Main Idea & Supporting Details • ELA Grades 5–8

Learning Through Song

Songs tell stories — and every story has a main idea supported by details. These five American classics, all in the public domain, give you short, engaging texts to practice one of reading's most essential skills.

Main idea and supporting details — what's the difference?

Every piece of writing has a main idea — the most important point the author wants you to understand. Everything else in the text exists to support, explain, or prove that idea. Those are the supporting details.

Main idea — the central message or most important point of a text. It is usually a complete thought, not just a topic word. "Carolina in the Morning" is a topic. "The singer longs to be back in Carolina" is a main idea.
Supporting details — specific facts, examples, descriptions, or reasons the author uses to develop and support the main idea. A good supporting detail answers: How do you know? What proves it? What does that look like?

Songs are excellent texts for practicing this skill because they are short, the main idea is almost always clear, and the supporting details are easy to identify once you know what you're listening for. As you work through each song below, ask yourself two questions: What is the songwriter's most important message? And: What specific words or images support that message?

Answer the two questions after each song before moving on. You can replay any song as many times as you need.

Questions answered: 0 of 10
1

Carolina in the Morning

Words by Gus Kahn • Music by Walter Donaldson • 1922 • Public Domain

Listen for: The main idea of this song is built around a wish or longing — it is never directly stated but is implied through every image the singer describes. Notice how each detail (the morning glories, the dew, the butterflies) supports the same central feeling.

  Check for Understanding

1. What is the main idea of "Carolina in the Morning"?

2. Which detail from the song best supports the main idea?

2

Casey Jones

Traditional ballad • c. 1909 • Public Domain • Walt Disney animated short, 1950

Listen for: Unlike the previous song, Casey Jones has a main idea supported by a sequence of events — a narrative structure. Each verse gives you a cause that leads to an effect. Pay attention to the chain of events that builds toward the ending.

  Check for Understanding

3. What is the main idea of "Casey Jones"?

4. Which supporting detail from the song most clearly shows Casey Jones's dedication to his job?

3

The Man on the Flying Trapeze

Words by George Leybourne • Music by Alfred Lee • 1867 • Public Domain

Listen for: This song's main idea is supported primarily through character comparison — the singer describes two very different people and how he feels about each. Notice how details about one character reflect back on the other.

  Check for Understanding

5. What is the main idea of "The Man on the Flying Trapeze"?

6. The singer describes the trapeze artist in detail. How does this description support the main idea?

4

My Old Kentucky Home

Words & Music by Stephen Foster • 1853 • Public Domain

Listen for: Stephen Foster uses sensory and emotional details to build his main idea — images of what can be seen, heard, and felt. Notice how the mood of the song shifts between verses and how that shift supports the central message.

  Check for Understanding

7. What is the main idea of "My Old Kentucky Home"?

8. How do the sensory details in the first verse — the sun shining, the birds singing, the corn and meadow — support the main idea?

5

Over There

Words & Music by George M. Cohan • 1917 • Public Domain

Listen for: This song has a different structure from the others — it is persuasive. The main idea is a call to action, and the supporting details are reasons, promises, and emotional appeals designed to motivate listeners. Notice how Cohan uses repetition as a supporting technique.

  Check for Understanding

9. What is the main idea of "Over There"?

10. How does the repetition of "over there" throughout the song work as a supporting detail?

What did you notice?

Each song you listened to had a clear main idea — but the supporting details worked differently in each one. Carolina in the Morning used images of longing. Casey Jones used a sequence of events. The Man on the Flying Trapeze used contrast. My Old Kentucky Home used sensory details to set up loss. Over There used repetition and a direct call to action. Supporting details are not just examples — they are the specific choices a writer makes to prove, show, or deepen the main idea. The next time you read, ask yourself: what technique is this writer using to support the main idea?