4th Grade English Language Arts Scope & Sequence Guide
An ELA scope and sequence integrates reading, writing, speaking, and language standards — typically organized by genre study, with reading and writing instruction spiraling together across quarters.
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ELA pacing is most effective when reading and writing are paired by genre — narrative reading alongside narrative writing, informational text alongside research and essay writing. Language and vocabulary instruction should be embedded throughout rather than isolated. Plan 4–6 genre-based units per year with word study and discussion standards woven into each.
Typical Units for 4th Grade ELA
Unit 1: Narrative Reading & Writing
7–9 weeksStory elements, character development, narrative craft, and personal narrative writing
Key Standards Focus
- ›RL standards: story elements, theme, character
- ›W standards: narrative writing
- ›Language: figurative language, word choice
Unit 2: Informational Text & Research Writing
8–10 weeksMain idea, text features, note-taking, research skills, and expository writing
Key Standards Focus
- ›RI standards: main idea, text structure, evidence
- ›W standards: informative/explanatory writing
- ›Language: domain-specific vocabulary
Unit 3: Opinion & Argument Writing
7–8 weeksDistinguishing fact from opinion, text-based evidence, and argument or opinion writing
Key Standards Focus
- ›RI/RL standards: text evidence and author's purpose
- ›W standards: opinion/argument writing
- ›Speaking: discussion norms, listening, responding
Unit 4: Poetry, Drama & Extended Text Study
5–7 weeksGenre variety, structural elements of poetry and drama, and close reading of a longer text
Key Standards Focus
- ›RL standards: poetry elements, drama structure
- ›RL: comparing and contrasting texts
- ›Language: tone, mood, figurative language
Assessment Windows
Pacing Considerations
- ›Anchor each unit to a mentor text (or anchor text) that you teach deeply rather than many texts shallowly
- ›Writing process takes longer than one class period — plan drafting, revision, and editing as separate days
- ›Independent reading volume matters — build sustained reading time into the weekly schedule
- ›Book clubs or literature circles require explicit setup time in Q1 before running independently
- ›Vocabulary instruction is most effective when words come from the texts students are already reading
Vertical Alignment
From Prior Grade
Students should arrive with prior-grade reading level fluency, narrative writing experience, and basic paragraph structure — your Q1 launch should diagnose and build from this baseline
Toward Next Grade
Students should leave with the ability to write a multi-paragraph organized response with text evidence — this is the non-negotiable handoff to the next grade
Planning Tips
Frequently Asked Questions
Should reading and writing be separate units or integrated?
Integrated is more effective. Students who read narrative texts while studying narrative writing develop voice and craft faster than those whose reading and writing are disconnected. Pair each genre study across both domains.
How do I fit all the ELA standards into a year-long scope and sequence?
Not every standard needs its own unit. Cluster standards by genre and embed language and speaking/listening standards across all units. Identify the 3–4 'major' clusters in your state framework and build those as full units. Cover supporting standards within those units.