Skip to content

What does a student learn in ?

This is the year reading and writing start asking for proof. When students share what a story or article means, they have to point to the words on the page that show it. In writing, they move past one good paragraph to a full piece with a clear point, reasons, and an ending that ties it together. By spring, students can read a chapter book or article and write a few organized paragraphs that back up an opinion with details from the text.

Illustration of what students learn in Grade 4 English Language Arts
  • Citing evidence
  • Main idea and theme
  • Opinion writing
  • Paragraph writing
  • Vocabulary and word roots
  • Group discussion
Source: New York P-12 Learning 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

    Reading longer, harder books

    Students move into chapter books and longer articles. They learn to point to the exact line that proves their answer instead of just guessing what the author meant.

  2. 2

    Theme, main idea, and summary

    Students figure out the lesson behind a story and the main point of an article. They learn to retell what they read in a few sentences without leaving out the important parts.

  3. 3

    Building a stronger vocabulary

    Students use clues in the sentence to figure out new words, and they start spotting Greek and Latin word parts like photo or graph. They also learn what similes, idioms, and sayings actually mean.

  4. 4

    Writing with a clear point

    Students write essays that take a position and back it up with reasons and examples. They learn to organize paragraphs, use linking words, and end with a real conclusion instead of trailing off.

  5. 5

    Storytelling and research projects

    Students write stories with dialogue, sensory details, and a clear ending. They also research a topic using more than one source, take notes, and present what they learned to the class.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 4.
Language
Standard Definition Code

How language works in writing and speech

Students apply what they know about grammar, word choice, and sentence structure to make their writing clearer and their speaking more precise. This standard shows up across reading, writing, and conversation.

NY-4L3

Figuring out what unfamiliar words mean

Students figure out what an unfamiliar word means by using context clues, word parts, or a dictionary. They also recognize when a word has more than one meaning and decide which meaning fits the sentence.

NY-4L4

Figurative language and word meanings

Students learn to spot figurative language like similes and metaphors, and explore how words relate to each other in meaning. They notice shades of difference between similar words, like the gap between "annoyed" and "furious."

NY-4L5

Precise words for actions, emotions, and topics

Students build vocabulary for school subjects by learning precise words that show exactly how someone acts or feels, like "stammered" instead of "talked," and topic-specific words needed to discuss subjects like science or history.

NY-4L6

Choosing the right word for the idea

Students pick the exact word that says what they mean, not just a word that's close enough. They practice swapping vague words like "nice" or "big" for ones that fit the sentence better.

NY-4L3a

Choosing punctuation for effect

Students learn that a period, question mark, or comma can change how a sentence sounds to a reader. They practice picking the right punctuation to make a sentence land the way they intended.

NY-4L3b

Formal vs. informal English

Students learn when to use formal language, like in a presentation, and when casual language is fine, like talking with a small group. It's the difference between how you'd address a class and how you'd chat with a friend.

NY-4L3c

Using context clues to figure out new words

When students run into an unfamiliar word, they look at the sentences around it for clues. A nearby definition, example, or repeated idea can reveal what the word means without a dictionary.

NY-4L4a

Greek and Latin roots unlock word meanings

Students use familiar Greek and Latin word parts, like "graph" or "auto," to figure out the meaning of an unfamiliar word. Seeing those parts as clues helps students decode new vocabulary without stopping to look every word up.

NY-4L4b

Looking up words in a dictionary

Students look up unfamiliar words in a dictionary or thesaurus to check how a word is pronounced and what it means. They use these tools to pin down the exact meaning, not just a rough guess.

NY-4L4c

Similes and metaphors in context

Students spot comparisons like "the wind is a broom" or "her smile is as bright as the sun" and explain in their own words what the writer meant.

NY-4L5a

Idioms, adages, and proverbs

Students read phrases like "it's raining cats and dogs" or "don't cry over spilled milk" and explain what they actually mean. These sayings don't mean what the words literally say, and students learn to figure out the real message behind them.

NY-4L5b

Words with opposite and similar meanings

Students practice matching words to others that mean the same thing or the opposite. This builds a stronger working vocabulary for reading and writing.

