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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year reading shifts from following a story to backing up ideas with proof from the page. Students quote lines to support what they think, compare how two books or articles handle the same topic, and notice how a writer's word choices set the tone. Writing grows into multi-paragraph pieces with a clear point, real evidence, and revision. By spring, students can write a short opinion essay that uses quotes from a book or article to back up the main idea.

  • Citing evidence
  • Opinion writing
  • Comparing texts
  • Multi-paragraph essays
  • Research projects
  • Vocabulary in context
Source: Connecticut Connecticut Core Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Settling into harder books

    Students start the year reading longer stories and articles on their own. They practice pointing to lines in the text that back up what they think, instead of just guessing.

  2. 2

    Finding themes and main ideas

    Students learn to sum up what a story is really about and what an article is trying to teach. They pull out the most important details and leave the rest behind.

  3. 3

    Writing opinions and explanations

    Students build paragraphs that state an opinion and back it up with reasons from what they read. They also write to explain how something works, with a clear beginning, middle, and end.

  4. 4

    Research and storytelling

    Students run small research projects using more than one source and check whether a website can be trusted. They also write stories with characters, dialogue, and a satisfying ending.

  5. 5

    Comparing texts and word choice

    Students put two articles or stories side by side and notice how each author handles the same topic. They also pay attention to how a single word can change the feeling of a sentence.

  6. 6

    Presenting and polishing language

    Students give short talks with visuals and adjust how they speak depending on the audience. They tighten their grammar, spelling, and punctuation so a reader can follow along easily.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 5.
Reading Literature
  • Cite Textual Evidence

    Students point to specific lines or passages from a story or poem to back up what they think the text means, both what it says directly and what it implies.

  • Central Ideas

    Students find the main message of a story and trace how it builds across the text. Then they sum up the key details that support it, in their own words.

  • Analyze Development

    Students explain why a character acts the way they do, how a key event shapes what comes next, and how those pieces connect across a whole story.

  • Word Meanings

    Students figure out what words really mean in a story or poem, including when a word carries extra feeling or acts as a metaphor. Then they look at why the author chose those exact words and what mood that creates.

  • Text Structure

    Students examine how a story or poem is built, looking at how individual sentences and paragraphs connect to each other and shape the piece as a whole.

  • Point of View

    Students figure out who is telling a story and how that narrator's perspective changes what gets included, left out, or emphasized. A story told by the villain reads very differently than the same story told by the hero.

  • Integrate Diverse Media

    Students compare what a story or article says in words with what a photo, chart, or video shows about the same topic. They think about what each format adds and whether the details match.

  • Evaluate Arguments

    Students read a text and decide whether the author's argument holds up. They check if the reasons make sense and if the examples actually support the point being made.

  • Compare Texts

    Students read two stories or books on the same theme and compare how each author handles it. They look at what's similar, what's different, and what reading both teaches them that one alone wouldn't.

  • Range of Reading

    Students read full books, stories, and poems on their own at the fifth-grade level, without help to get through the words or follow what's happening.

Reading Informational Text
  • Cite Textual Evidence

    Students back up their ideas with exact lines or details pulled directly from the passage. They also read between the lines to draw conclusions the author hints at but never states outright.

  • Central Ideas

    Students find the main point of a nonfiction passage and explain how the details build on it. Then they summarize what the text says without copying it word for word.

  • Analyze Development

    Students read a nonfiction passage and explain how a person, event, or idea changes as the text goes on. They look at what causes those changes and how one part of the text connects to another.

  • Word Meanings

    Students figure out what tricky words mean in a nonfiction passage, including words used as comparisons or with emotional weight. They also look at how an author's word choices make a passage feel urgent, serious, or calm.

  • Text Structure

    Students look at how a nonfiction article is built: how one paragraph leads to the next, how a single sentence supports a bigger idea, and how all the parts work together to make one clear whole.

  • Point of View

    Students figure out who wrote a nonfiction piece and why, then look at how that motive shapes what the author included, left out, or emphasized. A scientist writing about climate change and an oil company writing about the same topic will tell the story differently.

  • Integrate Diverse Media

    Students read the same topic two ways, such as a written article and a chart or video, then explain what each one shows that the other doesn't.

  • Evaluate Arguments

    Students read a nonfiction passage and decide whether the author's argument holds up. They check if the reasons make sense and if the facts given actually support the point being made.

  • Compare Texts

    Students read two articles or books on the same topic and compare what each author says, what each leaves out, and how their approaches differ.

  • Range of Reading

    Students read full-length nonfiction books, articles, and other informational texts on their own, without help. The goal is to handle grade-level reading confidently and understand what a text says without needing it explained to them.

Reading Foundational Skills
  • Print Concepts

    By fifth grade, students already know how print works. This standard confirms they can read a page, a caption, or a heading and understand how text is laid out and organized.

  • Phonological Awareness

    Students listen to spoken words and identify syllables and individual sounds within them. This is the ear-level work that supports spelling and reading aloud.

  • Phonics and Word Recognition

    Students use spelling patterns and word parts to figure out unfamiliar words while reading. This includes breaking longer words into prefixes, roots, and suffixes to get at meaning.

  • Students read aloud smoothly and accurately enough that the meaning of a passage comes through clearly. Speed and precision matter here, but only because they help students focus on understanding what they read.

Writing
  • Arguments

    Students write a paragraph or short essay that takes a clear position on a topic, then back it up with solid reasons and details pulled from what they read. The argument has to make sense, and the evidence has to actually support the claim.

  • Informative Texts

    Students write to explain a topic clearly, using facts and details to help a reader understand something they didn't before. The focus is accuracy and organization, not opinion.

