Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence | Students write a paragraph or essay that takes a position and backs it up with specific reasons and proof from a text or source. The goal is to convince a reader, not just share an opinion. | W.6.1 |
Introduce claim(s) and organize the reasons and evidence clearly | Students write an opening that states their argument and then lines up the supporting reasons in an order that makes sense. | W.6.1.a |
Support claim(s) with clear reasons and relevant evidence, using credible… | Students back up their main argument with reasons and facts pulled from trustworthy sources. The goal is to show they actually understand the topic, not just have an opinion about it. | W.6.1.b |
Use words, phrases, and clauses to clarify the relationships among claim | Students practice linking their argument and supporting reasons with connecting words like "because," "therefore," and "as a result." Those transitions show readers how each reason actually backs up the main claim. | W.6.1.c |
Establish and maintain a formal style | Writing an argument means choosing words and a tone that fit the task. Students practice dropping casual, conversational language and sticking with a consistent formal style from the first sentence to the last. | W.6.1.d |
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from the argument… | Students wrap up an argument essay with a closing paragraph that connects back to what they argued. The ending doesn't just stop; it shows the reader why the argument holds together. | W.6.1.e |
Write informative/explanatory texts to examine a topic and convey ideas… | Students write a focused explanation of a real topic, choosing facts and details that matter, then arranging them so a reader can follow the thinking from start to finish. | W.6.2 |
Introduce a topic; organize ideas, concepts | Students open an informational piece by clearly naming the topic, then organize what follows using tools like headings or charts to help readers understand how ideas connect. | W.6.2.a |
Develop the topic with relevant facts, definitions, concrete details, quotations | Students back up the main topic with facts, real examples, or direct quotes from sources. The goal is to give readers enough detail to actually understand the subject, not just a surface-level summary. | W.6.2.b |
Use appropriate transitions to clarify the relationships among ideas and… | Students choose words and phrases like "for example," "as a result," or "on the other hand" to show how one idea connects to the next. Without these, paragraphs feel like a list of separate thoughts. | W.6.2.c |
Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to inform about or explain… | Students choose exact words that fit the subject, including terms a scientist, historian, or expert would actually use. Vague words like "stuff" or "things" get replaced with the specific vocabulary that makes the explanation clear. | W.6.2.d |
Establish and maintain a formal style | Writing for school or work calls for a different tone than texting a friend. Students learn to choose words and sentences that sound professional and stay that way throughout a piece. | W.6.2.e |
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from the information or… | The final paragraph of an informational piece wraps up the main ideas. Students write a closing that grows out of what they explained, not a new thought dropped in at the end. | W.6.2.f |
Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using… | Students write a story, real or made-up, with a clear sequence of events and details that bring the characters and setting to life. The writing follows a structure that keeps readers engaged from beginning to end. | W.6.3 |
Engage and orient the reader by establishing a context and introducing a… | Students open a narrative by setting up where and when the story takes place and introducing who is in it. From there, the events follow in an order that makes sense. | W.6.3.a |
Use narrative techniques, such as dialogue, pacing | Students use conversation between characters, well-timed details, and vivid description to make the people and events in a story feel real and worth reading. | W.6.3.b |
Use a variety of transition words, phrases | Students practice connecting scenes and moments in a story using words like "later," "meanwhile," or "by the time" to show when things happen and when the setting changes. | W.6.3.c |
Use precise words and phrases, relevant descriptive details | Students choose exact words and sensory details to make a scene feel real. The right word does more than a vague one: "scorched" lands harder than "hot," and a specific detail pulls the reader into the moment. | W.6.3.d |
Provide a conclusion that follows from the narrated experiences or events | Students write an ending that grows naturally out of what happened in the story. The final paragraph wraps up the events rather than stopping without warning or adding something unrelated. | W.6.3.e |
Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization | Students learn to match their writing to the situation: a persuasive letter sounds different from a lab report, and both sound different from a personal story. The writing stays focused and organized from start to finish. | W.6.4 |
With some guidance and support from peers and adults, develop and strengthen… | Students learn to improve a piece of writing by planning it out, revising weak spots, editing for errors, or starting fresh when something isn't working. A teacher or classmate helps, but students do the thinking. | W.6.5 |
Produce and publish grade-appropriate writing using technology, either… | Students use word processors or other digital tools to write and share their work, sometimes on their own and sometimes with classmates. The finished piece is ready to read online or in print. | W.6.6 |
Conduct short research projects to answer a question, drawing on several… | Students pick a question, gather information from multiple sources, and write a short research piece. If the research leads somewhere unexpected, students adjust their focus and follow where the evidence points. | W.6.7 |
Gather relevant information from multiple print and digital sources | Students pull facts from books and websites, check whether each source can be trusted, and then write those facts in their own words or as direct quotes. They give credit to every source they use. | W.6.8 |
Draw relevant evidence from grade-appropriate literary or informational texts… | Students find quotes and details from a book or article that back up their argument or analysis. The evidence has to actually fit the point they're making, not just mention the same topic. | W.6.9 |
Apply grade 6 Reading standards to literature | Students read two pieces of literature, such as a story and a poem on the same topic, and write about how each one handles that topic differently. The writing shows students can think across texts, not just summarize one. | W.6.9.a |
Apply grade 6 Reading standards to literary nonfiction | Students read nonfiction books or articles and decide whether the author's argument holds up. They look for claims backed by real evidence and spot ones that are just opinions or assertions with nothing behind them. | W.6.9.b |
Write routinely over extended time frames | Students write often, in short bursts and across longer projects, for different reasons and different readers. Practice across both paces builds the habit of putting ideas into writing for any subject or situation. | W.6.10 |