Welcome to Grade 4 Mathematics!

Grade 4 is where math gets sophisticated and seriously satisfying!

This is the year your child moves from basic operations to working with fractions, decimals, and multi-digit numbers with confidence.

They're developing mathematical reasoning that goes beyond computation—they're analyzing, comparing, estimating, and solving problems that require real strategic thinking.


Setting Up Your Math-Rich Home

Fourth graders need a workspace that supports increasingly complex mathematical thinking:

Create Visual Anchors

  • Multiplication and division fact charts for quick reference during multi-digit work

  • Place value chart to millions showing the relationship between places

  • Fraction wall or number line displaying equivalent fractions and comparing fractions

Keep Tools Accessible

Calculator for checking complex calculations and exploring patterns

  • Protractor, compass, and geometry tools for angle and shape work

  • Organized math notebook with sections for different concepts

The Essentials

  • Math picture books (start with 3-5, build your collection)

  • Base-ten blocks (essential for place value and decimals)

  • Fraction bars, circles, or tiles (for fraction work)

  • Protractor for measuring angles

  • Rulers (inches and centimeters)

  • Graph paper (for area, multiplication models, data displays)

  • Decimal grids (10×10 squares—printable or purchased)

  • Calculator (for checking work, not doing work)

  • Playing cards and dice for games

  • Hundreds chart

  • Measuring tools (measuring cups, tape measure, scale)

Make Math Visible

  • Conversion chart for measurement units (inches/feet, cups/pints, etc.)

  • Decimal place value chart as they bridge fractions to decimals

Nice to Haves

  • Geoboard for geometry

  • Pattern blocks

  • Compass for drawing circles

  • Blank number lines (printable)

  • Tangrams

  • Money (play or real) for decimal work

Our approach: Grade 4 concepts need quality manipulatives, especially for fractions and decimals. We show you how to maximize what you have and offer printable alternatives when possible.

Ready to dive in?

Your Quick-Start Path

  1. Pick a concept that matches where your child is right now (or start with Concept 1!)

  2. Grab a book from the library or our store that introduces the concept

  3. Try an activity together using things you have at home

  4. Apply it through a project when they're ready to go deeper

Notice math everywhere and point it out as you go about your day

Concept List for Grade 4:

Most concepts take 3-4 weeks each, but here's what matters most: math is everywhere your fourth grader looks.

Calculating sale prices at the store. Measuring ingredients for a recipe they're doubling. Noticing patterns in sports statistics. Figuring out if they have enough allowance saved.

Every single one of those moments builds the mathematical thinking that makes the "school math" click.

Below you'll find every concept your fourth grader will explore.

Click to dive into activities, books that bring the concept to life, and projects that let them apply what they're learning.

NUMBER SENSE & COUNTING

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders extend place value understanding to millions—and use this understanding constantly for multiplication, division, decimals, and rounding. They see our number system as an elegant, repeating pattern where every place is 10 times (or 1/10 of) the place next to it. This understanding is absolutely foundational for decimals and all future math.

    Skills they're building:

    • Understanding place value to 1,000,000 (millions through ones)

    • Reading and writing numbers in multiple forms (standard, expanded, word form)

    • Comparing and ordering large numbers

    • Rounding to any place value

    • Understanding relationships between places (10 times as much, 1/10 as much)

    • Using place value for mental math strategies

    • Recognizing patterns in place value (moving left = 10x bigger, moving right = 1/10 as big)

    • Understanding that decimals extend the place value system to the right of ones

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders discover the building blocks of our number system! They explore factors (numbers that divide evenly into another number), multiples (results of multiplying), and prime vs. composite numbers. This concept builds number sense, connects to division and multiplication fluency, and sets up fraction work (finding common denominators requires understanding multiples).

    Skills they're building:

    • Finding all factors of a number

    • Identifying multiples of a number

    • Understanding prime numbers (only 2 factors: 1 and itself)

    • Understanding composite numbers (more than 2 factors)

    • Recognizing that 1 is neither prime nor composite

    • Using factor pairs (if 3 × 8 = 24, then 3 and 8 are factors of 24)

    • Finding common factors and common multiples

    • Understanding divisibility rules (patterns that help identify factors)

    • Seeing patterns in multiples and factors

OPERATIONS

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders multiply numbers with 2-3 digits—and they understand WHY the algorithms work because they've built understanding through area models, partial products, and place value reasoning. This isn't just memorizing steps; it's understanding how multiplication with larger numbers is just organized repeated addition using place value.

