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What does a student learn in ?

Fifth grade is the year reading and writing get sharper and more grown-up. Students back up what they say about a book or article with specific lines from the text, and they notice how an author's word choice shapes the mood. In their own writing, they take a clear position, line up reasons in order, and tie everything together with words like however and moreover. By spring, students can write a short argument with a clear claim, real evidence, and a conclusion that ties it up.

Illustration of what students learn in Grade 5 English Language Arts
  • Citing evidence
  • Argument writing
  • Main idea and theme
  • Comparing points of view
  • Word meaning
  • Group discussions
Source: New York P-12 Learning Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Settling into fifth grade reading

    Students dig back into longer chapter books and articles, pointing to specific lines that prove what they think. They start summarizing what a story or article is really about instead of just retelling it.

  2. 2

    Comparing characters and ideas

    Students look at two characters, two settings, or two news articles side by side and notice how they line up and where they differ. They also start tracking how an author builds an argument with reasons.

  3. 3

    Writing with reasons and structure

    Students write longer pieces that take a position, explain a topic, or tell a story. Paragraphs get organized, and students use linking words like however and in addition to connect ideas.

  4. 4

    Research and presenting

    Students gather facts from a few different sources to answer a question, then put their notes in their own words and list where the information came from. They share findings out loud, sometimes with slides or images.

  5. 5

    Word study and figurative language

    Students figure out tricky words by using context, Greek and Latin roots, or a dictionary. They also start catching similes, metaphors, and common sayings in what they read.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 5.
Language
  • How language works in writing and speech

    Students apply what they know about grammar and word choice to make their writing clearer and their speaking more precise. This standard shows up across reading and listening too, not just on writing assignments.

  • Figuring out unfamiliar words

    When students hit an unfamiliar word, they figure out its meaning by using context clues, word roots, or a dictionary. This standard covers words that have more than one meaning, too.

  • Figurative language and word meanings

    Figurative language shows up when words mean more than what they literally say. Students learn to spot phrases like "raining cats and dogs," see how words connect to each other, and notice the small differences in meaning between similar words.

  • Transition words and academic vocabulary

    Students learn words that connect and contrast ideas, like "however," "although," and "moreover," and practice using them accurately in writing and speech.

  • Shaping sentences for meaning and style

    Students learn to stretch a short sentence into a longer one, or tighten a wordy sentence into something sharper. The goal is a sentence that sounds right and keeps the reader interested.

  • Dialects and registers in literature

    Students read stories, poems, or plays and notice how characters or speakers use different styles of English. They explain what makes those speech styles different from each other and what effect each one creates.

  • Using context clues to figure out words

    Students use clues from the surrounding sentences to figure out what an unfamiliar word means. A comparison or cause-and-effect relationship in the passage can point to the right meaning without a dictionary.

  • Greek and Latin roots unlock word meaning

    Students use familiar Greek and Latin word parts, like "photo" (light) or "bio" (life), to figure out the meaning of unfamiliar words. Knowing a handful of roots unlocks the meaning of hundreds of words across subjects.

  • Looking up words in a dictionary

    Students look up unfamiliar words in a dictionary or thesaurus to confirm what a word means and how to say it out loud. The goal is precision: finding the exact right meaning, not just a close one.

  • Similes and metaphors in context

    Similes and metaphors say one thing is like another to make writing more vivid. Students read sentences in context and figure out what those comparisons actually mean.

  • Idioms, adages, and proverbs

    Students read familiar sayings like "the early bird catches the worm" and explain what they actually mean. The words don't mean what they say literally, and students figure out the real message behind them.

  • Word relationships: synonyms, antonyms, homographs

    Students learn new words by comparing them to words they already know. Recognizing that "hot" and "cold" are opposites, or that "bark" means two different things, helps students nail down exactly what each word means.

Reading
  • Finding evidence in what you read

    Students find specific lines or details in a text to back up what they say about it. They also read between the lines to figure out what the author implies but never says directly.

  • Theme, central idea, and summary

    Students figure out the big message or main point of a story or article, then explain which details from the text back it up. They also write a short summary of what the text is mostly about.

  • Comparing characters, settings, and events in text

    Students compare two characters, settings, or events in a story using details from the text, or explain how two people, ideas, or events connect in a nonfiction piece by pointing to specific evidence.

  • Figuring out what words really mean

    Students figure out what unfamiliar words and phrases mean in a text, including figurative language and subject-specific vocabulary, then explain how those word choices shape the feeling or message of the passage.

  • How text structure shapes the whole piece

    Students look at how a story's chapters, a play's scenes, or a poem's stanzas build on each other to shape the whole piece. For nonfiction, students compare how two texts are organized, spotting patterns like cause and effect or problem and solution.

  • Point of view shapes what the story tells you

    In stories, students explain how the narrator's point of view shapes the way events are described. In nonfiction, students compare two accounts of the same event and spot where the authors agree or see things differently.

  • Pictures and text working together

    Students look at photos, maps, charts, or other visuals in a text and explain how those images add to or change what the words alone are saying.

