Favorite Homeschool Curriculum Choices for 4th Grade

Favorite Homeschool Curriculum Choices for 4th Grade

This year my daughter, Josie, is entering fourth grade. Her favorite subjects are anything to do with art, reading, and writing. I am excited to introduce her to new literature this year and expand her notebooking skills with longer narrations and more detailed illustrations. 

This blog post lists some of my favorite curriculum choices for the fourth grade, or children ages 9-10. These include curricula I have used in previous years and ones I plan to use this year.

Because my family practices family-style learning, you may notice the overlap between this grade and others. I believe there is so much joy in learning together and adapting each study for different grades and interests. Keep in mind I don’t use all of these resources simultaneously. This is simply a list of various resources I have enjoyed over many years when my children were in this stage of learning.

In this blog post:

  • Our homeschool style
  • Fourth grade homeschool schedule
  • Fourth grade homeschool curriculum choices

Our homeschool style

family style homeschool learning ideas

Family-style learning 

As you may know, in my homeschool we do not emphasize labeling grade levels. This is because we do much of our schoolwork “family-style.” Family-style learning means we use the same curricula for my children at different ages, tailoring the material to their levels. This way, my children learn together, despite being at various ages. While my children also have work they do independently that is tailored to their levels, the majority of our curricula can be tailored to use with all of my children, together. Lesson planning is streamlined and fosters sibling bonding as we do lessons together. 

Respectful learning 

Rather than forcing my children into specific grade levels, I allow my children to progress at their own pace. Sometimes this means they are above “grade level” according to curriculum labels or state standards. Sometimes this means they are “behind.” My goal as a homeschooling parent is simple: To see that my children are continually growing in understanding, in skills, and in the desire to learn. I want them to enjoy their education, while also being challenged at just the right level. 

Charlotte Mason-style

While I do not subscribe to one specific methodology of education, I do lean toward Charlotte Mason principles. I value learning through living books, life experiences, and educating the whole child (not only the mind). Take this Homeschool Style Quiz to see what learning styles fit your family best.

Related: Top 6 Homeschooling Styles and Homeschool Style Quiz

Fourth grade homeschool schedule

homeschool planning ideas

In my homeschool, a fourth-grade student does formal lessons about four-five hours a day, four days each week. We usually do school lessons Monday through Thursday, and spend Fridays outdoors with our homeschool nature group.

Here’s a breakdown of what a day may look like:

  • Family devotions: 30 minutes
  • Morning Time (art, poetry, nature, literature): 1 hour
  • Core subjects (math, grammar, reading, written narrations): 1 hour
  • Read-aloud, oral narration, research, and notebooking: 1 hour
  • Rotating subjects (history, geography, science, etc.): 1 hour

Fourth Grade Curriculum Choices

In my homeschool, we start the day with a family devotional over breakfast. When we are ready to begin our school day, we do Morning Time, where we go through our family-style curriculum together. Then we work through core subjects like language arts, math, and social studies.

Family devotionals

homeschool devotional charlotte mason

My husband leads this time over breakfast. We have used various resources over the years, but my favorites are Rooted Family Bible Curriculum, Our 24 Family Ways, and Hero Tales

Rooted Family Bible Curriculum 

Rooted incorporates Bible readings, discussion, Scripture memorization, prayer, hymns, art study, poetry, and simple hands-on connections. I designed it to combine beauty subjects with Bible study. The curriculum is centered on declarations about identity in Christ and their choices to live a life devoted to God.

Related: Introducing Rooted Family Bible Curriculum and How Do I Explain the Gospel to My Children?

Our 24 Family Ways: A Family Devotional Guide 

The book’s premise is that you as a parent create the culture in your home of how your family thinks and acts. Based on the idea that Christians are called to “train up a child in the way he should go,” the author maps 24 ways to teach and instruct children. I love this idea because it articulates the character traits I want my children to have. 

Related: Family Devotional Review: Our 24 Family Ways

Hero Tales: A Family Treasury of True Stories from the Lives of Christian Heroes

Hero Tales is an illustrated storybook that presents the true-life stories of fifteen key Christian heroes. Each hero is profiled in a short biography and three educational yet exciting and thought-provoking anecdotes from his or her life.

Related: My Favorite Bibles and Devotionals

Morning Time

Our formal school time begins each day with Morning Time. During Morning Time, my children and I gather and connect with different subjects where we all share and learn together. We may check in with the calendar, literature, nature study, and more. I love beginning the day together and using this time as a springboard for the rest of our studies.

For Morning Time, younger children love doing daily tasks like calendar and weather charting, but I have found older children have grown out of those activities. Instead, my older children begin copywork of the week's poetry or something else related to what we are studying in literature or nature study. I love that Morning Time gives us time to join together even though my children are at different phases of learning.