    Skills they're building:

    • Multiplying multi-digit numbers by one-digit numbers (326 × 4)

    • Multiplying two-digit numbers by two-digit numbers (47 × 23)

    • Understanding multiplication using area models

    • Using partial products strategy

    • Understanding the standard algorithm through place value

    • Estimating products using rounding

    • Solving multi-step word problems involving multiplication

    • Understanding when multiplication is the appropriate operation

  • What your child is learning:

    Division with larger numbers is complex! Fourth graders learn to divide multi-digit numbers by one-digit divisors, understanding division through place value, estimation, and relationship to multiplication. They interpret remainders in context (sometimes you round up, sometimes down, sometimes the remainder IS the answer) and solve problems requiring strategic thinking.

    Skills they're building:

    • Dividing multi-digit numbers by one-digit divisors (456 ÷ 3)

    • Understanding division through place value

    • Using estimation to check if answers are reasonable

    • Interpreting remainders in context

    • Understanding the relationship between multiplication and division (checking division with multiplication)

    • Solving division word problems with multiple steps

    • Understanding when division is the appropriate operation

    • Beginning to divide by two-digit divisors (introduction)

FRACTIONS

  • What your child is learning:

    This is huge! Understanding that 1/2 = 2/4 = 3/6 opens the door to all fraction operations. Fourth graders explore equivalent fractions through visual models, multiplication/division, and pattern recognition. This understanding is absolutely critical for adding/subtracting fractions with unlike denominators (coming in Grade 5) and for understanding ratios, proportions, and algebra later.

    Skills they're building:

    • Understanding that fractions can have the same value with different names

    • Generating equivalent fractions by multiplying/dividing numerator and denominator by the same number

    • Simplifying fractions to lowest terms

    • Using visual models to prove equivalence

    • Comparing fractions using equivalent fractions

    • Understanding that multiplying or dividing top and bottom by the same number doesn't change the fraction's value

    • Finding common denominators (foundation for addition/subtraction)

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders develop sophisticated strategies for comparing fractions—using common denominators, common numerators, benchmarks (like 1/2), and reasoning. They understand that comparing fractions requires thinking about the size of the pieces AND how many pieces you have. This builds fraction sense and prepares for operations.

    Skills they're building:

    • Comparing fractions with like denominators (3/8 vs. 5/8)

    • Comparing fractions with like numerators (1/3 vs. 1/4—which pieces are bigger?)

    • Using common denominators to compare unlike fractions

    • Using benchmarks (0, 1/2, 1) for comparison

    • Ordering three or more fractions

    • Using visual models to prove comparisons

    • Understanding that denominators show size of pieces, numerators show how many

    • Using reasoning: "5/6 is close to 1, but 2/5 is less than half"

  • What your child is learning:

    Finally—fraction operations! Fourth graders add and subtract fractions with the same denominator, understanding that you're combining or separating pieces of the same size. They use visual models, number lines, and equations, always connecting procedures to meaning. This is the foundation for all future fraction operations.

    Skills they're building:

    • Adding fractions with like denominators (2/5 + 1/5 = 3/5)

    • Subtracting fractions with like denominators (4/6 - 1/6 = 3/6)

    • Understanding that you only add/subtract numerators when denominators are the same

    • Simplifying answers when possible

    • Solving word problems involving fraction addition/subtraction

    • Using visual models to show addition/subtraction

    • Adding mixed numbers with like denominators (introduction)

    • Understanding improper fractions and converting to mixed numbers

  • What your child is learning:

    Multiplying fractions might sound advanced, but fourth graders can understand it! When you multiply a fraction by a whole number, you're just adding that fraction repeatedly (3 × 2/5 means 2/5 + 2/5 + 2/5). They use visual models and understand what's happening before using procedures. This builds foundation for multiplying fractions by fractions in Grade 5.

