Gray uses.
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    In this first one here,
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    "Tomatoes are the fruit of a
    vine, just as are cucumbers,
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    squashes, beans and peas."
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    That sounds like it's
    acknowledging the counterargument.
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    That's saying, "Okay, technically
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    tomatoes are botanically fruit."
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    So while that may strengthen
    the overall argument,
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    because then you can swerve back around
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    and say "That's true, but,
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    there's this even stronger evidence."
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    This evidence does not support the claim
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    that tomatoes are vegetables.
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    In fact, it says the opposite.
    So let's cross that out.
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    Second one, "In the common
    language of the people,
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    these are vegetables."
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    That's kind of a "Because
    I said so" argument.
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    What's the data that undergirds that?
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    Which people? How many people?
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    And does the fact
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    that people believe a thing make it true?
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    People saying these plants are vegetables,
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    doesn't really prove that
    they're vegetables, right?
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    Nevertheless, this is stronger
    than "Tomatoes are fruit."
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    I'd call this relevant evidence.
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    It does provide some
    support for the claim,
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    but is it the best evidence?
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    Let's look at the last piece.
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    "Whether eaten cooked or raw,
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    vegetables are usually served at dinner,
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    and not like fruits
    generally, as dessert."
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    So this last one is all about
    that big list of vegetables,
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    including tomatoes that
    are served for dinner
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    and not for dessert like a fruit would be.
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    This is a cultural
    definition of a vegetable,
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    a question of how the food item is used,
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    which is even stronger than
    what the food item is called.
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    I think this is our best evidence.
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    People use tomatoes like
    vegetables when they eat them,
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    so they're vegetables.
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    Good job. Option three.
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    You are the best.
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    In your own writing,
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    when you need to find supporting evidence
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    for an argument that you're making,
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    look for those strong examples
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    that are directly linked
    to the claim you're making.
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    Keep it as brief and as direct as you can.
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    Claim. My sister picked up a
    package for me when I was out.
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    Evidence. My doorbell camera
    captured her doing that.
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    I have every confidence
    that you'll be able
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    to find the best text
    evidence for your claims.
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    And my evidence for that
    is you taking the time
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    to learn With me today.
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    You can learn anything.
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    David, out.
Title:
Choosing the best text evidence | Reading | Khan Academy
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
04:36

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