Grade 4 English Language Curriculum Summary (U.S.)

Grade-Level Focus

In Grade 4, students are expected to become analytical readers, thoughtful writers, and confident communicators. The curriculum shifts toward interpreting text structure, supporting claims with evidence, organizing multi-paragraph writing, and developing academic vocabulary.

This year plays a key role in preparing students for upper-elementary and middle school level academic literacy.

Students interpret more complex literary works and analyze deeper meaning in characters, setting, and themes.

Objectives:

  • Describe characters, settings, and events using specific details

  • Identify theme and summarize stories

  • Analyze how dialogue and description reveal character

  • Understand similes, metaphors, and figurative language

  • Compare and contrast different points of view (first-person vs. third-person)

  • Explain how structural elements (e.g., verse, rhythm) enhance poetry

Literary Forms Studied:

  • Chapter books and novels

  • Myths, legends, traditional literature

  • Poems with figurative language

  • Plays and scripts (reader’s theater)

Sample Texts:

  • Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing by Judy Blume

  • The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo

  • James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl

  • Greek myths (e.g., Theseus and the Minotaur)

  • Poetry by Shel Silverstein

Students begin to analyze the structure and purpose of nonfiction texts, using multiple sources to deepen comprehension.

Objectives:

  • Identify main idea and explain how it’s supported by key details

  • Describe overall structure (cause/effect, compare/contrast, chronology)

  • Use text features (charts, graphs, captions) to understand and locate information

  • Explain the author’s purpose and point of view

  • Compare texts on the same topic across authors or formats

Topics Often Explored:

  • U.S. geography and history

  • Environmental science

  • Animal studies

  • Biographies of inventors and leaders

At this stage, most students are fluent readers, so instruction focuses on refining fluency and automaticity while decoding multisyllabic and academic words.

Objectives:

  • Decode unfamiliar multisyllabic words using word patterns, prefixes, and suffixes

  • Use context clues, root words, and morphology to determine word meanings

  • Read fluently with expression and accuracy appropriate to grade level

Grade 4 writing requires well-structured multi-paragraph essays using clear reasoning and text-based evidence.

Types of Writing:

  1. Opinion Writing

    • Introduce topic, state opinion, support with facts and examples, conclude effectively

    • Example: “Why We Should Have More Field Trips”

  2. Informative/Explanatory Writing

    • Explain a topic using facts, definitions, and details from research

    • Example: “The Water Cycle Explained”

  3. Narrative Writing

    • Tell a story with characters, dialogue, conflict, and resolution

    • Example: “The Day I Got Lost at the Zoo”

Writing Elements:

  • Clear introductions and conclusions

  • Use of linking words and phrases (e.g., in addition, however, for example)

  • Paragraph development with main idea and supporting evidence

  • Use of dialogue, sensory details, and figurative language in narratives

  • Research and note-taking skills

Students are expected to listen critically, contribute to discussions, and present organized ideas orally.

Objectives:

  • Summarize information from a text, presentation, or discussion

  • Ask and respond to questions for deeper understanding

  • Plan and deliver an organized presentation with supporting evidence

  • Use multimedia or visuals to enhance presentations

  • Speak with clarity, volume, and pacing appropriate to task

Activities:

  • Book reviews

  • Debate-style discussions

  • Science research presentations

  • Group projects with oral reports

Students develop command of grammar and conventions in formal writing and learn strategies to expand vocabulary.

Grammar and Usage:

  • Relative pronouns and adverbs (who, whose, which, that, where)

  • Progressive verb tenses (was running, is walking)

  • Capitalization rules for titles, places, events

  • Commas and quotation marks in dialogue

  • Plural vs possessive nouns

  • Subject-verb agreement

Vocabulary Development:

  • Use context clues, root words, affixes (prefixes/suffixes), and dictionaries

  • Understand figurative language (idioms, similes, metaphors)

  • Synonyms, antonyms, homographs

  • Shades of meaning (e.g., whisper vs. shout)

DayELA Components
MondayWhole-group reading instruction, vocabulary preview, opinion writing lesson
TuesdaySmall group reading, grammar mini-lesson, writing workshop
WednesdayInformational reading + summary writing, oral response to texts
ThursdayLiterary analysis, narrative writing practice, peer review
FridaySpelling quiz, research project or presentation, poetry reading

Assessments & Monitoring

Reading Assessments:

  • Oral and silent reading comprehension quizzes

  • Constructed response questions using text evidence

  • Theme, plot, and character analysis worksheets

Writing Assessments:

  • Opinion, narrative, and informative essays graded by rubrics

  • Timed writing exercises

  • Research-based writing assignments

Grammar & Vocabulary:

  • Weekly grammar worksheets

  • Spelling tests (12–20 words)

  • Vocabulary quizzes (contextual use emphasized)

Technology Integration

  • CommonLit: Reading passages with comprehension questions

  • Newsela: Current events at adjustable Lexile levels

  • Google Docs: Typed writing and collaborative editing

  • Epic!: Digital reading library

  • Padlet/Flip: Oral response and class discussion tools

Reading Benchmarks by End of Grade 4

Students should be able to:

  • Read and comprehend literature and informational texts independently

  • Identify and explain theme, character development, and structure

  • Use text evidence to support responses

  • Read fluently and expressively at ~140–170 words per minute


Writing Benchmarks by End of Grade 4

Students should be able to:

  • Write multi-paragraph texts with topic sentences, evidence, and transitions

  • Use correct punctuation and grammar consistently

  • Conduct short research projects using multiple sources

  • Use a writing process: brainstorm → draft → revise → edit → publish


Recommended Texts and Authors

Literature:

  • Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo

  • The Lemonade War by Jacqueline Davies

  • Esperanza Rising by Pam Muñoz Ryan

  • Frindle by Andrew Clements

  • Love That Dog by Sharon Creech (poetry)

Informational Texts:

  • Who Was? series (e.g., Who Was Harriet Tubman?)

  • National Geographic Readers

  • A Drop of Water by Walter Wick

  • Kids Discover magazine series


Support at Home

Families are encouraged to:

  • Have children read aloud daily and discuss what they’ve read

  • Encourage writing letters, journal entries, or summaries of events

  • Watch educational documentaries and discuss new vocabulary

  • Play word games that build grammar or vocabulary (e.g., Boggle, Mad Libs)


Social-Emotional and Cultural Learning in ELA

  • Exposure to characters from diverse backgrounds

  • Reading stories that address fairness, courage, empathy, and teamwork

  • Writing activities that explore personal identity and values

  • Group work to practice respectful listening and communication

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