ELA Class: What Students Actually Do in English Language Arts Today
ELA class guide for parents and students: what English Language Arts covers, daily routines, grade-level skills, homework load, and how to help kids succeed.

What an ELA Class Actually Looks Like in 2026
Ask any sixth grader what they did in ELA class today and you might hear "read a story, did some grammar, started an essay" - a vague summary that misses the point. ELA class is far more layered than the old "English period" of twenty years ago. The shift from passive lecture to active reading, writing, speaking, and listening has changed what walks through the classroom door each morning. Parents who remember diagramming sentences and book reports will find a different scene entirely.
English Language Arts blends reading comprehension, written expression, vocabulary growth, grammar, and oral communication into one connected subject. A typical 45-to-60-minute block weaves at least three of those strands together. A teacher might open with a short literary passage, pivot into a discussion about character motivation, then have students draft a paragraph using a target vocabulary word and a specific sentence structure. It is busy. It is intentional. And it is built on standards that did not exist before 2010.
Most states base ELA instruction on the Common Core ELA standards or a closely aligned state version. Whether your district uses Common Core, the Texas TEKS, the Virginia SOLs, or Florida's BEST standards, the core demands look similar: read complex texts, write with evidence, build vocabulary in context, and discuss ideas aloud with peers. The shift since 2010 has been from "what the teacher knows" to "what the student can do with text."
What modern ELA class delivers across the school year:
- Five integrated strands: reading literature, informational text, writing, speaking and listening, language
- Standards-based instruction tied to state or Common Core benchmarks
- Mix of canonical and contemporary texts paired for relevance
- Daily writing and discussion practice, not just weekly tests
The Five Strands of a Modern ELA Class
A well-run ELA class touches five strands across the week. Reading literature, reading informational text, writing, speaking and listening, and language conventions. Skipping any one strand for too long shows up later as a gap on the state test or a wobble in college writing readiness. Strong teachers cycle through all five over a 10-day window without making it feel like a checklist.
Reading literature covers novels, short stories, poetry, drama, and folklore. Students learn to identify theme, analyze character development, trace plot structure, and unpack figurative language. By middle school, the texts get harder - think Lois Lowry's "The Giver" in sixth grade, "To Kill a Mockingbird" in eighth, "Romeo and Juliet" by ninth. Reading the text is only the entry fee; the work is in the discussion, annotation, and written analysis that follows.
Reading informational text is the strand that grew most after 2010. Articles, speeches, essays, scientific reports, historical documents - the goal is to teach students how to read for argument, evidence, and bias. A unit on the civil-rights movement might combine Martin Luther King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail" with a 2024 news article on voting access and a primary-source photograph. Students compare structure, tone, and argument. This is where reading skill translates into civic literacy.
Writing in ELA class breaks into three main types: argumentative, informative or explanatory, and narrative. Each year the expectations climb - longer pieces, more research, tighter thesis statements, better evidence integration. By the end of high school a student should be able to draft a 1,500-word evidence-based essay across multiple sources. That does not happen by accident. It is built one paragraph and one revision cycle at a time, year by year.
Speaking and listening covers structured discussion, oral presentations, group collaboration, and active listening. This strand often gets underplayed at home because nothing comes home in a backpack. It matters anyway. Employers, professors, and customers all rate spoken communication near the top of the skills they want. ELA class is where most students get the most structured speaking practice they will ever receive.
Language conventions cover grammar, mechanics, vocabulary, and word study. Modern ELA does not teach grammar in isolation the way 1985 did. Instead, conventions are embedded in writing instruction. A teacher might note that several students confused subject-verb agreement in plural collective nouns, then teach a five-minute mini-lesson the next day before students revise their drafts. Grammar lives inside writing, not on a separate worksheet.

Worth knowing: ELA class in 2026 looks very different from English class twenty years ago. The shift from grammar drills to integrated literacy means students do more reading and writing and less worksheet work, even though the skills tested are deeper than ever.
A Day in the Life of an ELA Class
Walking into a Tuesday morning sixth grade ELA classroom looks something like this. The bell rings at 8:45. On the board: a short "do now" - a single sentence with two grammar errors and the instruction "fix me and explain why." Students grab their notebooks and start. The teacher circles, checking who needs a hint and who got it instantly.