Here is what I use in Morning Time for children ages 9-10.

Literature with other subject connections

homeschool family book club

Treehouse Book Club is great for Morning Time because it’s designed to be family-style and can engage children of multiple ages. Each month you read aloud great literature and then learn about various themes in the story. This could be watching videos that teach about the book’s historical elements, sketching a topic we read about in the story, or reading more picture books about ideas presented in the story. You document your learning through notebooking.

Related: Summer of the Monkeys Book Study

For a fourth grader, the focus is narrating, learning research methods, chasing interests emerging from the story, and notebooking. For notebooking at this age, they usually write three or more paragraphs for each notebook page and are growing in their art skills by using tutorials and various mediums. They also complete the Book Report Booklet throughout the study, which includes writing and drawing on topics like characters, plot, and the book's author. We also add to the Illustrated Dictionary, where they look up unfamiliar words throughout the story and create illustrated entries.

Related: Notebooking in Your Homeschool: Why and How?

Treehouse Book Club is also an excellent choice for families looking for ways to collaborate and interact with friends by implementing a format for book club, plus options for presentations and group activities.

Learn more about Treehouse Book Club

Nature study with music, art, and poetry

best nature study curriculum kids

Treehouse Nature Study has been a staple of our Morning Time for years. It’s a fun way to begin a day with family learning. Each week of Treehouse Nature Study covers a seasonal nature theme and includes songs, hand rhymes, poetry, art study, an extensive book list, and hands-on connections. The study is meant to be used year after year and includes so much that we will easily go deeper and wider this year than last with no problem. All of my children engage with elements of this, so it’s easy and fun to include them all.

This year I am so excited to introduce Treehouse Nature Study, Intermediate Years for my older children to use alongside Treehouse Nature Study. While my younger children will study nature topics connected to art, poetry, and hands-on activities,  Treehouse Nature Study, Intermediate Years gives my older children ways to dig deeper into topics they love with more in-depth writing assignments, science experiments, and more.

Related: 

Core subjects for fourth grade

Language Arts: Grammar, spelling, handwriting, and reading

cursive curriculum 4th grade workbook

We holistically approach language arts, meaning much of what children learn happens through narrations, copywork, notebooking, and organic writing opportunities like penpalling and list-making. While some homeschooling parents prefer to have separate curricula for each language arts “subject,” I prefer to use living books and curriculum and expand on it to offer language arts learning. 

At this age, children are confident in both print and cursive. For continued practice, we continue cursive copywork using Wonder of Nature Cursive Copywork. We also practice Mail Monday where each of my children writes a letter and sends it to someone we know. When we do this, I check for proper handwriting, grammar, and spelling.

Related: Copywork in Your Homeschool: Why and How? and Mail Monday: Language Arts through Penpalling

Around fourth grade, if my child is struggling with spelling we may use a spelling book like Evan-Moor’s Spell and Write. If not, we don’t use anything formal for spelling and instead, continue copywork and notebooking and practice spelling organically.

Here are some other practices and resources I use for these subjects:

  • Copywork: Each day the kids will have a selection to copy or write from dictation. This is for handwriting, spelling, and grammar. Sometimes this selection will be a passage of scripture we are memorizing, an excerpt of a poem, a quote, or a selection of literature from something we are reading. Sometimes they will write in cursive and other times in print.
  • Grammar: In fourth grade, we use Fix-it! Grammar, usually Level 2: Town Mouse and Country Mouse. In Fix-it! Grammar, students search for and correct errors in passages that cumulatively tell a story. It is an incremental program that encourages students to apply new grammar knowledge in every lesson while continuing to practice what they already know.
  • Literature and narrations: Each morning I read aloud from a selection of literature from Treehouse Book Club. Older children orally narrate what I have read or complete a written narration.
  • Writing: Each Monday my children participate in Mail Monday, an informal way to practice writing skills by writing letters. They also complete written narrations throughout the year, as well as stories, research papers, and notebooking pages. I don’t use a formal curriculum for writing at this age, but instead offer creative writing promyt through science, history, and notebooking.
  • Independent Reading: I like for a fourth-grade student to spend 20-30 minutes each day reading independently. Around this age, they will occasionally write a paragraph of narration of their reading. The chapter books they read are from “Mom’s Library,” a basket of books I curate primarily from the “Free Reads” lists in Ambleside Online years 2-5 as well as others from other book lists for them to choose from. 
  • Notebooking: Notebooking is central to so many of our lessons. There are notebooking opportunities in Rooted Family Bible Curriculum, the Book Club Guides from Treehouse Book Club, and Treehouse Nature Study, Intermediate Years. For a fourth-grader I am looking for a couple of paragraphs about the topic we are studying with correct spelling and grammar. I love using notebooking as a way to explore new topics and document our learning.