  • Narratives

    Students write stories about real or imagined events, using specific details and a clear order of events to bring the experience to life on the page.

  • Coherent Writing

    Students write pieces that fit the job: the right structure, tone, and level of detail for whether they're telling a story, making an argument, or explaining something. The writing feels organized and matches who will read it.

  • Revision Process

    Students learn that writing isn't finished after the first draft. They plan, revise, edit, and sometimes start over to make a piece of writing clearer and stronger.

  • Use Technology

    Students type, format, and share their writing using a computer or tablet, then give and receive feedback from classmates online. The work goes beyond paper and reaches a real audience.

  • Research Projects

    Students pick a focused question and research it, then write up what they found. Short projects might take a few days; longer ones stretch over a week or more.

  • Gather Information

    Students find facts from books and websites, check whether each source can be trusted, and blend what they learn into their own words without copying.

  • Cite Evidence

    Students pull quotes or details from a story or article to back up their own ideas in writing. They explain how the evidence connects to their point, not just drop it in.

  • Range of Writing

    Students practice writing often, both in quick exercises and longer projects, for different reasons and different readers. The goal is to build the habit of writing for any situation school (or life) asks for.

Speaking and Listening
  • Collaborative Discussions

    Students come to a discussion ready to build on what classmates say, not just wait for a turn to talk. They add their own ideas clearly and try to bring others along to their point of view.

  • Integrate Information

    Students watch, listen to, or read something, a video, a chart, a speech, then judge whether the information holds up and explain how it connects to what they already know.

  • Evaluate Speaker

    Students listen to a speaker and judge whether the argument holds up: Is the reasoning sound? Does the evidence actually support the point? Students look past confident delivery to examine what the speaker is really claiming and how well they back it up.

  • Present Ideas

    Students give a short talk or presentation with a clear point and details that back it up. The structure and word choice fit the topic and the people listening.

  • Use Visual Displays

    Students choose charts, images, or other visuals to make a presentation clearer. The goal is to pick displays that help the audience understand, not just decorate the slides.

  • Adapt Speech

    Students practice switching how they talk depending on the situation, using formal language for a class presentation and a more relaxed tone with a small group. The goal is knowing which style fits.

Language
  • Standard Grammar

    Students apply standard grammar rules in their writing and speaking. This includes using correct verb tenses, pronouns, and sentence structure so their meaning comes through clearly.

  • Spelling and Punctuation

    Students apply capitalization, punctuation, and spelling rules correctly in their own writing. This means using commas, apostrophes, and capital letters in the right places without being reminded.

  • Students choose words and sentences that fit the moment, whether they are writing a story, an argument, or a text to a friend. Reading carefully shows them how other writers make the same choices.

  • Word Strategies

    When students hit an unfamiliar word, they use clues from nearby sentences, break the word into roots or prefixes, or look it up in a dictionary or glossary. The goal is to figure out what the word means well enough to keep reading and understanding.

  • Figurative Language

    Figurative language uses words in surprising ways to create a picture or feeling. Students learn to spot similes, metaphors, and idioms, and to notice how small differences in word choice can shift the meaning of a sentence.

  • Academic Vocabulary

    Students learn words that show up across subjects, like "analyze" or "evidence," and use them correctly in writing and conversation. The goal is the kind of vocabulary that helps students read harder texts and explain their thinking clearly.

Assessments
The state tests students at this grade and subject take.
State Summative

Smarter Balanced Assessment: ELA/Literacy (Grades 3-8)

Connecticut's spring summative test in reading and writing for grades 3 through 8, aligned to the Connecticut Core Standards for ELA.

When given:
spring
Frequency:
annual
Official source
Common Questions
  • What does fifth grade reading and writing look like overall?

    Students read longer books and articles on their own and explain what the text says using specific lines as proof. They write longer pieces with paragraphs that stick to one idea. Expect more opinion essays, research projects, and stories with real character development.

  • How can I help with reading at home in 10 minutes a day?

    After students read a chapter, ask one question that needs proof from the page: why did a character change, or what is the author really trying to say. Make them point to the sentence that shows it. This builds the habit of backing up ideas with evidence.

  • My child reads fine but struggles to explain what they read. What helps?

    Ask for a one-sentence summary after each chapter, then ask what details led to that summary. If they get stuck, reread the first and last paragraphs together. Most comprehension trouble at this age comes from skimming, not from decoding.

  • How should writing be sequenced across the year?

    Many teachers start with personal narrative to rebuild stamina, move to informational writing tied to a content unit, and end with argument writing once students can find and quote evidence. Research projects fit well in the second half once note-taking habits are in place.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Citing evidence accurately, summarizing without retelling every event, and using paragraphs to group ideas. Students also tend to struggle with comparing how two texts treat the same topic. Plan to revisit these across units rather than teach them once.

  • Does spelling and grammar still matter at this grade?

    Yes. Students are expected to write with correct capitalization, punctuation, and grade-level spelling, and to use verb tenses consistently. At home, a quick proofread of any written work catches most issues. In class, short daily editing tasks work better than long worksheets.

  • What kinds of books should students be reading?

    A mix of chapter books, nonfiction articles, and poems, with some texts that feel a little hard. Stretch books build vocabulary and stamina, while easier books build fluency and enjoyment. Reading aloud together still counts, even at this age.

  • How do I know students are ready for sixth grade?

    By spring, students should read a grade-level article and explain the main idea with two or three pieces of evidence, write a multi-paragraph essay with a clear position, and hold a focused discussion that builds on what others said. Speed matters less than accuracy and stamina.

  • How much should research and source-checking come up this year?

    Students do short research projects where they gather facts from a few sources, decide which sources to trust, and put information in their own words. At home, this is a good year to talk about why some websites are more reliable than others.