4th Grade Wonders Unit 1: Text-Dependent Questions That are Planned for You! - Teaching in the Heart of Florida (2024)

Having text-dependent questions ready for reading instruction can make a teacher’s planning time go much quicker – which literally every teacher needs and wants! Does your school or district use McGraw Hill’s Reading Wonders reading series? If so, this 4th Grade Wonders Unit 1 reading resource of text-dependent questions is already planned for you!

4th Grade Wonders Unit 1: Text-Dependent Questions That are Planned for You! - Teaching in the Heart of Florida (1)

Week 1 & 2: Text-Dependent Questions & Graphic Organizers – Describe a Character

Unit 1 begins with two fun fairy tales focused on characters in “The Dragon Problem” and “The Princess and the Pizza”. These two stories align with R.L.4.3: Describe in depth a character, setting, or event in a story or drama, drawing on specific details in the text (e.g., a character’s thoughts, words, or actions).

For these two stories, the text-dependent questions are focused on the character’s thoughts, words, or actions. Students are required to use text evidence to support their answers. Hopefully, your 4th graders learned how to cite text evidence in 3rd grade, but if they need a refresher – you can get a really helpful reference sheet for them in my post Teach Students How to Cite Text Evidence with Sentence Starters.

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Also included is a sequence graphic organizer for both texts that helps students follow the plot and how the characters thoughts, words, and actions affect it.

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Week 3: Text-Dependent Questions & Graphic Organizers – Text Structure – Compare & Contrast

A focus on analyzing the text structure of informational text and how it helps the reader understand what the author wants them to know begins in week 3. The standards is: R.I.4.5: Describe the overall structure (e.g., chronology, comparison, cause/effect, problem/solution) of events, ideas, concepts, or information in a text or part of a text.

The text in this week is “A World of Change” and “Earthquakes”, with a focus on comparing and contrasting details in a graphic organizer.

Within this text are several text structures and the questions reflect that, so your students will get valuable practice identifying all of those.

Week 4: Text-Dependent Questions & Graphic Organizers – Text Structure – Cause & Effect

Text structure is continued in week 4, but is focused on cause & effect text structure to explain Force and Motion.

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Week 5: Text-Dependent Questions & Graphic Organizers – Main Idea & Key Details

The week 5 focus is all about the main idea and key details in two engaging informational texts about businesses giving back to the community and kids who start businesses that help people. The standard for 4th grade includes the ability to summarize the main idea and key details, so there is space for that on the graphic organizer page.

Text-Dependent Questions for Language Standards

Each week also includes text-dependent questions for language standards as well: Week 1 – Synonyms; Week 2 – Idioms; Week 3 – Multiple Meaning Words; Week 4 – Context Clues; and Week 5 – Greek and Latin Roots

Compare and Contrast Texts

Students will be able to compare the main Anthology text and the final Comparison text each week. They will use the graphic organizer to find details to compare and contrast, then write a summary to explain. Great opportunity for additional writing practice, using titles correctly, and transitional words and phrases!

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Week 6: Research and Review

Research and review are the main focus of week 6. I’ve included note-taking pages and a place to organize those notes. The generic format can be used with any research subject chosen. These pages can be copied as much as you need for your students!

All of this is available in a digital version too! Just assign to your students and let them go!

If you are teaching 4th-grade language arts AND use McGraw Hill’s Reading Wonders series, you need this packet of text-dependent questions! It will make your planning for reading instruction much quicker and you will know your students are getting really good reading response activities!

The best part of this resource is….answer keys for all of it!

By using this “Wonders 4th-Grade Unit 1 Text-Dependent Questions That Are Planned for You“, you can save so much precious time planning for reading instruction. Use that time for all the other important tasks you need to accomplish each week!

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>>> Want to try this resource first? Grab thisUnit 1, Week 4 lesson packetand try it out!

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4th Grade Wonders Unit 1: Text-Dependent Questions That are Planned for You! - Teaching in the Heart of Florida (2024)

FAQs

What are text-dependent questions? ›

TEXT DEPENDENT QUESTIONS require students to provide evidence directly from the text in their answers to questions. In order to ask these types of questions, teachers must have read the text in advance.