By 8:55 the do-now is reviewed aloud, two students explain their reasoning, and the class transitions into a 15-minute mini-lesson on inferencing in narrative text. The teacher reads a short passage from "Wonder" by R. J. Palacio, models thinking aloud about Auggie's emotional state in the cafeteria scene, and writes three inference statements on chart paper. Students copy the structure into their notebooks.
By 9:15 students are in pairs reading a fresh passage, annotating with sticky notes, and writing three inferences of their own. The teacher pulls a small group at the back table for targeted reteaching on a tricky passage. Two students at another table are using a graphic organizer because they need extra scaffolding.
By 9:35 the class regroups. Two pairs share their best inference with the whole class. Brief discussion. Then a 10-minute independent write where each student picks one inference and explains it in a full paragraph, citing the text. By 9:50 the writing goes into folders, and the teacher previews tomorrow's lesson on theme.
That single hour touched four of the five strands. Reading literature. Writing. Speaking and listening. Language conventions inside the do-now. The fifth strand - informational text - will appear later in the week when students compare a fiction passage to a nonfiction article on the same theme.
Inside a Typical ELA Class Period
5 to 10 minutes. Short grammar fix, vocabulary spot, or quick-write tied to yesterday's lesson. Sets the tone and activates prior learning.
10 to 15 minutes. Teacher models a target skill - inferencing, theme tracking, paragraph structure. Students take notes or annotate examples.
15 to 20 minutes. Students work in pairs or small groups applying the skill. Teacher circulates and pulls struggling students for targeted support.
10 to 15 minutes. Quiet writing or reading where students put the skill into their own work. Often the most valuable part of the period.
5 minutes. Two or three students share work or ideas. Teacher previews tomorrow's lesson and assigns brief homework.
How ELA Changes from Elementary to High School
The shape of ELA class changes dramatically as kids move up the grades. In kindergarten through second grade, ELA is mostly about decoding - phonics, blending, sight words, fluency, and early comprehension. The teacher reads aloud, students read in small groups, and the class spends real time on letter sounds and word patterns. Writing at this stage is invented spelling, sentence stems, and short labeled pictures.
Grades three through five mark the famous shift from "learning to read" to "reading to learn." Texts get longer. Chapter books appear in the rotation. Vocabulary work intensifies. Writing moves from sentence-level into multi-paragraph compositions, with persuasive and explanatory pieces showing up by fourth grade. Most state ELA tests start in third grade, which means the stakes step up around the same time the reading load does.
Middle school - grades six through eight - is where ELA becomes recognizably "high-school-like." Students read full-length novels, write analytical essays, conduct short research projects, and discuss in structured Socratic seminars. Class periods are usually 50 to 70 minutes, and homework expectations climb to 30 minutes a night by eighth grade. Vocabulary moves from word lists to root and affix study, which pays off in standardized testing later.
High school ELA - taken every year, often called English I through English IV - blends literary survey courses with intensive writing instruction. Ninth grade often focuses on world literature, tenth on American or contemporary literature, eleventh on American literature in depth, and twelfth on British literature or AP English. Writing demands shift to longer research papers, college-application essays, and timed argumentative writing for state-mandated ELA state test assessments and AP exams.
ELA Across Grade Bands
Decoding focus. Phonics, sight words, fluency, beginning comprehension. Writing is short sentences and labeled pictures. Reading aloud by the teacher is daily. Stamina for sustained silent reading builds from 5 to 15 minutes by end of second grade.

What Homework in an ELA Class Looks Like
Homework in ELA falls into four predictable categories. Independent reading, vocabulary practice, writing drafts or revisions, and grammar or convention practice. The amount and balance shifts by grade level and teacher style, but most students in grades four through twelve see at least three of these in any given week.
Independent reading is the quiet workhorse of ELA homework. Expectation: 20 to 30 minutes a night, choice of book, with a short response in a reading log or via discussion the next day. Research from the U.S. Department of Education suggests independent reading at this volume correlates with stronger comprehension on every state and national assessment - the catch is that the books must be the right level of challenge and held to some accountability.
Vocabulary practice usually means studying a small list - 8 to 15 words a week - through context sentences, sentence stems, or quizzes on Friday. The strongest teachers tie new words back to current readings so the words appear in context the same week they are taught. Drilling words in isolation without context fades by the next month.
Writing homework can mean drafting, revising, or extending a piece started in class. A common middle-school assignment is "finish your introduction paragraph and bring it ready to peer-review tomorrow." This is where parents see the biggest variation - some kids race through, some agonize, some procrastinate. The work is real but the time required varies wildly.