  • Finding evidence that supports a claim

    Students read a nonfiction or fiction text and figure out which facts, details, or examples back up each main point the author is making. They explain the connection between each piece of evidence and the claim it supports.

  • Judging and connecting texts

    Students sort and judge texts using set criteria, then connect what they read to other books, ideas, or their own life. The focus is on thinking critically about what makes a text good and where it fits alongside other things they have read.

Reading Foundational Skills
  • Decoding words with phonics

    Students break down unfamiliar words by recognizing spelling patterns, prefixes, suffixes, and roots. This helps them read new words accurately without stopping to guess.

  • Read fluently enough to understand

    Reading grade-level passages smoothly and accurately enough that decoding doesn't get in the way of understanding what the text means.

  • Decoding long, unfamiliar words

    Students use what they know about letter sounds, syllables, and word parts like prefixes and suffixes to read long, unfamiliar words. This applies whether the word appears in a sentence or on its own.

  • Reading aloud with accuracy and expression

    Reading aloud gets smoother every time students practice. Students work on reading grade-level stories and nonfiction passages with the right pace and expression, not just correct words.

  • Self-correcting while reading

    When a sentence doesn't make sense, students go back and reread to check that they read a word correctly and understood what it means.

Speaking and Listening
  • Group discussion and talking through ideas

    Students read or study the material before a group discussion, then use what they learned to add to the conversation, ask questions, and push the ideas further.

  • Summarizing information from charts, videos, and talks

    Students watch, listen to, or read something presented as a chart, graph, video, or spoken talk, then put the main ideas into their own words.

  • Evaluate a speaker's evidence and reasoning

    Students listen to a speaker and decide whether the reasons and examples given actually back up the speaker's main points. They judge whether the support is convincing or falls short.

  • Reporting on a topic clearly and in order

    Students pick a topic, organize their main points in a clear order, and present supporting facts and details out loud. They speak at a pace and volume the audience can follow.

  • Adding visuals and media to presentations

    Students add images, video, or charts to a presentation to make the main idea clearer and more memorable. The visuals do real work, not just decoration.

  • Formal vs. casual speaking

    Students adjust how they talk depending on the situation, using formal language for a presentation or class discussion and more casual language when working with a partner.

  • Follow rules and take on a discussion role

    Students take part in class discussions by following the group's agreed rules and doing their assigned job, whether that means keeping notes, leading the conversation, or making sure everyone gets a turn to speak.

  • Building on what others say in a discussion

    Students ask focused questions and build on what classmates say, adding detail or a new angle instead of just agreeing or repeating.

  • Drawing conclusions from group discussions

    After a group discussion, students think about what was said and decide what they actually learned or now believe. The focus is on drawing a real conclusion, not just summarizing what others said.

Writing
  • Arguing a point with evidence

    Students write a persuasive piece that takes a clear position and backs it up with reasons and facts from what they've read or studied.

  • Informational writing about a topic

    Students write a focused nonfiction piece on a topic, pulling in facts and details that actually explain it. The goal is a reader who finishes knowing something they didn't before.

  • Story writing with vivid details

    Students write stories, real or made-up, with a clear beginning, middle, and end. They use specific details and pacing to pull readers through what happens.

  • Write creatively in response to a text

    Students read or experience something, then respond by writing a poem, story, or short play. The response shows what the text or experience meant to them, in their own words and form.

  • Using text evidence to support ideas

    Students pull quotes and details from stories or nonfiction passages to back up their written analysis. The evidence has to connect clearly to the point they are making.

  • Research a topic using multiple sources

    Students pick a question about a topic, then dig into several sources to find answers and build a fuller picture of what they're researching. The goal is to understand the topic more deeply, not just locate a single fact.

  • Finding and summarizing information from sources

    Students pull facts from books, websites, or personal experience, then put the information in their own words. They list where the information came from so readers can check the sources.

  • Making a clear argument with evidence

    Students write a clear opinion statement and arrange their reasons and supporting details in an order that makes sense to the reader.

  • Backing up opinions with facts and details

    When making an argument in writing, students back up each reason with facts and details pulled from real sources, in an order that actually makes sense.

  • Precise word choice in argument writing

    When writing an argument, students choose exact words that fit the topic, the way a scientist says "evaporate" instead of "go away." Precise language makes the argument clearer and harder to ignore.

  • Transitional words that connect ideas

    Students practice linking their sentences and paragraphs with transition words like "however," "as a result," or "for example" so readers can follow how one idea connects to the next.

  • Wrap up an argument with a strong conclusion

    Students end a persuasive piece with a closing sentence or paragraph that ties back to their argument, not just stops mid-thought.

  • Matching tone and style to the task

    Students match their word choice and tone to the kind of writing they are doing. A persuasive letter sounds different from a personal story, and students learn to tell the difference.

  • How to open and organize an informational essay

    Students open an informational piece by stating the topic clearly, then group related details in an order that makes sense to the reader.

