Grade 4
English Language Arts: Reading Informational Text

Use the information below to get a deeper understanding of what your child has mastered and areas where your child may need more help. There are also resources you can use to find activities to support your child’s learning at home.

Help can I help my child progress?

Next Steps

Here are some exercises you can work on at home with your Grade 4 student.

Below Mastery

Ask your student to read articles and to describe the people, events, or ideas from the articles using details from the texts. Discuss the main ideas and the connections between ideas. Ask your student to tell you about the organization of the text and the author’s point of view.

At or Near Mastery

Ask your student to read several articles about a topic and to compare and contrast the ideas, organization, and points of view of the texts. Ask your student how charts, pictures, or diagrams help to explain the topic.

Above Mastery

Ask your student to read several texts about a topic and to compare and contrast the ideas, organization, and points of view. Ask your student to determine the evidence that supports each author’s ideas and how charts, pictures, or diagrams supplement the information.

Talking With Your Child's Teacher

This document titled “Moving Forward: A Guide for Conversations with Your Child’s Teacher” includes helpful tips and questions to discuss with the teacher about your child’s classroom performance, academic progress, and more.

Additional Free Resources Available to Support Your Child's Learning

Use this information to have a meaningful conversation with your child’s teacher about the skills and content in the grade level and to support your child’s learning at home.

An elated student raises her arms in the air after learning on a laptop computer.

What Can I Do to Help My Child?

Visit the college- and career-readiness resource hub for families to find tools to help your child achieve college and career readiness by the time they graduate from high school.
A teacher speaks to a student while holding a dry erase marker next to a whiteboard.

Talking with your child's teacher

This document titled “Moving Forward: A Guide for Conversations with Your Child’s Teacher” includes helpful tips and questions to discuss with the teacher about your child’s classroom performance, academic progress, and more.
A student types on a laptop.

Check Out the Test in Action

Visit the WVGSA practice test to become more familiar with test items and tools. Once there, just click "Sign In"!