1st Grade ELA Vertical Planning
ELA skills spiral upward through increasingly complex texts, more sophisticated writing tasks, and deeper analysis. Vertical planning in ELA helps teachers see how foundational literacy skills — decoding, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension — layer into literary analysis, research writing, and rhetorical reasoning.
- ✓Decode consonant blends and digraphs
- ✓Read decodable texts with accuracy
- ✓Ask and answer questions about text
- ✓Write complete sentences with capitalization
Standards: 1.RF, 1.RI, 1.RL, 1.W
K–12 ELA Skill Progression
Generate a Vertical Plan for 1st Grade ELA
Use the AI to map skill progressions, identify gaps, and align curriculum across your grade band — customized for your standards and context.
Open Vertical Planning ToolKey Vertical Themes in English Language Arts
Letter sounds (K) → Word decoding (1–2) → Fluent reading (2–3) → Deep comprehension and analysis (4–12)
Literal recall (K–2) → Main idea and details (3) → Inference and text evidence (4–5) → Author's craft and purpose (6–8) → Rhetorical analysis (9–12)
Dictation and sentences (K–1) → Paragraph writing (2–3) → Multi-paragraph essays (4–5) → Argument and research writing (6–8) → College-level essays (9–12)
Sight words (K–2) → Academic vocabulary (3–5) → Tier 2 words in context (6–8) → Etymology, rhetoric, and discipline-specific terms (9–12)
Planning Considerations
- 1Track reading level progressions (Lexile bands) so you can identify incoming students who need intervention vs. extension.
- 2Coordinate writing rubric language across grades — using consistent terms like 'claim,' 'evidence,' and 'elaboration' reduces confusion.
- 3Note where close reading is first introduced (typically grade 3) and how depth of analysis increases each year.
- 4Align vocabulary instruction with the tiers your grade introduces — Tier 2 academic vocabulary is the biggest cross-grade gap.
- 5Ensure research skills are scaffolded: introducing sources and citations in 4th–5th grade prepares students for 6th-grade research projects.
Cross-Curricular Connections
- ↔Social Studies: Informational reading, primary source analysis, and argument writing are shared skills.
- ↔Science: Lab reports, reading scientific texts, and evidence-based explanations reinforce ELA informational writing skills.
- ↔Math: Word problems require reading comprehension; explaining mathematical reasoning develops academic writing.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I use vertical planning in ELA when texts change each year?
Focus on skills, not specific texts. The skill of 'using text evidence to support an inference' applies whether students are reading Charlotte's Web or The Outsiders.
How do reading and writing vertical planning connect?
They're mirrors — students who read complex texts develop the vocabulary and structures they use in writing. Aligning them vertically means both strands reinforce each other at each grade.
What do I check for in incoming 4th graders?
Fluency and decoding automaticity, ability to identify main idea and supporting details, and whether they can write a focused paragraph with a topic sentence.
How do I handle students who are behind grade-level in reading?
Use the differentiation tool to plan scaffolded reading tasks, and the reteach tool to address specific gaps like phonics or basic comprehension strategies.