Home > Language Arts > Punctuation > Grade 4
Children in Grade 4 will have varying degrees of competency when it comes to how they use punctuation. One common issue you may find is that your child forgets to end their sentences using the correct punctuation. This comes with practice and it can help for children to read their writing aloud once they've completed it.
This guide focuses on new skills your fourth grader will develop at this stage in their elementary language arts journey. We’ll show you how they can use quotation marks to pick out sections of text, whilst also looking at a variety of ways that they can use the comma when structuring more complex sentences. Let's get started!
Here are two of the ways we use quotation marks:
You’ll find examples of how to use quotation marks in direct speech in our third grade punctuation page.
Before they move on to more complex topics, your child can consolidate their knowledge of direct speech with this lesson on Night Zookeeper:
When your third grader is writing about or answering questions on a text they have read, they need to give evidence for the claims they make. Evidence is often a quotation from the text and is punctuated with quotation marks.
There are two uses of quotation marks in this context:
- for book titles
- for the words you have quoted from the text
Look at this example, citing the book The Giraffes of Whispering Wood by Joshua Davidson:
- In “The Giraffes of Whispering Wood”, Will’s teacher, Mrs Barnes, does not like his painting of a purple elephant. On page 25, when Mrs Barnes looked at Will’s painting she “wrinkled her nose and tutted three times.” This shows that she didn’t like the painting.
The comma is a punctuation mark that we use to separate parts of a sentence and words within a sentence.
We use a comma to separate items in a list. For example:
- Night Zookeeper Will wears a hat, coat, and tie.
Commas are important when writing a letter. Use a comma in the date, the greeting, and the closing. When writing an address on an envelope, remember to use a comma between the city and state.
When writing an address in a sentence, use commas after each part of the address. For example:
- The Professor lives at 5 Igloo Street, Iceberg, Igloo City, The Night Zoo.
A comma is also used before a coordinating conjunction in a compound sentence.
A compound sentence is made up of two independent clauses. An independent clause is a complete thought that makes sense as a sentence on its own.
This is an example of a compound sentence all about ants!
Your child can complete the remainder of this lesson on Night Zookeeper to practice their use of commas in compound sentences.
Looking for a fantastically fun way to boost your child's reading & writing skills? Night Zookeeper can help!
Our language arts program has been created to help children in Grades 1 to 6 improve their reading and writing, with an emphasis on boosting grammar, spelling, and punctuation skills. Whether used as an additional resource to help your fourth grader develop their punctuation skills, or as a complete homeschool language arts curriculum, Night Zookeeper can support you and your child through their learning journey!
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