6th Grade Fact vs. Opinion | Nonfiction Passages + Writing | Light Up Literature
The Skill That Unlocks
Argument Writing
Three nonfiction passages. Thirty identification questions. Six writing prompts with model answers. Everything your 6th grader needs to tell fact from opinion — and explain why it matters.
Why This Resource
Fact vs. Opinion Is the Foundation. Most Practice Worksheets Stop Too Soon.
Identifying fact vs. opinion isn't just a standalone skill — it's the gateway to RI.6.8 (distinguishing fact from opinion in nonfiction) and W.6.1 (argument writing). Students who can't make this distinction will struggle with every evidence-based writing task that follows.
Most worksheets ask students to label statements. This resource asks them to explain their thinking — which is what state assessments and argument writing actually require. The short-answer and extended writing prompts push students to use text evidence and reason in writing, not just circle an answer.
Real nonfiction, real engagement
All three passages are high-interest informational texts — not generic practice sentences. Students read about mountain climbing, plant science, and aviation history before they answer any questions.
Reading AND writing, together
Each passage pairs identification questions with two writing prompts — one short-answer and one extended paragraph. Students don't just label facts; they explain their reasoning and cite the text.
Model answers do the heavy lifting
The answer key includes model short responses, model extended paragraph responses, and a checklist of what makes each response acceptable — so grading is fast and feedback is easy.
Parent-friendly from the start
The answer key is written in plain language. No ELA background needed — model responses show exactly what a good answer looks like, and criteria checklists explain what to look for.
The Three Passages
High-Interest Nonfiction Students Actually Want to Read
Each passage is a complete informational text on an engaging subject — written at 6th grade level, formatted with clear paragraphs, and designed to generate real discussion about fact vs. opinion distinctions.
The Story of Sir Edmund Hillary: A Famous Mountain Climber
Covers Hillary's early life, the 1953 Everest summit with Tenzing Norgay, the dangers faced (extreme weather, avalanches, treacherous ice falls), and his post-climb contributions building schools and hospitals in Nepal.
The Science of Plants and Photosynthesis
Explains how photosynthesis works — chloroplasts, chlorophyll, the carbon dioxide/glucose/oxygen cycle — including the chemical equation and the role photosynthesis plays in the food chain and food security.
The Story of Amelia Earhart: A Famous Pilot
Follows Earhart from her first flight in 1920 through her Atlantic crossings, her founding of the Ninety-Nines, and her 1937 disappearance — providing rich text for distinguishing documented facts from opinion-based claims.
What's Inside
Four Components Per Passage. One Complete Mini-Unit.
Every passage comes with a full set of student materials and teacher support. Each component builds on the previous one — read, identify, explain, write.
Fact vs. Opinion Identification Questions
Each passage is followed by 10 questions presenting a statement from or related to the text. Students identify it as A) Fact or B) Opinion. The binary format keeps the focus sharp and eliminates guessing from distractor overload — better for attention and clarity.
Short-Answer Writing Prompt
Each passage includes a short-answer prompt asking students to evaluate a specific sentence from the text: Is it fact or opinion? Students must explain their reasoning using text evidence. Response lines are pre-printed — no extra setup.
Extended Paragraph Writing Prompt
Each passage closes with an opinion/argument paragraph prompt that connects the reading to student thinking. Students must take a position and support it with at least one reference to the passage — a direct bridge to W.6.1 argument writing expectations.
Complete Answer Key with Model Responses
For each passage: correct answers for all 10 questions, a model short-answer response, model extended paragraph, and a checklist of acceptable response criteria. Makes grading fast and gives students (or parents) clear exemplars to learn from.
What This Teaches
Three Levels of Skill — All From One Packet
This resource builds three distinct but connected skills in sequence. Students don't just identify — they analyze and they write. That progression is what makes this useful for RI.6.8 and W.6.1 together.
| Skill | Component | What Students Practice |
| Fact vs. Opinion Identification | 10 questions × 3 passages | Distinguish verifiable, documented statements from judgment-based or subjective claims — using a real nonfiction passage as the source |
| Text Evidence & Analysis | Short-answer prompt × 3 | Identify whether a specific sentence is fact or opinion, then explain the reasoning in writing using evidence from the passage |
| Opinion Writing with Support | Extended prompt × 3 | Take a position on a question connected to the passage, develop a paragraph with logical reasoning, and include at least one text reference — aligned to W.6.1 |
| Standards Bridge | Full resource | Builds the analytical foundation students need before engaging with author's purpose, persuasive techniques, argument vs. opinion, and claim-evidence-reasoning structures in later units |
ADHD-Friendly Design
Built to Reduce Friction and Support Focus
Each component of this resource is structured to minimize the "where do I start?" problem that trips up students who struggle with executive function or attention. The format does the organizing so the student can focus on the thinking.