    Skills they're building:

    • Understanding multiplication of fractions as repeated addition

    • Multiplying a fraction by a whole number (4 × 3/8 = 12/8 = 3/2 = 1 1/2)

    • Using visual models to show multiplication

    • Converting improper fractions to mixed numbers

    • Solving word problems involving fraction multiplication

    • Understanding that multiplying by a whole number makes the fraction larger

    • Beginning to see patterns in fraction multiplication

MEASUREMENT & DATA

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders work with multiple units of measurement and convert between them—feet to inches, hours to minutes, pounds to ounces. They understand that measurement is about relationships between units and develop flexibility in choosing appropriate units. This connects to fractions (1/2 foot = 6 inches), decimals (0.5 meters = 50 centimeters), and multiplication/division.

    Skills they're building:

    • Converting between units of length (inches ↔ feet ↔ yards, centimeters ↔ meters ↔ kilometers)

    • Converting between units of weight/mass (ounces ↔ pounds, grams ↔ kilograms)

    • Converting between units of capacity (cups ↔ pints ↔ quarts ↔ gallons, milliliters ↔ liters)

    • Converting between units of time (seconds ↔ minutes ↔ hours ↔ days)

    • Solving multi-step problems involving measurement

    • Understanding when to convert (can't add 5 feet + 20 inches without converting first!)

    • Choosing appropriate units for different situations

    • Using multiplication and division for conversions

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders create and analyze more sophisticated data displays, including line plots with fractional measurements! They understand how different display types reveal different information and that data can be misleading depending on how it's presented. This builds analytical thinking, connects to fractions and measurement, and develops healthy skepticism about statistics.

    Skills they're building:

    • Creating and interpreting line plots with fractions (1/4, 1/2, 3/4)

    • Creating and interpreting bar graphs with scaled axes

    • Understanding that scale affects interpretation

    • Solving problems using data from graphs

    • Collecting and organizing data systematically

    • Understanding measures of center (introduction to mean, median, mode)

    • Recognizing that graphs can be misleading

    • Drawing appropriate conclusions from data

ALGEBRAIC THINKING

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders explore patterns with increasing sophistication—they don't just continue patterns, they analyze them, describe the rules that generate them, and create their own. They work with growing patterns (each step adds more), repeating patterns, and number sequences. This builds algebraic thinking: understanding that patterns follow rules, and rules can be expressed mathematically. It's the foundation for functions, variables, and algebra in middle school.

    Skills they're building:

    • Identifying and extending number patterns (arithmetic sequences)

    • Describing pattern rules in words and numbers

    • Finding missing terms in patterns

    • Creating patterns that follow specific rules

    • Understanding growing patterns (patterns that increase by a constant amount)

    • Recognizing patterns in multiplication tables and factor/multiple relationships

    • Using patterns to make predictions

    • Creating visual patterns and describing their numerical rules

  • What your child is learning:

    Fourth graders tackle problems that require multiple operations and strategic thinking. They learn to break complex problems into steps, choose which operations to use and in what order, and check if their answers make sense. This isn't just about getting answers—it's about developing the kind of logical, persistent thinking that solves real problems in any field. They learn that there's often more than one way to solve a problem, and that's exactly what makes mathematics powerful.

    Skills they're building:

    • Solving word problems requiring two or more operations

    • Determining which operations to use and in what order

    • Understanding order of operations (introduction to parentheses)

    • Breaking complex problems into manageable steps

    • Using estimation to check if answers are reasonable

    • Representing problems with equations and visual models

    • Explaining solution strategies and reasoning

    • Persisting when problems are challenging

DECIMALS

  • What your child is learning:

    Decimals are just fractions in disguise! Fourth graders discover that 0.5 is another way to write 5/10, and decimals extend the place value system to the right of the ones place. They connect decimals to money (they've been using decimals all along!), measurement, and fractions. This understanding is critical for all future work with decimals, percents, and proportional reasoning.

    Skills they're building:

    • Understanding decimals as fractions with denominators of 10 and 100

    • Reading and writing decimals to hundredths

    • Understanding decimal place value (tenths, hundredths)

    • Converting between fractions and decimals (1/2 = 0.5, 75/100 = 0.75)

    • Comparing and ordering decimals

    • Understanding that 0.5 = 0.50 (equivalent decimals)

    • Connecting decimals to money and measurement

    • Placing decimals on number lines

GEOMETRY

  • What your child is learning:

    Geometry gets precise in Grade 4! Students learn proper vocabulary for lines (parallel, perpendicular, intersecting) and angles (right, acute, obtuse, straight). They measure angles with protractors, classify shapes by their angles and sides, and understand symmetry. This builds spatial reasoning and connects to measurement, fractions (angles as fractions of a circle), and real-world design.

