Reading - Word Reading
KS2EN-Y4-D002
Application of phonics, morphology and etymology to decode and understand new words. By Year 4, most pupils should not need further direct word reading instruction; any focus should support vocabulary development. Pupils apply growing knowledge of root words, prefixes and suffixes and read further exception words.
National Curriculum context
Reading — word reading at Year 4 consolidates automatic decoding so that pupils can read most words, including those with more complex morphology, without conscious attention. Pupils are expected to understand that many words have been borrowed from other languages and carry the spelling patterns of their language of origin — Latin, French, Greek — and to use this knowledge to tackle unfamiliar vocabulary in academic texts. The statutory curriculum requires pupils to continue to apply their phonic knowledge and skill to read aloud and to understand new words encountered in their independent reading. Year 4 is a crucial year for closing any remaining gaps in decoding fluency so that comprehension, rather than decoding, becomes the primary challenge in reading.
3
Concepts
1
Clusters
4
Prerequisites
3
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Apply morphology and etymology to read and understand unfamiliar words
practice CuratedRoot words, prefixes/suffixes for reading (etymology and morphology), and exception words from Y3-4 form the complete word reading curriculum for Y4; C013 lists C014 in co_teach_hints.
Teaching Suggestions (1)
Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.
Spelling and Vocabulary: Word Detective
English Unit Writer's WorkshopPedagogical rationale
Systematic spelling instruction at Y4 must go beyond rote memorisation to build morphological awareness through prefixes, suffixes, and root words. An investigative approach where pupils act as 'word detectives' develops etymological curiosity and transferable spelling strategies. This maps directly to the statutory Y3-4 word list and Appendix 1 spelling rules.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (3)
Root words for reading and meaning
knowledge AI DirectEN-Y4-C013
Pupils apply growing knowledge of root words alongside etymology and morphology to read aloud and comprehend new words, supporting vocabulary development rather than decoding alone
Teaching guidance
Build on Year 3 root word knowledge by introducing Latin and Greek roots found in subject-specific vocabulary across the curriculum. Examples: 'aqua' (water), 'bio' (life), 'geo' (earth), 'port' (carry), 'rupt' (break), 'struct' (build), 'tele' (far). Use word webs to show how a single root generates multiple words. When encountering unfamiliar vocabulary in science, geography or history, prompt children to identify the root word and use it to infer meaning. Create class root word collections for each subject area.
Common misconceptions
Children may not connect root word knowledge to reading comprehension, treating it as a separate spelling activity. They may misidentify root words in words that are not etymologically related (e.g., thinking 'television' and 'telephone' share the root 'tel' when the actual root is 'tele-'). Some children memorise roots without understanding how to apply them to new vocabulary.
Difficulty levels
Identifying the root word within a familiar word that has a prefix or suffix.
Example task
What is the root word in each of these: unhappy, playing, darkness?
Model response: unhappy → happy, playing → play, darkness → dark
Using known root words to read and understand unfamiliar words by identifying how prefixes and suffixes change meaning.
Example task
You come across the word 'misunderstand' in your reading. Break it into parts and explain what it means.
Model response: mis- means wrongly, and the root word is 'understand'. So misunderstand means to understand something wrongly or incorrectly.
Applying root word knowledge alongside etymology to read aloud and comprehend unfamiliar words across subjects.
Example task
In your science book, you read: 'Herbivores consume only vegetation.' Use root word knowledge to explain what 'herbivore' and 'vegetation' mean.
Model response: Herbi- comes from the Latin word for plant (like 'herb') and -vore means eater (like 'devour'). So a herbivore is a plant-eater. Vegetation comes from the Latin root 'vegetare' meaning to grow, so vegetation means plants and growing things.
Using root word families to predict the meanings of multiple unfamiliar words and explain the connections between them.
Example task
The Latin root 'port' means 'to carry'. List four words containing this root and explain how 'carry' connects to each meaning.
Model response: Transport — carry across (trans = across). Export — carry out (ex = out of a country). Import — carry in. Portable — able to be carried. They all connect to the idea of carrying or moving things from one place to another.
Delivery rationale
Reading/word reading concept — decoding and retrieval skills are digitally assessable.
Prefixes and suffixes for reading (etymology and morphology)
knowledge AI DirectEN-Y4-C014
Pupils apply knowledge of a wide range of prefixes and suffixes (as listed in English Appendix 1) both to read aloud and to understand the meaning of new words, testing different pronunciations for longer words
Teaching guidance
Extend prefix and suffix knowledge to support reading of unfamiliar vocabulary. Year 4 prefixes include: in-/im-/il-/ir- (meaning 'not': inactive, impossible, illegal, irregular), inter- (between: interact, international), and further practice with un-, dis-, mis-, re-. Year 4 suffixes include: -ation (information), -ous (famous), -ly (happily), -er/-or (teacher, inventor). Teach children to decode unfamiliar words in reading by identifying the prefix or suffix and the root word. Model this process during shared reading across all subjects.