NY-4L5c
Reading
Standard Definition Code

How characters, settings, and events work

Reading closely, students pick out specific details from a story or article to describe a character, setting, or event, and explain what happened and why. The details come from the text itself, not from memory or guessing.

NY-4R3

Reading between the lines: figurative language and word

Students figure out what unfamiliar words and phrases mean while reading, including figurative language and subject-specific vocabulary. Context clues, word parts, and other tools help them work out meaning without stopping the story or article cold.

NY-4R4

How texts are built and organized

Students learn to name and explain how a text is built. In a poem, that means spotting rhythm and verses; in a story, characters and dialogue; in a nonfiction piece, how the author organized ideas using sequence, comparison, or cause and effect.

NY-4R5

Who's telling the story, and how do you know

Students compare two stories to spot who's telling each one and how that shapes what readers learn, or look at a firsthand account of an event alongside a later retelling to see how the same topic can sound different.

NY-4R6

Charts, graphs, and pictures support the text

Students look at charts, graphs, timelines, and illustrations in a text and explain what those visuals add that the words alone don't show.

NY-4R7

How authors back up their claims

Students find the main point an author is making, then explain which facts, details, or examples from the text back it up.

NY-4R8

Connecting books to life and other texts

Students read two or more texts and explain what they have in common, connecting stories or articles to other books, historical periods, or their own experiences.

NY-4R9
Reading Foundational Skills
Standard Definition Code

Decoding words with phonics skills

Students use phonics rules to sound out and read unfamiliar words on the page. This includes breaking words into syllables, spotting prefixes and suffixes, and recognizing spelling patterns they have learned in class.

NY-4RF3

Reading smoothly enough to understand

Reading at grade level means more than sounding out words. Students read fourth-grade passages smoothly and accurately enough to focus on what the text means, not just how it sounds.

NY-4RF4

Decoding long words using letters and syllables

Students decode long unfamiliar words by using letter sounds, syllable patterns, and word parts like prefixes and suffixes. This works both inside a sentence and when the word stands alone.

NY-4RF3a

Decoding long unfamiliar words

Students break unfamiliar long words into parts, using letter sounds, syllables, and word pieces like prefixes and suffixes, to read them correctly. This works whether the word appears in a sentence or on its own.

NY-4RF3b

Reading aloud with fluency and expression

Reading aloud gets smoother each time students practice. Students work on saying words correctly, keeping a steady pace, and letting their voice match the feeling of the text, whether it's a story or a nonfiction piece.

NY-4RF4a

Self-correcting while reading

When students hit a word that doesn't make sense, they use the surrounding sentences to figure it out and reread if needed.

NY-4RF4b
Reading: Literature
Standard Definition Code

Finding proof in the text

Students find the exact words in a story or poem that support what they think it means. They point to lines in the text, whether the answer is stated outright or they have to read between the lines.

NY-4R1

Finding theme, main idea, and summary

Students figure out the big lesson a story or poem is teaching, then back it up with details from the text. For nonfiction, they find the main point the author is making and sum up the whole piece in their own words.

NY-4R2
Speaking and Listening
Standard Definition Code

Group discussions using what you've read

Students come to class discussions having already read or studied the material, then use what they know to add something real to the conversation, not just agree with whoever spoke last.

NY-4SL1

Putting information into your own words

Students listen to or watch something, like a short video, a graph, or a spoken presentation, then put the key information into their own words.

NY-4SL2

Judging a speaker's reasons and evidence

Students listen to a speaker and decide whether the reasons and examples given actually back up the speaker's main point. They learn to tell the difference between a strong argument and a weak one.

NY-4SL3

Giving a clear, organized spoken report

Students give a short report, retell a story, or share a real experience out loud, picking details that matter and speaking at a pace and volume the audience can follow.

NY-4SL4

Adding visuals to strengthen a presentation

Students add photos, video clips, or charts to a presentation to make the main idea clearer. The visuals do real work, not just decoration.

