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Its or It's

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Its or It's - Paw
Its or It's - Paw

Free printable its or it's worksheet for 4th grade students. Part of our punctuation 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 punctuation 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 punctuation 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 punctuation in sentences and short passages.
  • Students will distinguish punctuation from related language concepts and apply rules consistently.
  • Students will demonstrate understanding of punctuation in both reading and their own writing.

Curriculum Links

Common Core State Standards

Language · 4th Grade

L.4.2.B

Standard: Use commas and quotation marks to mark direct speech and quotations from a text.

View all L.4.2.B worksheets →

FAQ

How do I use this punctuation 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 punctuation 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 punctuation 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 punctuation 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 punctuation through a variety of exercises designed to reinforce both recognition and application. Our punctuation worksheets connect grammar practice to reading and writing so students see how punctuation works in real language. Building a solid understanding of punctuation 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.B. 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 punctuation skills should fourth graders master?

Fourth graders should use commas and quotation marks to mark direct speech and quotations from a text, use a comma before a coordinating conjunction in a compound sentence, and correctly punctuate titles. CCSS L.4.2b covers commas and quotation marks in dialogue and direct quotation, while CCSS L.4.2c covers the comma before a coordinating conjunction. Students also refine their use of apostrophes in possessives and continue mastering comma usage in addresses, dates, and series. A key fourth grade advancement is punctuating quotations from source material, not just dialogue, which connects grammar to research writing. Students learn that quoting from a book requires the same punctuation rules as character dialogue. Worksheets that include both dialogue and text quotation exercises build this transfer. Activities that present compound sentences and ask students to place the comma correctly before the conjunction address a common weak spot. Integrated punctuation editing passages that combine all fourth grade rules provide the most realistic and effective practice.

How do I help my fourth grader punctuate compound sentences correctly?

The rule is straightforward: when two independent clauses are joined by a coordinating conjunction (and, but, or, nor, for, so, yet), place a comma before the conjunction. "I enjoy reading, and my brother prefers soccer." The challenge is distinguishing compound sentences from simple sentences with compound predicates. "I enjoy reading and writing" has no comma because it is one subject with two verbs, not two separate clauses. Teach your child this test: cover everything after the conjunction. If what remains on each side could be a complete sentence on its own, add a comma. If one side cannot stand alone, no comma is needed. Worksheets that present mixed examples and ask students to decide whether a comma is needed are highly effective. Start with clear examples where both clauses have different subjects, then progress to trickier cases. Having students write their own compound sentences and check them with the "cover test" builds the skill for independent use. CCSS L.4.2c specifically identifies this comma rule as a fourth grade focus.

What are the most common punctuation errors fourth graders make?

Fourth graders commonly struggle with four punctuation areas. First, comma splices: joining two independent clauses with just a comma and no conjunction ("I like pizza, she likes tacos" instead of "I like pizza, and she likes tacos"). Second, missing commas before conjunctions in compound sentences, which is the reverse problem. Third, punctuating quotations from texts incorrectly when incorporating them into research reports and book responses. Fourth, inconsistent or incorrect use of possessive apostrophes, especially with plural possessives and proper nouns ending in s. Some students also over-use exclamation points or place commas based on speech pauses rather than grammar rules. Worksheets that present passages with these specific errors and ask students to identify and correct them build proofreading skills. The most effective approach is focusing on one error type per week until students can spot it automatically, then combining them in integrated editing exercises. CCSS L.4.2 requires students to demonstrate command of capitalization, punctuation, and spelling conventions appropriate to their grade level.

Ratings & Reviews

3

Nicole S.

Homeschool parent · Verified download

Apr 2026

Three kids at home and these work for all of them. Easy to adapt up or down a grade level depending on the day.

Helpful · 9

Priya N.

Kindergarten Teacher · Verified download

Mar 2026

I love how these are designed for actual classroom use. Margins are good for little hands, font is readable, and activities are just the right length.

Helpful · 15

David L.

2nd Grade Teacher · Verified download

Apr 2026

Exactly what I needed for my students. Clean layout, easy instructions, and the kids actually stay on task.

Helpful · 9

Worksheet Details

Grade4th Grade
SubjectGrammar & Writing
TopicPunctuation
StandardL.4.2.B
Pages1 page
DifficultyMedium

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