Plastic Pushback Answer Key
About This Worksheet
This is a high-level argument analysis task-and honestly, it’s exactly where Grade 8 students should be heading. We’re moving beyond just identifying a claim and into something more nuanced: how authors handle opposing viewpoints.
This passage gives students a chance to see what strong argument writing actually looks like. The author doesn’t ignore the counterclaim-they acknowledge it, then respond with evidence. That’s a critical skill, especially as students begin writing their own arguments.
For teachers, this is a great moment to reinforce: good arguments are not one-sided-they are strategic. For parents, I’d explain it as learning how to “disagree thoughtfully and back it up.”
Curriculum and Grade Alignment
This worksheet aligns with Grade 8 standards focused on analyzing arguments, counterclaims, and reasoning. Students evaluate how authors respond to opposing ideas. It supports Common Core RI.8.8 and TEKS ELAR 8.6(E).
Student Tasks
Students read a passage about banning plastic bags. Then they:
- Identify the author’s main claim
- Locate the counterclaim
- Find where the author responds to that counterclaim
- Analyze what kind of evidence is used
- Evaluate whether the counterclaim is fully dismissed or partially acknowledged
This is layered thinking-students are tracking multiple ideas at once.
Common Challenges and Misconceptions
Students often confuse the counterclaim with the main claim. Others may miss the author’s response entirely. A big misconception is thinking the author must “win” by completely shutting down the other side-when in reality, strong writing often acknowledges complexity.
Implementation Guidance
One effective strategy is color-coding:
- Claim (one color)
- Counterclaim (another)
- Response (third color)
This visual separation helps students see the structure clearly.
You can also ask: “Where does the author push back?” That language helps students identify the turning point in the argument.
Details and Features
- Real-world environmental topic
- Strong example of argument structure
- Focus on counterclaim and rebuttal
- Encourages critical evaluation