Related: How to Develop a Love of Literature In Your Home and Best Sources for Preschool and Elementary Book Lists

Math 

We have tried various math curricula over the years. Finding the right fit depends on the child’s learning style and the parent’s preference. Some of my favorite math curricula that I recommend for fourth grade are Teaching Textbooks, Math-U-See, Saxon Math, Charlotte Mason Arithmetic Series, and RightStart Mathematics.

  • Teaching Textbooks is a spiral-approach, digital math curriculum that offers teaching videos, math problems, and grades every math problem with instant feedback. Teaching Textbooks gently introduces new math concepts in plain, easy-to-understand language and in an engaging way. The formatting makes math approachable and fun for students, without being over-stimulating. This is a great option for kids who can work independently in math.
  • Math-U-See is a solution for struggling math students with gaps in their foundational math skill set. The Accelerated Individualized Mastery (AIM) programs use strategies and manipulatives in combination with an accelerated approach to help students successfully master math facts.
  • Saxon Math has been around for decades and uses an incremental approach to instruction and assessment. I like it because it limits the amount of new math principles delivered to students and allows time for daily practice.
  • Charlotte Mason Arithmetic Series from Simply Charlotte Mason are short lessons that help students advance in addition and subtraction up to 1,000,000, plus well as multiplication and division with larger numbers, fractions, and decimals, and provide a hands-on investigation of both metric and US standard measures, including measures of area, cubic measure, and volume. Lessons are mainly oral and are carefully graduated, and children will answer small word problems within their understanding (no reading required). Problems are worked out in a straightforward, hands-on way using everyday objects.
  • RightStart Mathematics is a comprehensive math curriculum that emphasizes visual learning and de-emphasizes counting. It provides visual strategies for learning facts and emphasizes problem-solving. 

Related: Teaching Textbooks Curriculum Review and Our Math Journey: Honest Curriculum Reviews

Geography, history, and science

geography history curriculum 4th grade

My favorite curricula explore different subjects through reading literature. Instead of going through a textbook, these studies pull from a curated collection of literature to use stories and different writers to provide knowledge about various subjects.

  • Treehouse Book Club allows us to use literature as a lens to study historical and scientific themes in the books we are reading. We may break out and research the historical context of the book, inventions in the period, historical figures, and more. I love the overlap between these subjects and something else we are working through.
  • Treehouse Nature Study, Intermediate - This year my older children will use Treehouse Nature Study, Intermediate to study themes in nature and science. This is the same seasonal nature topics from Treehouse Nature Studybut geared for children 4th grade and up with advanced language arts and scientific experiments. Join the waitlist and get a free week here.
  • Holling C. Holling Geography Study (Beautiful Feet Books) is centered on the books by Holling C. Holling that takes students on a literature-centered adventure through the United States, studying the Great Lakes and Eastern seaboard, states, national landmarks, bodies of water, natural science, indigenous animals, and industry. Students will practice mapping skills and notebooking as they work through the study.
  • U.S. Geography 4-6 Pack (Beautiful Feet Books) connects the stories of Native American tribes, intrepid explorers, and hopeful pioneers to the land in North America. These stories introduce homeschoolers to the vast variety of landforms, biomes, and ecosystems found in the United States.
  • Early American History 4-6 Pack (Beautiful Feet Books) studies the foundations of civil and religious liberty unique to the United States. Students will celebrate the rich mosaic of people who contributed to the founding and development of the United States.

Related: Incorporating Geography & Cultures in Your Homeschool [FREE World Map PDF]

Enrichment Subjects

best easter study kids

For fourth grade, we add enrichment activities throughout the year. Here are some of my favorites.

  • Piano: My children have loved taking piano lessons from Hoffman Academy this year. Each day they do a lesson and spend time practicing. We have family recitals for them to share what they are learning every couple of months!
  • Typing: We do a Keyboarding Without Tears lesson a couple of days each week for typing practice. 
  • Art and drawing: We do a lot of art and drawing in our notebooking by following online watercolor and sketching tutorials. We also have an Art For Kids Hub subscription, and my kids also like doing origami.
  • Holiday studies: We use a holiday study like A Connected Christmas: Around the World to prepare for Christmas. This includes Bible readings about the nativity story and a look at how the Christmas season is celebrated in different countries throughout the world. We will also use An Expectant Easter to learn about the resurrection in the weeks leading up to Easter.
  • Practical skills and handcrafts: Many of our studies include crafts and baking projects. We will introduce them to many handcrafts and skills over the year such as woodworking, crocheting, cross stitching, leatherwork, and bread making.

Related: Best Handcrafts for Children (+ Tips to Teach Them)

Other curriculum recommendations from Treehouse Schoolhouse:

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