Home Free Printables Literacy 7th Grade Grade 7 Writing — Argumentative with Counterargument — Reading Comprehension — Rebut the Counterargument Preview — download the full PDF for print-quality output
Literacy 7th Grade Ages 12–13
Grade 7 Writing — Argumentative with Counterargument — Reading Comprehension — Rebut the Counterargument Free printable reading comprehension passage about rebut the counterargument. Students read the passage and answer questions to build understanding. For 7th Grade (ages 12–13).
2,400+ parents downloaded printables this week
Free PDF Download · Print Unlimited Copies
Download Free PDFRebut the Counterargument Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Rebut the Counterargument is a literacy skill you use across every subject. Strong readers notice how structure, evidence, and word choice shape a text's meaning, and writers use those same moves on purpose. Practicing with many kinds of texts — articles, stories, and speeches — builds the flexibility needed for harder reading. The skill transfers because all careful reading asks the same question: what does this text say, and how does it say it? Questions: 1 What do strong readers notice about a text? 2 What kinds of texts help build reading flexibility? 3 What question does all careful reading ask? www.littleactivity.com 7th Grade — Page 1
Instant download. PDF is generated in your browser.
Upgrade to the full Literacy pack 50+ worksheets for 7th Grade organized by skill level with answer keys — less than $0.22 per worksheet.
Answer keys Unlimited downloads Skill-level organizedGet the Full Pack — $10.99
How to Use This Worksheet Step 1
Download PDF Click the download button above. The PDF is generated instantly in your browser — no waiting.
Step 2
Print at Home Print on standard A4 or US Letter paper. Works with any home printer — color or black & white.
Step 3
Learn & Play Give it to your child with crayons, pencils, or markers. Reprint as many times as needed!
More Literacy Printables Click any worksheet to view and download for free
Browse More Free Worksheets 📦
Love this worksheet? Get the full pack! 50+ literacy worksheets for 7th Grade — organized by skill level, with answer keys and progress tracking.
Instant download Print unlimited copies Answer keys includedAI-powered activity ideas to keep your little ones learning, playing, and growing every day.
© 2026 LittleActivity. All rights reserved.
Built for families who love playtime
Rebut the Counterargument Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Rebut the Counterargument is a literacy skill you use across every subject. Strong readers notice how structure, evidence, and word choice shape a text's meaning, and writers use those same moves on purpose. Practicing with many kinds of texts — articles, stories, and speeches — builds the flexibility needed for harder reading. The skill transfers because all careful reading asks the same question: what does this text say, and how does it say it? Questions: 1 What do strong readers notice about a text? 2 What kinds of texts help build reading flexibility? 3 What question does all careful reading ask? www.littleactivity.com 7th Grade — Page 1
Firefighters Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Firefighters is a topic worth learning about. When we read about something new, we find out facts, learn new words, and discover how it connects to our own lives. Good readers read slowly, picture what is happening, and think about the big idea. Every new topic is an adventure waiting to be explored. Questions: 1 What do we find out when we read about something new? 2 What do good readers do as they read? 3 What is every new topic compared to? www.littleactivity.com Kindergarten — Page 1
Police Officers Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Police Officers is a topic worth learning about. When we read about something new, we find out facts, learn new words, and discover how it connects to our own lives. Good readers read slowly, picture what is happening, and think about the big idea. Every new topic is an adventure waiting to be explored. Questions: 1 What do we find out when we read about something new? 2 What do good readers do as they read? 3 What is every new topic compared to? www.littleactivity.com Kindergarten — Page 1
Doctors Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Doctors is a topic worth learning about. When we read about something new, we find out facts, learn new words, and discover how it connects to our own lives. Good readers read slowly, picture what is happening, and think about the big idea. Every new topic is an adventure waiting to be explored. Questions: 1 What do we find out when we read about something new? 2 What do good readers do as they read? 3 What is every new topic compared to? www.littleactivity.com Kindergarten — Page 1
Teachers Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Teachers is a topic worth learning about. When we read about something new, we find out facts, learn new words, and discover how it connects to our own lives. Good readers read slowly, picture what is happening, and think about the big idea. Every new topic is an adventure waiting to be explored. Questions: 1 What do we find out when we read about something new? 2 What do good readers do as they read? 3 What is every new topic compared to? www.littleactivity.com Kindergarten — Page 1
Mail Carriers Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Mail Carriers is a topic worth learning about. When we read about something new, we find out facts, learn new words, and discover how it connects to our own lives. Good readers read slowly, picture what is happening, and think about the big idea. Every new topic is an adventure waiting to be explored. Questions: 1 What do we find out when we read about something new? 2 What do good readers do as they read? 3 What is every new topic compared to? www.littleactivity.com Kindergarten — Page 1
Farmers Read the passage, then answer the questions below. Farmers is a topic worth learning about. When we read about something new, we find out facts, learn new words, and discover how it connects to our own lives. Good readers read slowly, picture what is happening, and think about the big idea. Every new topic is an adventure waiting to be explored. Questions: 1 What do we find out when we read about something new? 2 What do good readers do as they read? 3 What is every new topic compared to? www.littleactivity.com Kindergarten — Page 1