Grammar and convention work is the least common standalone homework in modern ELA. When it does show up, it is usually targeted - a specific error students made in their last draft, addressed via a short practice set. The days of weekly grammar workbook pages are largely gone outside of test-prep windows.
Watch for these warning signs:
- Refusing to read at home or claiming books are boring most weeks in a row
- Writing assignments coming back with comments on the same issue repeatedly without improvement
- Vocabulary scores trending down even when daily class participation is strong
- Avoidance of group discussion or oral presentation tasks
How Teachers Grade ELA Work
Grading in ELA is more subjective than math but less random than students often suspect. Most teachers use one or more rubrics across the year. Rubrics break down a piece of writing or a project into specific criteria - thesis clarity, evidence quality, organization, language use, conventions - and assign a 1-to-4 or 1-to-6 score on each.
A typical six-trait writing rubric scores ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, and conventions. Each trait carries weight, and the final grade is a weighted average rather than a single judgment call. Teachers usually share the rubric before students start writing, which means students can self-assess as they draft and revise.
Class participation, daily work, and project grades round out the gradebook. Many schools also issue separate standards-based marks on report cards - one mark for reading literature, another for reading informational text, another for writing, and so on. Standards-based grading gives parents a clearer picture of where a student is strong and where they need help, beyond a single letter grade.
State testing in ELA matters for two reasons. First, it can affect promotion in some districts - third grade reading tests are especially high-stakes. Second, the testing data feeds back into a teacher's instructional planning. A student who scored "approaching" on writing arguments will get more practice with evidence integration the following year. That is the system working as designed, even when it does not feel that way during testing week.
How to Support an ELA Student at Home
- ✓Make 20 to 30 minutes of independent reading non-negotiable, with student choice of book
- ✓Read the same novel your child is reading - even just one chapter - to enable conversation
- ✓Discuss new vocabulary words in real conversation, not just on flashcards
- ✓Ask one open-ended question about a class reading at dinner each night
- ✓Review writing drafts by asking what the writer means before fixing commas
- ✓Visit the school or public library every two weeks for fresh independent reading choices
- ✓Practice released state test items for two weeks before the actual exam
- ✓Attend parent-teacher conferences with specific questions about writing and reading levels
What Books Show Up Most Often in ELA Class
The reading list varies by district, but certain titles appear so often they form an unofficial American ELA canon. Sixth grade frequently includes "The Giver" by Lois Lowry, "Esperanza Rising" by Pam Munoz Ryan, "Bud, Not Buddy" by Christopher Paul Curtis, and short stories from authors like Walter Dean Myers and Ray Bradbury. Seventh and eighth grade pick up "The Outsiders," "Lord of the Flies," "A Wrinkle in Time," and "To Kill a Mockingbird."
Ninth and tenth grade lists usually include "Romeo and Juliet," "Of Mice and Men," "The Catcher in the Rye," and a contemporary novel chosen by the school. Eleventh grade often centers on American literature - "The Great Gatsby," "The Crucible," "Their Eyes Were Watching God," and excerpts from "Native Son." Twelfth grade tilts British or comparative - "Hamlet," "Macbeth," "Pride and Prejudice," and "Frankenstein" are common.
Most schools mix canonical texts with contemporary diverse voices. A typical middle school year might pair "The Outsiders" with Jason Reynolds's "Long Way Down" or Angie Thomas's "The Hate U Give." This pairing is intentional - the older text gives shared cultural literacy, the newer text gives current relevance and broader representation. Parents who only see the older title sometimes worry that ELA is stuck in the 1960s. Look closer at the reading list and you will usually find the balance.

Modern ELA Class Approach
- +Integrated literacy builds real-world communication skills, not isolated facts
- +Standards-based grading shows parents exactly where students stand on each strand
- +Mix of canonical and contemporary texts keeps content relevant
- +Discussion and speaking practice prepares students for college and work
- +Daily writing builds stamina and clarity year over year
- −Less worksheet work can feel unstructured to parents who expect traditional homework
- −Grammar instruction is embedded rather than systematic - some students need explicit reteaching
- −Subjective grading can frustrate students who prefer clear right-or-wrong answers
- −Reading load increases sharply in middle school and can overwhelm slower readers
- −Group work depends on classmate engagement and can vary in quality
How to Help Your Child Succeed in ELA Class
Parents have more leverage in ELA than in almost any other subject because the support work is conversational rather than technical. Five habits make the biggest difference across grade levels.
