RWS Module 3 Q4 1
RWS Module 3 Q4 1
RWS Module 3 Q4 1
SKILLS
(Core-Grade11)
QUARTER 4: MODULE 3
“Determining Textual Evidence”
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Lesson
Determining Textual Evidence
3
Learning Competency 7: Determine textual evidence to validate assertions and counterclaims
made about a text read.
S2 Q4 EN11/12RWS-IVac-10
EXPLORE
ACTIVITY
Direction: Read each item carefully. Choose the correct answer by writing the
letter on the space before each number.
_______ 1. It is information gathered from the text that supports your evaluative
statements.
_______ 3. It is a statement that you can make to reflect your judgment and
generalization about a text that you have read.
A. Assertion C. Textual Evidence
B. Evaluative Statement D. Counterclaim
_______ 4. These are statements that oppose the claims of the writer in the text.
A. Assertion C. Textual Evidence
B. Evaluative Statement D. Counterclaim
_______ 6. It is the act of mentioning a specific section of the text like an event
or action.
A. Referencing C. Summarizing
B. Paraphrasing D. Quoting
_______ 9. It is restating the text in a shorter way using your own words.
A. Referencing C. Summarizing
B. Paraphrasing D. Quoting
LEARN
In citing textual evidence, you need to quote, paraphrase or refer to the very
specific part of the text where you can use to support your own thoughts and
ideas.
Example:
Support your statements with textual evidence to come up with strong or solid
arguments, and make your ideas more credible. You can come up with good
textual evidence by selecting the most relevant section of the text that strongly
supports your statement about the text.
Why do you need to determine textual evidence?
The need to answer questions after reading a text and or to share our ideas
enables us to go back to what we have read and give evidence from it to prove
that you are not just manufacturing your thoughts. Oftentimes, when we you are
asked about how nice a movie was, you need to cite part or parts of the movie
which could support your thoughts that it was indeed a very nice movie worthy
to be watched. What you are doing is using textual evidence.
Example:
Eric often gets wet on Saturdays. He wakes up at 6 o’clock in the morning and
goes straight to the faucet. He prepares a basin, soap, shampoo and a stool.
One by one, he calls out his fur friends for the Saturday mornings “ritual”.
Question: Based on the text, what is Eric’s work on Saturday mornings?
a. Washes clothes
b. Cooks for breakfast
c. Baths his pets
d. Preparing for work
Textual Evidence: One by one, he calls out his fur friends for the Saturday
mornings “ritual”
ENGAGE
A. Define Words
Match the words with their definitions. Use a dictionary if you need help.
_____ 1. pasture a. textile fiber obtained from sheep and
other animals
_____ 2. graze b. high-pitched cry or noise
_____ 3. wool
c. land covered with grass and other
_____ 4. barn low plants suitable for grazing
animals
_____ 5. squealing
d. a large farm building for storing
crops, or for keeping animals in
B. Analysis
B. Analysis
Assertion: Smoking cigarette is a bad habit.
✦ Cite the strongest piece of textual evidence to support the assertion.
Use paraphrasing.
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
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Passage # 3
The slave owners justified their inhuman cruelty by blaming the Africans
themselves for their enslavement. For example, Captain Snelgrave argued that
slaves “had forfeited their Freedom before I bought them, either by Crimes or by
being taken in War, according to the Custom of their Country; and they being
now my Property, I was resolved to let them feel my Resentment, if they abused
my kindness.” By saying they were rightfully slaves because of their “Crimes” in
Africa, Snelgrave blamed the slaves rather than himself for the loss of their
freedom. His promise that disobedient slaves would “feel” his anger shows that
physical punishment would result from this supposed legality of slavery. It’s true
that the Captain emphasizes his acts of “kindness” in comparison with other
slavers. But Snelgrave’s professions of humanity should be taken with a grain of
salt. For example, when says the mutineer slaves begged him to “forgive them,
and promising for the future to be obedient . . . if I would not punish them this
A.time,”
Writing Sentences
it’s clear that he has punished them before. Their child-like request for
“forgiveness” comes from their complete and violent deprivation of liberty—not
from the slave captain’s humane treatment.
Source: http://explorehistory.ou.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Assert-Cite-Explain.pdf
B. Analysis
Assertion: The slave owners believed their inhuman cruelty was completely
justified.
Use quoting.
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________
APPLY
When I see a piece of flesh on someone’s plate, I also see the processes
that brought it to their plate. Some people argue that plants may be harmed by
being eaten. I happen to agree. If we care about minimizing harm to plants, then
we’ll do much less harm by eating them directly as opposed to grinding them up,
feeding them to animals, and then grinding up and eating the animals. If we
stopped growing crops to feed to animals and fed those crops to people directly,
it’s estimated that we’d have enough food to feed the whole planet five times
over. So if you do actually care about plants, then you can greatly reduce your
plant harm by eating plants directly. Another way to reduce harm to plants is to
favor fruits that can be eaten without killing the plants. You can eat a wide variety
of fruits, both sweet and non-sweet, without seriously hurting the plant that
spawned it. And that same plant will often continue to bear even more fruit. I
think a more sensible and realistic approach is to keep leaning towards a more
conscious, compassionate, and ecologically sound way of eating.
Write your assertion with textual evidence.
________________________________________________________________
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Write your counterclaim with textual evidence.
________________________________________________________________
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REFLECT
1. How did you find the lesson? Choose an emoticon that shows how you
feel.
2. Why did you choose that emoticon? Write a sentence about your
experience in learning this lesson.
__________________________________________________________
3. Which activity or activities did you like best? Which one/s do you think
did not suit your need/s as a learner?
__________________________________________________________
4. What suggestion can you give to help us improve this Learning Activity
Sheet?
________________________________________________________________
REFERENCES
Perez, R.E. (2014). Exit essay: Save the Filipino language. Retrieved from
http://rjaperez.tumblr.com/post/95149266012/exit-essay-save-the-filipino-
language
Reid, S. (n.d). Claims for Written Argument. Available @
https://www.mesacc.edu/~paoih30491/ArgumentSampleClaimofFactDef.html
Dayagbil, Felomina, et. Al (2016). Critical Reading and Writing for the Senior
High School. Lorimar Publishing, Inc., Quezon City.
http://ollie.dcccd.edu/Services/StudyHelp/StudySkills/sub/rdgcri.htm
https://www.slideshare.net/marykatrinebelino/critical-reading-as-reasoning-
7847430
https://www.citeman.com/9187-evaluative-statements.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YguqKdC1q8w
https://literarydevices.net/assertion/
https://dmh.mo.gov/dd/docs/chapter2.pdf
https://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/talktojazeera/2016/10/exclusive-
rodrigo-duterte-war-drugs-161015100325799.html
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/assertion
https://prezi.com/nm4ou_jglck5/the-logic-of-assertions/
http://www.senate.gov.ph/press_release/2018/1106_prib3.asp
"Stephen Crane" Accessed August 28, 2019.
https://link.quipper.com/en/organizations/547ffba0d2b76d000200267d/
curriculum#curriculum
https://modules.arvicbabol.com/files/ENGL112/Lesson%2010%20Formulatin
%20assertions%20and%20counterclaims.pdf
https://voetica.com/voetica.php?collection=1&poet=17&poem=549
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?
cites=15111645981185774840&as_sdt=2005&sciodt=0,5&hl=en
Prepared by:
DOMINICA R. PONTICA
Subject Teacher
Evaluated by:
MANUEL L. DELDA
T-I / Lay-out Artist
Noted by: