Fourth Grade Ela Reading Fiction Worksheets
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- Elements of a Story: Circle Chart
Use this graphic organizer to help your students identify the four elements of a fictional story: characters, setting, problem, and solution.
- The Wizard of Oz Setting
Is your child having trouble with reading comprehension? The wizard can help!
- Endangered Species: Red-Shanked Douc Langur
Get to know one of the most unique and colorful monkeys, the red-shanked douc langur. Read about why they are an endangered species with this info-sheet.
- Sinbad the Sailor
Go on a reading adventure with Sinbad the Sailor, a hero of Middle Eastern myth and a great excuse to practice reading comprehension.
- Making Connections: Thinking Stems
These thinking stems will set the stage for a rich reading environment and spark thoughtful reading responses.
- Literature Response Reflection Cards
Help your students think deeply about literature with these helpful conversation starters.
- Making Predictions Task Cards
Use these task cards to get your reflective readers making and adjusting predictions about their texts.
- Endangered Species: Black-Footed Ferret
Get in tune with nature, and read a bit about an endangered species of animal, the Black-footed Ferret. Your child can color an illustration as he reads.
- Problem & Solution Organizer
Use an open-ended graphic organizer to help your students identify the problem and solution in three stories.
- Characters in Books
Learn all about characters and their motives with this worksheet that deconstructs the children's classic, Peter Rabbit.
- Poetry Guide
This comprehensive exercise will introduce your students to twelve elements of poetry and six types of poems.
- The Boy Who Cried Wolf: Making Text Connections
Students will make meaningful connections between an adapted story from Aesop’s Fables and the world around them!
- Temple of Artemis
Take a trip back in time to visit the temple of the Greek goddess of the hunt, Artemis!
- What is Nonfiction?
Learn about famous nonfiction writers such as Henry David Thoreau and Jack London in this fun worksheet, then try writing some nonfiction yourself.
- Asking Questions: Before, During, and After
This is a comprehension resource for students to record their questions before, during, and after they have read nonfiction text.
- Endangered Species: Baird's Tapir
Introduce your child to a fascinating new animal, the Baird's tapir. This is just one of many endangered species around the world.
- Let’s Investigate!
Kids identify information about characters and setting in this worksheet.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt Biography
Learn more about FDR and his influence on the country in this biography worksheet.
- Colossus of Rhodes
Get to know this towering wonder of the ancient world and discover the inspiration for its creation.
- The Crane Wife
Read through this version of The Crane Wife and answer comprehension questions along the way.
- Making Connections Between Fiction and Nonfiction
Use this organizer to compare facts from a nonfiction text with examples from a novel or short story.
- Making Connections Part 2: Literary Response
Practice strategic reading and allow children to monitor their own thinking and make connections between texts and life.
- Comparing Two Fiction Texts
This resource gives your students the chance to read two fiction texts and compare and contrast the characters, setting, and plot.
- Fantasy Genre Discussion Cards
Use these discussion cards to get your students talking about the elements that are unique to the fantasy genre.