Seasons, Holidays, Directions


Grade 4 capitalization worksheet on seasons, holidays, directions. Rewrite each sentence with correct capitalization. Capitalize holidays and proper nouns, but not seasons or general directions. Printable PDF. Includes an answer key. Part of our seasons, holidays and directions capitalization collection. Aligned to Common Core standards.
How do I use this worksheet?
Introduce the skill with a brief whole-class activity, such as calling out examples and asking students to give a thumbs up when they hear seasons, holidays and directions in a sentence. Then let students work through the worksheet independently or in pairs, referring to a class anchor chart if one is available. When reviewing answers, ask students to explain why an answer is correct rather than just confirming it. These seasons, holidays and directions worksheets work well as a focused practice activity, a homework assignment, or a warm-up at the start of a language arts lesson.
What students will practice
- Students will identify and correctly use seasons, holidays and directions in sentences and short passages.
- Students will distinguish seasons, holidays and directions from related language concepts and apply rules consistently.
- Students will demonstrate understanding of seasons, holidays and directions in both reading and their own writing.
Curriculum Links
Common Core State Standards
Grammar & Writing · 4th Grade
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FAQ
How do I use this seasons, holidays and directions worksheet?⌄
Introduce the skill with a brief whole-class activity, such as calling out examples and asking students to give a thumbs up when they hear seasons, holidays and directions in a sentence. Then let students work through the worksheet independently or in pairs, referring to a class anchor chart if one is available. When reviewing answers, ask students to explain why an answer is correct rather than just confirming it. These seasons, holidays and directions worksheets work well as a focused practice activity, a homework assignment, or a warm-up at the start of a language arts lesson.
What does this worksheet teach?⌄
These seasons, holidays and directions worksheets for 4th grade give students the targeted language arts practice they need to master this important grammar skill. Students identify, sort, complete, and write using seasons, holidays and directions through a variety of exercises designed to reinforce both recognition and application. Our capitalization worksheets connect grammar practice to reading and writing so students see how seasons, holidays and directions works in real language. Building a solid understanding of seasons, holidays and directions in 4th grade sets students up for stronger writing and clearer communication in every subject.
What grade level is this for?⌄
This worksheet is designed for 4th Grade students (Ages 9-10), aligned to Common Core standard L.4.2. It can also be used as review for early students at the next grade level or as an introduction for advanced students.
Can I use this for homeschool or classroom?⌄
Yes. This worksheet works for homeschool, classroom, and tutoring settings. Print individual pages for targeted practice, or print the full set as a packet. Works great as a morning warm-up, independent center activity, or fast-finisher task.
What capitalization rules should fourth graders know?⌄
Fourth graders should correctly capitalize proper nouns including specific places (cities, countries, rivers), organizations, holidays, historical events and periods, languages, and names of courses (CCSS L.4.2a). They should also capitalize the first word of a quotation when appropriate. Fourth grade expands on the basic rules from earlier grades.
What capitalization errors do fourth graders commonly make?⌄
Common errors include failing to capitalize names of specific places (the amazon river vs. the Amazon River), incorrect capitalization of general directions vs. proper regions (turn north vs. I live in the North), and inconsistent capitalization of titles when used before names (president Lincoln vs. President Lincoln). Proofreading worksheets targeting these specific errors are effective practice.
How do you help fourth graders remember capitalization rules?⌄
Create a reference chart organized by category: people's names, specific places, specific organizations, specific time periods, languages/nationalities. The unifying rule is that proper nouns name a specific one-of-a-kind thing. Editing worksheets where students proofread a paragraph for capitalization errors - rather than fill-in-the-blank exercises - build the proofreading habit that matters in real writing.
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Maria R.
Homeschool parent · Verified member
My daughter loves these worksheets. Easy to print, simple to follow. We do one a day and she is making real progress.
David L.
2nd Grade Teacher · Verified member
Exactly what I needed for my students. Clean layout, easy instructions, and the kids actually stay on task.
Emily W.
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We've tried a lot of printable worksheets but these are consistently the best quality. My son asks to do them.
Lisa M.
Pre-K Teacher · Verified member
Perfect for my little learners. Simple, focused, and no distracting clutter. These are in my weekly rotation.
Rachel H.
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I print these every Sunday for the week ahead. My kids never complain about worksheet time when it's ClassWeekly.
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Worksheet Details
| Grade | 4th Grade |
| Subject | Grammar & Writing |
| Topic | Capitalization |
| Standard | L.4.2 |
| Pages | 1 page |
| Difficulty | Medium |
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