Binary-choice format
Every identification question has exactly two options: A) Fact or B) Opinion. No multi-option overwhelm. Students read, decide, and move on.
Clear chunk structure
Each passage set follows the same sequence: read → identify → short answer → extended writing. The predictable structure reduces transition friction.
Pre-printed response lines
Writing lines are already on the page. Students don't need to find paper, set up a document, or make formatting decisions — they can start writing immediately.
One skill, one focus
The entire packet stays on a single skill: fact vs. opinion. No switching between unrelated concepts. Students build fluency without context-switching fatigue.
Flexible split use
Each passage is its own self-contained set. Use all three in one week or one at a time over three sessions — the structure works either way.
Short, contained passages
No dense multi-page texts. Each passage is a focused, single-topic informational piece — long enough to be substantive, short enough to stay in working memory.
Standards Alignment
Where This Fits in Your Scope & Sequence
This resource is intentionally positioned at the intersection of reading and writing standards — so the time spent on it pays off in two places at once.
Aligned to RI.6.8 and W.6.1
RI.6.8 — Trace and evaluate the argument and specific claims in a text, distinguishing claims that are supported by reasons and evidence from claims that are not. The identification questions and short-answer prompts build this directly.
W.6.1 — Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence. The extended writing prompts introduce opinion-with-support paragraph structure as a first step toward formal argument writing.
Also supports: STAAR ELA, TNReady, and similar state assessments that test fact vs. opinion identification in nonfiction reading passages.
Who This Works For
Designed for 6th Grade — Flexible Enough for More
6th Grade ELA Teachers
Use at the start of an argument writing unit, as a review before state testing, or as a structured skills check for the first week of school.
Homeschool Parents
No ELA background needed. The model responses and answer criteria make grading clear, and the passages are engaging enough to spark conversation — not just fill-in-the-blank practice.
Tutors & Interventionists
The one-passage-at-a-time structure makes this easy to use in 45-minute sessions. Start with identification questions, then layer in writing when the student is ready.
Substitute Teachers
Completely self-contained. Students read the passage, answer questions, and complete writing prompts independently. The clear format means no verbal instructions required.
When to Use It
More Than One Right Time to Use This
- 📅Beginning-of-year skills review before moving into argument writing
- 🎯Pre-assessment before teaching RI.6.8 or W.6.1 formally
- 🧩Small group reteaching or RTI intervention for reading-writing connection
- 📊Test prep warm-up before state assessments (STAAR, TNReady, PARCC)
- 🏠Homeschool ELA unit on nonfiction reading and foundational argument writing
- 📋Sub day — fully self-contained, works without teacher explanation
- ✍️Literacy station or early finisher task with built-in writing extension
- 👩🏫Tutoring intake activity to identify where analytical reading breaks down
Product Details
What You're Getting
| Grade Level | 6th Grade (also: advanced 5th or struggling 7th) |
| Subject | ELA — Nonfiction Reading, Fact vs. Opinion, Foundational Argument Writing |
| Passages | 3 nonfiction informational texts: Sir Edmund Hillary · The Science of Plants & Photosynthesis · Amelia Earhart |
| Identification Questions | 30 total — 10 per passage. Binary format: A) Fact or B) Opinion. Each question presents a statement from or related to the passage. |
| Writing Prompts | 6 total — 1 short-answer + 1 extended paragraph per passage. Response lines pre-printed on student pages. |
| Answer Key | 3 separate answer keys (one per passage) — correct answers, model short responses, model extended paragraphs, and acceptable-response criteria checklists |
| Standards | RI.6.8 (fact vs. opinion in nonfiction) · W.6.1 (argument writing foundation) · Supports STAAR, TNReady, and similar state ELA assessment formats |
| Time Needed | 1–3 class periods depending on use; each passage set can be completed in a single 45–50 minute session |
| Format | PDF — no prep, print ready |
| License | Single classroom or personal homeschool use. Additional licenses required for teams, schools, or districts. |
Common Questions
Before You Buy
Read It. Identify It.
Write About It.
Three nonfiction passages, 30 identification questions, six writing prompts, and model answers for all of it — ready to print, ready to use.
Add to CartPDF delivered instantly · Single-classroom license · Full answer key with model responses included