
Lesson
Revise with Supporting Details
Students learn how to strengthen a draft by choosing facts, examples, and reasons that support the main point.
Revise with Supporting Details
What students learn
Students learn that supporting details make an essay stronger because they prove the main point. Open with so students hear the idea in simple language first.
Why it matters
A draft can have a good topic but still feel weak if the details are too thin or off topic. helps students choose evidence that actually supports the paragraph.
Learn the idea
Revision is more than fixing spelling. Writers also check whether each paragraph has enough useful support. shows how to look back through a draft and add, move, or remove details so the paragraph stays focused.
Try it
Give the student one short paragraph with a weak detail in it. Ask them to circle the sentence that proves the point best and cross out the sentence that does not help much. Then have them add one fact, example, or reason that makes the paragraph stronger.
Parent guide
When the child revises, keep asking, "Does this detail prove your point?" That one question helps them sort useful support from extra information. If they are unsure, let them explain the paragraph out loud before they rewrite it.