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Add 6 Types of Supporting Details

Teachers want more detail, more idea development, more elaboration. However, when we ask
students to add more details, they often nod their heads in agreement and stare at us blankly.
They know they need to add more. . .but they don't know what to add or how to add it. Rather
than telling students to add more detail, explicitly reveal a variety of ways to accomplish this
elaboration.
Here are six types of details that are relevant to all grade levels. Each of these will cause students
to write additional sentences, thus adding more meat to their writing.

1. Add description.
o Descriptive details often include the five senses. Students could write a
couple of sentences using the senses relevant to the topic.
o Description can also come in the form of comparisons. Students can use
metaphors or similes or simply compare the idea to something (e.g.,
bigger than, faster than, etc.).
o Naming something specifically also aids the reader in envisioning exactly
what the writer intended.
2. Add vocabulary.
o Encourage domain-specific terms followed by a definition detail using
phrases like This means. . . or A synonym for this is. . .
o Where appropriate, an onomatopoeia word (e.g., SPLAT! POP! CRACK!)
adds another sentence.
o Incorporate precise and powerful action verbs directly associated with the
topic. Such verbs often are followed by specific information in a predicate.
3. Add proof.
o Facts, statistics, and dates are hard proof that cannot be refuted.
o Specific types or actual examples also provide hard, undeniable proof.
4. Add voices.
o Expert quotes, individual feelings, individual opinions, or different
perspectives add "soft proof" and additional sentences.
5. Add explanation.
o Restate an idea in a second sentence; say it more simply.
o Summarize an idea to reinforce what is important.
o Include a "because" phrase to clarify an idea.
6. Add importance.
o Answer the question "So what?" after a fact or quote.
o Explain the significance or impact of the fact or quote.
o Reveal the consequence or importance of the fact or quote.
Teach each detail type individually

https://k12.thoughtfullearning.com/blogpost/15-awesome-persuasive-writing-prompts

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