What is the grade 4 reading program? ›

A fourth grade reading program will cover all English language arts strands. These include vocabulary development, reading comprehension, literature, writing strategies, writing applications, English language conventions, listening, and speaking. Each area covered provides a critical contribution.

What reading skills do 4th graders need? ›

In 4th and 5th grades, readers lift information from the text to support their explanations and inferences. Using a variety of texts, they are able to determine themes, summarize content, consider different perspectives, and compare and contrast various story elements with detail.

How to make text-dependent questions? ›

Text-dependent questions typically begin by exploring specific words, details, and arguments, and then move on to examine the impact of those specifics on the text as a whole. Along the way, they target academic vocabulary and specific sentence structures as critical focus points for gaining comprehension.

What are good text questions? ›

Beginner questions to ask someone you like
  • Where did you grow up?
  • What's something you're looking forward to?
  • What's the best compliment you've ever received?
  • In what ways do you think we're similar?
  • Sweet or savory breakfast?
  • What's your current hyperfixation meal?
  • Are you a morning person or a night owl?
Mar 28, 2024

What is taught in 4th grade ELA? ›

Our 4th grade language arts curriculum lessons focus on parts of speech, similes and metaphors, punctuation, double negatives, and spelling. Fourth graders will continue to review the grammar rules they have learned to this point, and will add new concepts such as: Rules of spelling. Proper and common nouns.

What reading level is 4th grade? ›

The approximate levels for each grade are as follows: Kindergarten to 1st grade from 0-530, 2nd grade from 420-650, 3rd grade from 620-820, 4th grade from 740-940, 5th grade from 830-1030, 6th to 8th grade from 1010-1205 and 9th to 12th grade from 1050-1605.

What percentage of 4th graders are proficient in reading? ›

In 2022, the percentage of fourth-grade public school students performing at or above the NAEP Proficient level in reading was 32 percent nationally.

How to start a topic sentence in 4th grade? ›

How to write a topic sentence
  1. Identify the main point in your piece of writing. Think about the overall topic for your writing. ...
  2. Write a sentence that connects to your main idea with a what and a why. ...
  3. Use the sentence you created as an opening statement. ...
  4. Create the first sentence in each supporting paragraph.
Jul 31, 2023

What is a fun way to teach the main idea? ›

One of my favorite introductory activities for main topic OR main idea is mystery bags! Depending on which one you're teaching, you place four cards into a special bin or paper bag. Students pull out all four clues and determine the main topic and/or main idea.

What is a main idea example? ›

The main idea is a sentence that provides the subject for discussion; it is the topic sentence. It is usually supported by a list of details. If you can tell what the supporting details have in common, you can discover the main idea. great heat of the desert sun at noon and in the bitter cold of the desert at night.

What do 4th graders like to do for fun? ›

50 Activities for 4th Grade
  • Set learning goals. ...
  • Draw with symmetry. ...
  • Visualize idioms. ...
  • Create a historical survival guide. ...
  • Tell tall tales. ...
  • Create a community field guide. ...
  • Craft a concrete poem. ...
  • Design a vision Board.

How many minutes should a 4th grader read per day? ›

Fourth graders read every day.

Their stamina for independent reading increases to 30-35 minutes or longer.

What is the difference between text dependent and non text dependent questions? ›

Non-text dependent questions ask students to communicate their own thinking, self expression and exploration. Text-dependent questions ask students to respond to sources and answer questions by drawing on evidence from the text in support of their ideas.

What are the essential questions for text dependent analysis? ›

  • Literal understanding. • What does the text say?
  • Analytical understanding. • How does the text work?
  • • How does the author convey his or her meaning?
  • • What does the text mean? Evaluative understanding.
  • • Why did the author write this text?
  • Teacher moves. Student moves.

What is text-dependent writing? ›

Text-dependent analysis writing instructs students to provide specific evidence from the passages they read, while demonstrating the ability to interpret the meaning behind the evidence they provide.

What are TDQ questions? ›

TDQs are questions that cannot be answered without referring back to the text. To answer a TDQ, students must read closely to determine what the text says and draw logical conclusions from the text. It is important to employ TDQs, because questions that are not text-dependent result in less learning.

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