Updated on April 24th, 2024.
"The more you know, the more you realize you don't know." Aristotle
What is the Claim, Support, Question Thinking Routine?
Created by Ron Ritchhart and researchers at Project Zero, the Claim, Support, Question thinking routine shows students the importance of identifying, understanding, and making claims based on reasoning and evidence.
The Claim, Support, Question thinking routine helps students develop key thinking moves like:
- Identifying generalizations
- Offering counterarguments
- Reasoning with evidence
- Asking questions.
How Does the Claim, Support, Question Thinking Routine Work?
- Make a Claim - This claim can be about a specific issue or idea related to the topic being examined.
- Support Your Claim - Identify and document the evidence that supports your claim.
- Ask Questions Related to Your Claim - Identify and address unexplained questions or informational gaps related to your claim.
Strong claims, sound reasoning, and thoughtful follow-up questions ultimately lead to a deeper understanding of topics and concepts. The more we know, the more we realize we don’t know. This helps us to understand that we always need to ask new questions as our understanding evolves.
Choosing the Content and Context for Learning
Investigating scientific phenomena provides an excellent catalyst for exercises in critical thought. After students have posed questions, stated a hypothesis, conducted experiments, and put forward a claim, this routine provides an opportunity for students to figure out what questions need to be addressed next. The cycle of scientific inquiry is always ongoing!
This routine is also flexible across subjects and useful any time an educator invites students to provide further evidence in support of or opposition to claims they make or encounter during the course of any scientific inquiry.
Claim, Support, Question Examples
Claim
Students start this routine by spotting something and making a claim about it. The reasoning behind this claim might be obvious if this routine is used after a scientific experiment, or it may be less obvious if it is used in an early discussion of the phenomenon.
A student's claim will ultimately be supported or unsupported. Strong claims can always be supported by evidence as part of an evidence-based conclusion. Prompt students to make claims they feel they have evidence to support later.
When using this routine in the context of forming a conclusion to a scientific experiment, a useful prompt may include: “After investigating your hypothesis, what claim can you make about that hypothesis knowing the data that you have gathered?
Support
After students have identified or stated their claims, push them to press one another by asking, “what data allows you to make this claim?” The goal is to have students articulate what specific evidence leads them to believe their claim is true For example, it may be a comparison of average height in a treatment group compared to the same calculation in a non-treatment group. This number and reasoning provide evidence and support for their claim. The strength of the support depends on the strength of the evidence and reasoning. For example, are there other interpretations of the same data that would lead to an opposite conclusion?
The best evidence is always gathered through careful observation, analysis, or experimentation. As students seek out support and evidence for their claims, encourage reflection by engaging students in explaining their claims with their evidence, and act as a thought partner by asking what other claims might be supported by the same evidence.
Useful Prompts:
- “What would you say to someone who looked at your evidence and made the opposite claim ______?”
- “What makes you say that?“
- “How does this specific evidence support your claim?”
- “What evidence would make this support even stronger?”
Question
This step helps students return to the scientific process and remember that investigations often raise more questions. The Claim, Support, Question thinking routine does an excellent job of drawing attention to the importance of evidence-based reasoning and questioning as an ongoing process.
Useful Prompts:
- “How might someone question your claim?”
- “Is there one piece of evidence that is key to the support for your claim? How could someone reasonably question that evidence?”
- “If __________ is false then ________ is an unsupported claim. How do we know _______ is true?”
Ensuring a Student-Centered Experience
The Claim, Support, Question thinking routine is applicable both in and beyond the science classroom. Students are asked daily to form conclusions across all subject areas as they explore concepts. Classrooms become more student-centered when students generate their own claims and routinely follow those claims up by developing their own support and questioning.
Meaningful engagement and follow-up with students require teachers to develop the craft of skillful questioning. Constructive questioning is a powerful type of questioning teachers can use and model. Constructive questioning requires a shift from review, procedural, and knowledge-based questions. Constructive questions push students to construct meaning with thinking moves. These questions require students to make interpretations and connections and capture the essence of concepts. The use of constructive questioning helps students to unpack ideas and principles foundational to deeper understanding. It can also help them figure out what they want to investigate next! This process helps students learn that making claims, reasoning with evidence, and asking more questions is an ongoing process that evolves as we learn more.
Claim, Support, Question Graphic Organizer
Are you ready to start the Claim, Support, Question thinking routine? Download a free anchor chart to display for your students and create a habit of pressing for evidence as a way of learning every day!
Visit our thinking routine topic page for more information.