

This Grade 7 worksheet focuses on **Reading Comprehension – Comparing Use of Evidence**, helping students understand how strong evidence supports ideas and leads to correct conclusions. Through an engaging mystery set in a busy market, learners explore how observation, reasoning, and evidence differ from assumptions and guesses.
Understanding evidence helps students think logically and evaluate information carefully. For Grade 7 learners, this topic is important because:
1. Evidence supports ideas with facts and observations.
2. It helps distinguish between strong and weak arguments.
3. It improves critical thinking and decision-making skills.
4. It prepares students for analytical reading and writing tasks.
This worksheet includes five engaging activities that develop comprehension and reasoning skills:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students identify how evidence is used in the story and evaluate which ideas are stronger.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Learners complete sentences using key words like *evidence, observation, assumptions,* and *search*.
📋 Exercise 3 – True or False
Students assess statements to strengthen attention to detail and understanding of facts.
📝 Exercise 4 – Short Answer Questions
Students respond to questions based on the passage, encouraging clear thinking and explanation.
🧩 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion
Students complete a meaningful paragraph using context clues and vocabulary from the lesson.
This worksheet builds the ability to recognize reliable evidence and avoid assumptions, helping students become thoughtful readers and logical thinkers.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Answers
1. (b) She used her observations of the surroundings.
2. (b) It relied on assumptions without evidence.
3. (b) They searched the area carefully.
4. (a) Direct observations and details.
5. (b) It slipped due to movement in the shop.
6. (c) Strong evidence leads to better conclusions.
7. (a) It was supported by clear observations.
8. (a) It helped explain how items moved.
9. (a) It was based on visible clues.
10. (a) Suspenseful and thoughtful.
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. wallet
2. observation
3. wind
4. shelves
5. idea
6. stranger
7. assumptions
8. search
9. box
10. evidence
Exercise 3 – True or False
1. True
2. False
3. True
4. True
5. False
6. False
7. True
8. False
9. False
10. True
Exercise 4 – Short Answers
1. Kavya guided the search.
2. The wallet was found behind a box near the shelves.
3. Rohan suspected a stranger.
4. Because her idea was based on clear observations and evidence.
5. A strong gust of wind caused objects to move.
6. A customer reported the missing wallet.
7. They searched the area carefully before deciding.
8. She used direct observation and physical evidence.
9. Because there was no proof against the stranger.
10. That strong evidence helps in making correct decisions.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion
1. market
2. wallet
3. observation
4. wind
5. stranger
6. search
7. shelves
8. wallet
9. reasoning
10. evidence
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By looking at how each text supports its claims with facts, statistics, or expert opinions.
Comparing evidence helps students assess the reliability and relevance of different sources.
Use charts or tables to organize the evidence from different texts and highlight key differences.