NY-4SL5

When to use formal vs. informal English

Students learn when to switch between casual speech and more formal language, like the difference between talking with friends at recess and presenting to the class. They practice using formal English when the moment calls for it.

NY-4SL6

Discussion rules and assigned roles

Students learn to take turns, listen to others, and fill a specific role in a group conversation, like note-taker or discussion leader.

NY-4SL1b

Asking follow-up questions in group discussions

Students ask follow-up questions when something is unclear and connect their own comments to what classmates just said. The goal is a real back-and-forth, not a series of separate answers.

NY-4SL1c

Wrap up a discussion in your own words

At the end of a group discussion, students look back at what was said and explain what they think, using the conversation to sharpen their own ideas.

NY-4SL1d
Writing
Standard Definition Code

Opinion writing with reasons and evidence

Students pick a position on a topic, back it up with reasons and evidence from what they've read, and wrap it up with a closing statement. The writing makes a clear case, not just a summary.

NY-4W1

How to write about a topic clearly

Students pick a topic and write a clear explanation of it, using facts and details that actually matter. Think book reports, how-things-work paragraphs, or any piece that teaches the reader something true.

NY-4W2

Writing stories with a beginning, middle, and end

Students write a story, real or made-up, with a clear beginning, middle, and end. They use details that put the reader inside the scene and keep events in an order that makes sense.

NY-4W3

Creative writing inspired by reading

Students write or create something in response to a book, a theme, or a personal experience. That might mean a poem, a short story, a play, or another creative work.

NY-4W4

Using text evidence to support writing

Students pull quotes and details from a book or article to back up what they write. This could be answering a question about a story, reflecting on an idea, or supporting a research topic.

NY-4W5

Research a topic using multiple sources

Students pick a question about a topic, then look through several sources to find answers and piece together what they've learned. The goal is to understand the topic more deeply, not just collect facts.

NY-4W6

Research notes and sources

Students pick a topic, gather facts from books or websites, and take notes they can organize into categories. They also keep a list of where each fact came from.

NY-4W7

Making a clear argument with evidence

Students pick a clear position on a topic, then back it up with facts arranged in a logical order so a reader can follow the thinking.

NY-4W1a

Choosing the right words for the topic

Students choose exact words that fit the topic, swapping vague words like "good" or "thing" for specific ones like "effective" or "evidence." Precise word choice makes an argument clearer and easier to follow.

NY-4W1b

Transition words that link ideas

Transitional words like "also," "for example," and "however" help connect one idea to the next. Students practice choosing and placing those words so a paragraph holds together instead of feeling like a list of unrelated sentences.

NY-4W1c

How to end an argument in writing

Students write a closing sentence or paragraph that wraps up their argument. It doesn't just stop mid-thought; it leaves the reader with a clear sense of what the student believes and why it matters.

NY-4W1d

Organize an essay with clear paragraphs

Writing starts with a clear topic sentence, then groups related details into paragraphs so readers can follow the ideas. Students practice building that organized structure before adding evidence or explanation.

NY-4W2a

Facts and details that support a topic

Students back up their writing about a topic with facts, definitions, and specific details. They may also add headings, diagrams, or other text features to help readers follow along.

NY-4W2b

Choosing the right words for the topic

Students choose exact words that fit the topic, swapping vague words like "good" or "thing" for specific ones that a reader could picture or use.

NY-4W2c

Transition words that connect ideas

Transitional words and phrases link ideas inside a paragraph so writing doesn't jump from point to point. Students practice words like "also," "another," and "for example" to keep a reader from getting lost.

NY-4W2d

Wrap up writing with a strong conclusion

Students write a closing sentence or short paragraph that wraps up what they explained. The ending connects back to the main idea instead of just stopping.

NY-4W2e

Story openings with a narrator and characters

Students open a narrative by setting up the situation and naming who the story is about, whether that's a narrator telling the tale or a character stepping into it.

NY-4W3a

Dialogue and description in stories

Stories come alive through what characters say and do. Students write dialogue and describe what characters think and feel to show how people respond when something happens.