One, read the same book your child is reading. Not the whole thing every time - just enough to ask one good question at the dinner table. "Why do you think Jonas is allowed to lie when no one else is?" beats "How was school today?" by a wide margin. Conversational practice with text deepens comprehension and signals that books are taken seriously at home.
Two, build vocabulary through context, not flashcards. When a new word appears in conversation, news, or a movie subtitle, name it. Use it again the next day. Words that get used three times in a week stick. Words drilled in isolation evaporate.
Three, treat writing as drafts, not finished products. When your child shows you an essay, resist correcting commas first. Ask "what are you trying to say in this paragraph?" and listen. Most writing problems are thinking problems in disguise. Sharpening the idea first makes the editing far easier.
Four, support independent reading by giving choice. The single most reliable predictor of strong ELA performance is the volume and variety of independent reading from grades three through eight. Library cards, audiobooks, graphic novels, sports magazines - whatever keeps the eyes on words counts. Reading widely beats reading "correctly."
Five, talk about how language works. Notice headlines. Spot a clever metaphor in a song. Compare two news stories on the same event. This is the kind of casual English language arts awareness that turns kids into confident readers and writers without it ever feeling like school.
What Counts as Success in an ELA Class
Success in ELA looks different from success in math. There is rarely one right answer. Students succeed when they can do five things consistently. Read a grade-level text and explain what it means. Write a clear paragraph supported by evidence. Discuss ideas with peers using textual references. Use new vocabulary in their own writing within a week of learning it. And revise work meaningfully when given feedback.
Letter grades and test scores measure pieces of this. They miss other pieces. A student with a B+ in ELA who reads voraciously, writes in a journal, and argues confidently in class has succeeded by every meaningful measure - even if the grade does not crack an A. Conversely, a student with an A who never reads outside school and panics during open-ended writing has not really mastered the skills the standards target.
The shift from "earning the grade" to "building the skill" is the most useful frame parents can hold. ELA class is not a series of assignments to survive. It is the slow construction of a life skill - communication - that pays compound interest from middle school onward. Every essay revised, every novel discussed, every vocabulary word adopted into daily speech is a small deposit. The dividends arrive in college applications, job interviews, and adult life every day.
Five Signs an ELA Student Is Thriving
- ✓Reads grade-level texts and explains them in their own words
- ✓Writes clear evidence-based paragraphs without heavy prompting
- ✓Uses new vocabulary in writing within a week of learning it
- ✓Joins discussion with textual references, not just opinions
- ✓Revises work meaningfully when given specific feedback
- ✓Chooses books for independent reading without being told to
- ✓Picks up cultural references and figurative language in conversation
- ✓Treats writing as a multi-draft process rather than a one-shot task
Common Questions Parents Ask About ELA Class
"Why does my child have so many novels but so few worksheets?" Modern ELA prioritizes extended reading and writing practice over drill. Worksheets are still used for targeted skill review, but the bulk of class time goes to applied work because that is what builds durable skill.
"Is ELA the same as English class?" Functionally yes, at least for K-8. In high school, "English" is the more common label but the standards and content match ELA. The shift in naming reflects the expansion from "English literature" to all five strands of literacy.
"How much grammar do they really teach?" Less than you remember from your own school days, and more strategically. Grammar shows up inside writing instruction and gets reinforced when student work shows specific patterns of error. The goal is correct usage in real writing, not the ability to label every clause type on a quiz.
"Why all the group work and discussion?" Because the standards explicitly require speaking and listening as a separate strand. Employers and colleges rate collaborative communication as critical. ELA class is one of the few places where it is taught and assessed deliberately.
"Should I push my child to read above grade level?" Sometimes. Slightly above is great. Way above can backfire if vocabulary outpaces comprehension. The sweet spot is books a child can read 95 percent of the words and still discuss with depth. A school librarian or ELA teacher can recommend titles within that zone.
"What if my child is reading below grade level?" Talk to the teacher first. Most schools have intervention programs - Title I support, small-group reading, or special-education services - that target specific skills. The earlier these conversations happen, the better the trajectory.
"How can my child improve quickly before a state test?" Two weeks before testing, daily 20-minute timed practice with released items beats any tutoring program. Practice the specific format of the test - whether that is multiple choice, short response, or extended essay - and review one missed item at a time. Cramming new content does little. Building familiarity with the test format does a great deal.
ELA Questions and Answers
About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.