  • Facts and details that support a topic

    Students pick facts, quotes, and details that explain their topic, then decide whether a chart, image, or other visual would help a reader understand it better.

  • Precise words for explaining a topic

    Students choose exact words that fit the topic, swapping vague words like "stuff" or "things" for the specific terms a reader actually needs to understand the explanation.

  • Transition words that connect ideas

    Students practice using words and phrases like "however," "as a result," and "for example" to link ideas across sentences and paragraphs so a reader can follow the logic from one point to the next.

  • Writing a strong conclusion

    Students write a closing sentence or paragraph that wraps up the main idea of their piece. It brings the explanation to a natural end instead of stopping abruptly.

  • Writing style that fits the subject

    Students learn to match their writing style to the subject. A science report sounds different from a personal story, and students practice making those choices on purpose.

  • Story openings with a narrator and characters

    Students open a narrative by setting up the situation and introducing who is telling the story or who the main characters are. The reader knows where things stand before the story moves forward.

  • Dialogue and description in stories

    Students use dialogue and description to bring story moments to life. Instead of just telling what happened, they show how characters speak, react, and respond to the situations they face.

  • Transition words that connect story events

    Students practice linking story events with transition words and phrases like "meanwhile," "the next morning," or "as soon as" so the sequence of events flows clearly for the reader.

  • Sensory details that make writing vivid

    Writing about a real or imagined experience, students choose words that show what something looks, sounds, or feels like rather than just telling the reader it happened.

  • Ending a story the right way

    Students write an ending that wraps up the story in a way that feels connected to what happened. The conclusion grows from the events in the narrative, not from a new idea dropped in at the end.

Assessments
The state tests students at this grade and subject take.
State test

Grade 5 English Language Arts Test

All New York public school students take this reading and writing test in the spring of grade 5. Students read short passages and answer multiple-choice and written-response questions tied to what they read.

When given:
Spring of grade 5
Frequency:
Annual
Official source
English language

NYSESLAT (NY State English as a Second Language Achievement Test)

The annual test New York gives to students who have been identified as English Language Learners. It checks speaking, listening, reading, and writing in English and decides whether a student is ready to exit ENL services.

When given:
Spring window each year
Frequency:
Annual
Official source
English language

NYSITELL (NY State Identification Test for English Language Learners)

The placement test New York gives to students within ten school days of enrolling, when a parent survey suggests the student may need English language services. Results decide whether the student is identified as an English Language Learner.

When given:
At enrollment, when a Home Language Questionnaire suggests a possible ELL
Frequency:
One-time per new student
Official source
Alternate assessment

NYSAA (New York State Alternate Assessment)

The alternate state test for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities. NYSAA replaces the Grade 3-8 tests and Regents exams in ELA, math, and science for the small group of students whose IEP teams qualify them.

When given:
Spring window each year
Frequency:
Annual
Official source
Common Questions
  • What does fifth grade reading and writing look like overall?

    Students read longer stories and articles and back up what they say with specific lines from the text. In writing, they build short essays with a clear point, a few reasons, and evidence pulled from what they read. Spelling, grammar, and sentence variety get more attention this year.

  • How can a parent help with reading at home?

    Ask students to point to the exact sentence that proves their answer when they talk about a book or article. Five minutes of this after reading is enough. It builds the habit of finding evidence instead of guessing.

  • What writing should students be able to do by the end of the year?

    Students should write a short argument or explanation with an opening, a few organized reasons backed by facts, and a closing. They should also write a personal story with dialogue and sensory details. Transition words like however, although, and in addition should show up in their writing.

  • My child says reading is boring. What helps?

    Mix in graphic novels, magazines, recipes, and articles about real interests like sports or animals. The skills students practice in a comic book still count. Talking about what was funny, surprising, or unfair matters more than the type of book.

  • How should argument and informational writing be sequenced across the year?

    Start with short opinion paragraphs tied to a familiar text, then build to multi-paragraph arguments with sourced evidence by winter. Informational writing can follow a similar arc, moving from a single topic with a few facts to a researched piece with multiple sources. Save the longest research project for spring, after students have practiced citing sources.

  • Which fifth grade skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Comparing point of view across two texts and explaining how reasons actually support a claim tend to be the hardest. Many students can find evidence but struggle to explain why it matters. Plan to revisit these every few weeks rather than teach them once.

  • How much should a fifth grader read each night?

    Twenty to thirty minutes of reading on most nights is a good target. It can be one long book or a mix of shorter pieces. What matters is steady practice, not the page count.

  • How do I know students are ready for sixth grade ELA?

    By June, students should read a grade-level article and pull out the main idea with two or three supporting details on their own. They should write a clear five-paragraph piece with evidence and use academic words like however, similarly, and moreover correctly. Discussion skills should include responding to classmates, not just answering the teacher.

  • What about vocabulary and spelling words?

    Fifth graders work on Greek and Latin roots like photo, graph, and tele, which unlock dozens of words. Memorizing weekly lists helps less than noticing roots in real reading. Ask students what a new word reminds them of and whether they can spot the root.