NY-4W3b

Transition words that connect story events

Transitional words and phrases (like "later," "after that," and "finally") keep a story's events in the right order. Students use these signal words to guide readers smoothly from one moment to the next.

NY-4W3c

Sensory details that make writing vivid

Writing a story means choosing words that help readers see, hear, and feel what happened. Students pick specific details ("the cold metal swing" instead of "the swing") to make scenes come alive on the page.

NY-4W3d

Story endings that wrap things up

Students write an ending that grows naturally out of what happened in their story, not one that feels tacked on or random.

NY-4W3e
Assessments
The state tests students at this grade and subject take.
State test

Grade 4 English Language Arts Test

All New York public school students take this reading and writing test in the spring of grade 4. Students read short passages and answer multiple-choice and written-response questions tied to what they read.

When given:
Spring of grade 4
Frequency:
Annual
Official source
English language

NYSESLAT (NY State English as a Second Language Achievement Test)

The annual test New York gives to students who have been identified as English Language Learners. It checks speaking, listening, reading, and writing in English and decides whether a student is ready to exit ENL services.

When given:
Spring window each year
Frequency:
Annual
Official source
English language

NYSITELL (NY State Identification Test for English Language Learners)

The placement test New York gives to students within ten school days of enrolling, when a parent survey suggests the student may need English language services. Results decide whether the student is identified as an English Language Learner.

When given:
At enrollment, when a Home Language Questionnaire suggests a possible ELL
Frequency:
One-time per new student
Official source
Alternate assessment

NYSAA (New York State Alternate Assessment)

The alternate state test for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities. NYSAA replaces the Grade 3-8 tests and Regents exams in ELA, math, and science for the small group of students whose IEP teams qualify them.

When given:
Spring window each year
Frequency:
Annual
Official source
Common Questions
  • What does fourth grade reading and writing look like overall?

    Students read longer stories and articles and back up their answers with details from the text. In writing, they learn to take a position, give reasons, and organize a few paragraphs around one idea. They also write stories with dialogue and informational pieces that explain a topic.

  • How can I help my child at home if they get stuck on a hard word?

    Ask them to look for smaller word parts they already know, like a root or a prefix such as un- or re-. Then have them reread the sentence and guess what would make sense. If they still aren't sure, look it up together in a dictionary or on a phone.

  • What should my child be writing by the end of the year?

    A clear paragraph or short essay that states an opinion and gives two or three reasons with examples. Stories should have a beginning, middle, and end, with dialogue and details that show what characters think and feel. Spelling and punctuation should be mostly correct.

  • How should I sequence writing across the year?

    Start with narrative in the fall so students get comfortable with paragraphs, dialogue, and sequence words. Move to informational writing in the winter, where they practice grouping facts into sections. Save opinion and argument writing for spring, once students can support a point with reasons and evidence from a text.

  • What does it mean to cite evidence from the text?

    When students answer a question about a reading, they point to the exact sentence or detail that shows where they got the answer. Instead of saying the character was brave, they say so and quote the line where the character stood up to a bully. This habit is a big shift from third grade.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching in fourth grade?

    Theme and main idea are the hardest. Students confuse the topic of a text with its message, and they often retell instead of summarize. Plan to revisit both skills several times across the year with shorter texts before asking for them on longer ones.

  • How can I help my child read more fluently at home?

    Have them read aloud for about ten minutes a day from a book they enjoy. If they stumble on a sentence, ask them to read it again so it sounds smooth. Reading the same favorite chapter twice in a week builds confidence and speed.

  • How do I know a student is ready for fifth grade?

    They can read a grade-level article, summarize it in a few sentences, and answer questions using specific details from the text. In writing, they can produce a multi-paragraph piece with a clear claim, supporting reasons, and a conclusion. They also use commas, quotation marks, and capital letters correctly most of the time.

  • What about figurative language like similes and idioms?

    Students learn to explain what phrases like raining cats and dogs or as quiet as a mouse actually mean. At home, point these out when reading or watching shows together and ask what the speaker really meant. It builds the habit of noticing how language works.