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Quill Reading for Evidence

Provide your students with nonfiction texts paired with AI-powered writing prompts, instead of multiple-choice questions, to enable deeper thinking. Students read a nonfiction text and build their comprehension through writing prompts, supporting a series of claims with evidence sourced from the text. Quill challenges students to write responses that are precise, logical, and based on textual evidence, with Quill coaching the student through custom, targeted feedback on each revision so that students strengthen their reading comprehension and hone their writing skills.

Designed for 8th-12th grade students, each activity takes 15-20 minutes to complete. These texts cover a wide range of topics, from 21st-century real-world issues to major historical moments and key literary themes.

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Try a sample activity

What Topics Are Covered in Quill Reading for Evidence

Culture & Society

"Should Schools Have Grade Requirements for Student Athletes?"

Interdisciplinary Science:

AI Knowledge

"How Are Marine Biologists Using Machine Learning to Protect Coral Reefs?"

Social Studies:

World History

"How Did British Women Workers Fight for Their Rights in the 19th Century?"

How Students Write to Learn with Reading for Evidence

1

Read and highlight text

A sample article about volcanoes showing a sentence highlighted with the cursor over the highlighted sentence
2

Write sentences using what you read

A sample question asking a student to fill in the rest of a sentence
3

Revise based on feedback

A sample feedback asking a student to add more detail to their sentence

How Quill Reading for Evidence Gives Feedback

Students read a text and then use what they have read to practice writing sentences. While the content can vary, every strong response must include paraphrased text evidence that is on-topic, clear, and specific. Quill serves individualized feedback in each of these areas, coaching the student to improve their writing one step at a time.

Activity Title:

“Should Schools Have Grade Requirements for Student Athletes?”

1st Attempt

Quill’s feedback bot provides custom feedback for every response that mirrors the feedback a teacher would provide to a student in a 1:1 context.


In this response, it’s true that some people think No Pass No Play laws are unfair, but the student has not specified *why* exactly. Quill asks the student to go back to the text and examine it more carefully to provide a reason why people think these laws are unfair. Students must use precise evidence in their response to be able to successfully complete it.

Prompt:

Critics have opposed No Pass No Play laws because...

Student’s Response:

their worried that the law isn’t fair to students.

2nd Attempt

The student identified that some people think No Pass No Play laws are unfair for students but did not support their response with a key statistic from the text. Quill encourages them to be as specific as possible to strengthen their response and more accurately respond to the claim.

Prompt:

Critics have opposed No Pass No Play laws because...

Student’s Response:

their worried that the law isn’t fair to students for lots of reasons.

3rd Attempt

The student strengthened their evidence by adding a precise statistic from the text that explains how the laws may affect student dropout rates. Since the key ideas are in place, Quill now provides a mini-lesson on the grammar errors in their response. Quill only provides grammar and spelling feedback once the student has written a strong response with the key ideas from the text.

Prompt:

Critics have opposed No Pass No Play laws because...

Student’s Response:

their worried that the law isn’t fair to students and will make them drop out of school.

4th Attempt

At this point the student has now written a precise, textually-supported sentence. Students often come into the tool writing vague or inaccurate statements, and through multiple rounds of practice, feedback, and revision, students gain the ability to utilize precise evidence in their responses.

Prompt:

Critics have opposed No Pass No Play laws because...

Student’s Response:

they are worried that the law isn’t fair to students and will make them drop out of school.

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You'll be able to revise each sentence up to five times. We give you feedback because we want to help you write a stronger sentence.

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We use artificial intelligence (AI) to help us give you feedback on your writing. You should know that AI isn't always correct.

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Once the activity is complete, both you and your teacher will see a report with your score and your responses for each prompt.

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