Warm-Up for Comparison-Contrast Essays

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026
Form
Unit Lesson Body

Warm-Up for Comparison-Contrast Essays

People often say, "You can't compare apples and oranges." Of course you can. Apples and oranges are both fist-sized fruits with an outer protective covering, sweet inner flesh, and seeds. Both grow on trees and appear in supermarkets. Both come in delicious varieties. These fruits are different in many ways as well: color, texture, taste, vitamins, acidity, availability, seasons, and so on. By comparing and contrasting apples and oranges, you learn more about each.

This kind of analytical thinking can help you understand just about any two topics, whether protagonists in novels or types of respiratory systems in animals or generals in the Civil War. In this unit, you'll select two topics from your own areas of study or from personal interest and compare and contrast them.

What Are Comparing and Contrasting?

Listen to "What Are Comparing and Contrasting?"

Hide audio

Writing Comparing and Contrasting Essays
© Thoughtful Learning 2018

When you compare two topics, you find the similarities between them. When you contrast them, you focus on differences. Yes, you can compare and contrast apples and oranges, but your thinking needs to use parallel structure. In other words, you compare and contrast the appearance of both, and then the taste, and then the color. You shouldn't say, "While an orange has a tangy, slightly acidic taste, an apple comes in different colors." You shouldn't compare the taste of the orange to the color of the apple.

As you can see, a comparison-contrast essay needs to keep ideas neatly sorted. You have two separate topics, the similarities and differences between them, and the many points of comparison and contrast. This unit will help you manage all of this complexity, thinking effectively about your topics and developing a clear, thorough, and compelling essay.

You can warm up your thinking by comparing and contrasting yourself and one of your friends or family members.

Thinking About People

You may have a lot in common with a friend or family member, or very little in common, or some combination. You can analyze the similarities and differences between yourself and a person you like by writing about each of you, point by point. One student compared and contrasted himself to his best friend by completing the following chart.

Points of Comparison

Me

Wade

Appearance

Hair buzzed on top; brown eyes, brown skin; tall, thin, strong; like to dress nice; kind of serious

Hair parted and light brown; blue eyes, white skin, medium height, wiry; jeans and T-shirts; always grinning

Personality

Focused and serious, hard working, quiet, rule follower

Random and joking, hard working, always talking, pushing people's buttons

Interests

Hunting, fishing, camping, stargazing

Hunting, fishing, camping

Talents

Science and math

Music, writing, science, telling stories, making jokes, making friends

Background

Grew up in the city, only child

Grew up on a farm, third of five kids

Goals

Become an engineer

Be a comedian, actor, or writer

Fears

Failure

He doesn't seem to be afraid of anything or anybody

Compare yourself to someone you like.

For each point of comparison, write details about yourself and someone you like. In what surprising ways are you different? In what surprising ways are you the same?

Teaching Tip

This activity helps students focus on two topics, analyze them point by point, and discover similarities and differences. Trying out this process with familiar topics (themselves and their friends or family members) will help students use a similar approach with more challenging topics as they research for their essays.

Lesson Downloads (Word)
Templates
Template Name
Compare Yourself to Someone
Template Content

Name:

Date:

For each point of comparison, write details about yourself and someone you like. In what surprising ways are you different? In what surprising ways are you the same?

Points of Comparison

Me

Appearance

Personality

Interests

Talents

Background

Goals

Fears

Unit Container Label
Unit Container D7 ID
Lesson Weight
1