Common misconceptions
Children may not realise that in-, im-, il- and ir- are all variants of the same 'not' prefix, applied depending on the initial letter of the root word. They may strip affixes from words that are not actually prefixed (e.g., thinking 'improve' has the prefix 'im-'). Some children can identify affixes but do not use this knowledge to work out the meaning of unfamiliar words.
Difficulty levels
Recognising common prefixes and suffixes in words and reading them aloud correctly.
Example task
Read these words aloud and underline the prefix or suffix: impossible, cheerful, disappear, hopeless.
Model response: im-possible, cheer-ful, dis-appear, hope-less. [Reads each word aloud with correct pronunciation]
Using prefix and suffix knowledge to decode unfamiliar words in reading, understanding how they modify the root word's meaning.
Example task
Read this sentence: 'The magician made the rabbit reappear.' You know 'appear' means to come into sight. What does 'reappear' mean and how do you know?
Model response: Reappear means to appear again. I know because 're-' means again or back, so adding it to 'appear' means to come into sight again — the rabbit had disappeared and then came back.
Applying knowledge of a wide range of prefixes and suffixes from English Appendix 1 to read aloud and understand new vocabulary, testing different pronunciations.
Example task
Read this passage aloud: 'The irresponsible inventor created an indescribable contraption.' Explain how you worked out how to pronounce and understand the underlined words.
Model response: [Reads passage aloud fluently] 'Irresponsible' has the prefix ir- meaning 'not' and the root 'responsible', so it means not responsible. For 'indescribable', I know in- means 'not' and the root is 'describe' with the suffix -able meaning 'able to be'. So indescribable means not able to be described — it's so unusual you can't find words for it.
Explaining how the same prefix or suffix can have different meanings in different words, using etymology to distinguish.
Example task
The prefix 'in-' can mean 'not' (invisible) or 'into' (inject). Sort these words into two groups based on the meaning of 'in-': incomplete, inform, invisible, insect, inhale, inaccurate.
Model response: 'Not': incomplete (not complete), invisible (not visible), inaccurate (not accurate). 'Into/in': inform (to put knowledge into someone), inhale (to breathe in). 'Insect' is tricky — 'in' here comes from Latin 'insectum' meaning 'cut into', because insects have segmented bodies. So it is the 'into' meaning.
Delivery rationale
Reading/word reading concept — decoding and retrieval skills are digitally assessable.
Exception words (Years 3-4)
knowledge AI DirectEN-Y4-C015
Pupils read further exception words from the Years 3-4 statutory list, noting the unusual correspondences between spelling and sound and where these occur in words
Teaching guidance
Continue practising the Years 3-4 statutory word list words throughout Year 4, focusing on those that children still find challenging. Use a range of strategies: look-say-cover-write-check, dictation in sentence contexts, word sorts by common patterns, mnemonics for particularly tricky words, and regular assessment. Focus on words that appear frequently in cross-curricular writing. Encourage children to self-monitor their spelling of exception words in independent writing and correct errors using dictionaries.
Common misconceptions
Children may be able to spell exception words in isolation (on a spelling test) but revert to phonetic spelling in independent writing. They may confuse similar-looking words (e.g., 'thought', 'though', 'through', 'thorough'). Some children assume that once they pass a spelling test on these words, they never need to practise them again.
Difficulty levels
Reading aloud common exception words from the Years 3-4 list with correct pronunciation.
Example task
Read these words aloud: though, thought, through, enough, caught, answer, different.
Model response: [Reads each word correctly: /ðəʊ/, /θɔːt/, /θruː/, /ɪˈnʌf/, /kɔːt/, /ˈɑːnsə/, /ˈdɪfrənt/]
Spelling common exception words correctly in isolation and noting the unusual letter-sound correspondences.
Example task
Your teacher dictates: 'different', 'describe', 'favourite', 'knowledge', 'sentence'. Write them correctly and circle the tricky part in each word.
Model response: different (circling 'er' — sounds like it could be 'ent'), describe (circling 'des' — sounds like 'dis'), favourite (circling 'ou' — easy to forget), knowledge (circling 'kn' — silent k), sentence (circling 'ence' — could be 'ance')
Spelling all Years 3-4 exception words correctly in dictated sentences and independent writing.
Example task
Write from dictation: 'It was a different experience from what we expected. The whole group decided to continue the experiment, although it was difficult.'
Model response: It was a different experience from what we expected. The whole group decided to continue the experiment, although it was difficult.
Explaining why exception words are spelt unusually, using knowledge of etymology or historical spelling patterns.
Example task
Why is there a silent 'k' in 'knowledge' and a silent 'w' in 'answer'? What does this tell us about how English has changed?
Model response: In Old English, the 'k' in 'knowledge' was actually pronounced — people said 'k-nowledge'. Over hundreds of years, English speakers stopped saying the 'k' sound before 'n', but the spelling stayed the same. Similarly, 'answer' comes from Old English 'andswaru', where the 'w' sound was spoken. The spelling kept the old letters even after pronunciation changed, which is why English has so many silent letters.
Delivery rationale
Reading/word reading concept — decoding and retrieval skills are digitally assessable.