    Skills they're building:

    • Understanding and identifying types of lines (parallel, perpendicular, intersecting)

    • Understanding and measuring angles (using a protractor)

    • Classifying angles (right = 90°, acute < 90°, obtuse > 90°, straight = 180°)

    • Understanding that angles are measured in degrees

    • Identifying and drawing lines of symmetry

    • Classifying triangles by angles (right, acute, obtuse) and sides (equilateral, isosceles, scalene)

    • Classifying quadrilaterals by properties (parallelogram, rectangle, square, trapezoid, rhombus)

    • Understanding that shapes can belong to multiple categories

  • What your child is learning:

    Building on Grade 3 foundations, fourth graders master perimeter and area with more complex shapes, including rectangles with fractional side lengths! They discover formulas, understand the difference between perimeter and area deeply, solve problems requiring both, and tackle irregular shapes by decomposing them into rectangles. This connects to multiplication, fractions, and real-world applications.

    Skills they're building:

    • Calculating perimeter of complex shapes

    • Using area formulas (A = l × w for rectangles)

    • Finding area and perimeter of rectangles with fractional side lengths

    • Understanding that area and perimeter are independent (same perimeter ≠ same area)

    • Finding area of irregular shapes by decomposing into rectangles

    • Solving real-world problems involving area and perimeter

    • Understanding square units vs. linear units

    • Optimizing area for a given perimeter (and vice versa)

A Note from the Teach Early Team:

Grade 4 is where the rubber meets the road.

This is the year we ask kids to work with fractions—not just identify them, but operate with them. To understand decimals as an extension of place value. To multiply and divide numbers with multiple digits. To measure angles precisely. To convert between measurement units.

These are genuinely sophisticated mathematical concepts. And honestly? Many adults struggle with them.

Kids who build deep understanding of fractions, decimals, and multi-digit operations in Grade 4 are SET for all future math. These concepts are foundational for ratios, proportions, percentages, algebra, geometry—everything.

But kids who memorize procedures without understanding? They hit walls in Grade 5, middle school, and high school. Because you can't memorize your way through algebra. You have to understand.

That's why our Grade 4 curriculum is uncompromising about understanding. We use visual models extensively. We connect concepts to what kids already know. We build from concrete to abstract slowly and carefully. We never ask kids to memorize what they don't understand.

Is this slower than racing through procedures? Sometimes, yes. Is it worth it? Absolutely.

Because a fourth grader who truly understands equivalent fractions, who can explain why 3/4 + 1/4 = 1, who sees decimals as fractions in disguise, who understands what multiplication and division actually mean with large numbers—that child has mathematical power.

And mathematical power is what we're building.

Thank you for trusting us with this critical year in your child's mathematical journey.

With deep commitment to understanding,

The Teach Early Team

Beyond Grade 4

Where This Journey Leads

Moving to Grade 5: Grade 4 is THE critical year for fractions and decimals. Solid understanding now means Grade 5's work with operations (adding/subtracting fractions with unlike denominators, multiplying and dividing fractions, operating with decimals) will make sense. Weak understanding now creates serious struggles later, and in middle school algebra.

The Foundation Year: Everything that happens in Grade 4 matters enormously. Multi-digit operations, fraction concepts, decimal understanding, geometric reasoning- these are the building blocks for all upper elementary and middle school math. Time invested now pays dividends forever.

Connect the Learning

Grade 4 Science: Measurement and unit conversion are everywhere in science experiments. Data collection and graphing are essential for science inquiry. Fractions and decimals appear in observations and calculations.

[Explore Grade 4 Science Curriculum → Coming Soon]

Grade 4 ELA: Multi-step word problems require advanced reading comprehension. Explaining mathematical reasoning builds expository writing skills. Mathematical vocabulary expands language development.

[Explore Grade 4 ELA Curriculum → Coming Soon]

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