Teacher Guide: Figurative Language

Grade 4 ELA | FAST Success Kit | FL B.E.S.T. Standards

Florida B.E.S.T. Standard

ELA.4.R.3.1

Explain how figurative language contributes to meaning in text(s).

What Students Need to Know

Fourth graders must be able to identify different types of figurative language AND explain what they mean in context. The key is understanding that figurative language creates images, emotions, or comparisons that make writing more vivid and interesting.

The Five Types of Figurative Language

Simile

Definition: Compares two unlike things using "like" or "as"

  • "Her eyes sparkled like diamonds."
  • "He was as brave as a lion."
  • "The classroom was as quiet as a mouse."

Metaphor

Definition: Says one thing IS another (direct comparison without like/as)

  • "Time is money."
  • "She is a shining star."
  • "Life is a roller coaster."

Idiom

Definition: A phrase whose meaning is different from the literal words

  • "It's raining cats and dogs."
  • "Break a leg!" (good luck)
  • "Piece of cake" (easy)

Personification

Definition: Gives human qualities to non-human things

  • "The wind whispered through the trees."
  • "The sun smiled down on us."
  • "The flowers danced in the breeze."

Hyperbole

Definition: Extreme exaggeration not meant to be taken literally

  • "I've told you a million times!"
  • "I'm so hungry I could eat a horse."
  • "This backpack weighs a ton."

Simile vs. Metaphor: The Key Difference

Simile Metaphor
Uses "like" or "as" Does NOT use "like" or "as"
"Life is LIKE a box of chocolates." "Life IS a box of chocolates."
"She runs AS fast AS the wind." "She IS the wind when she runs."
Says something is SIMILAR to another Says something IS another thing

Common Misconceptions

Misconception 1: All comparisons with "like" are similes

Reality: "I like pizza" is not a simile - it's just using the word "like" as a verb. A simile must COMPARE two unlike things ("Pizza tastes like heaven").

Misconception 2: Idioms should be taken literally

Reality: Idioms never mean what the words literally say. "It's raining cats and dogs" doesn't mean animals are falling from the sky - it means it's raining heavily.

Misconception 3: Hyperboles are lies

Reality: Hyperboles are exaggerations used for effect, not to deceive. When someone says "I'm starving," they're expressing strong hunger, not claiming they're actually dying.

FAST Assessment Question Types

Question Type Example Stem What It Tests
Identify Type "Which type of figurative language is used in this sentence?" Recognizing simile, metaphor, etc.
Explain Meaning "What does the phrase '___' mean in this passage?" Understanding figurative meaning
Author's Purpose "The author uses this simile to show that..." Understanding effect on meaning
Literal vs. Figurative "If taken literally, this phrase would mean..." Distinguishing literal from figurative

FAST-Style Question Stems

"What type of figurative language is used in the sentence '___'?"
"What does the author mean by '___'?"
"The phrase '___' is an example of—"
"The author uses this simile/metaphor to show that..."
"Read this sentence: '___.' What does this figurative language help the reader understand?"
"Which sentence contains personification?"
"The phrase '___' is an idiom that means..."

5-Day Lesson Plan

Day 1: Introduction & Similes 45 min

Day 2: Metaphors & Comparing to Similes 45 min

Day 3: Idioms & Personification 45 min

Day 4: Hyperbole & Mixed Practice 45 min

Day 5: Assessment & Review 45 min

Teaching Strategies

Draw the Literal Meaning

Have students draw what idioms would look like literally (cats and dogs falling from the sky!). This helps them understand why figurative language exists - to create vivid images without being literal.

Simile vs. Metaphor Sort

Give students sentence strips with similes and metaphors. Have them sort into two groups, then explain the difference. The "like/as" rule is the key!

Ask "What Does This REALLY Mean?"

For every example, ask students to explain the figurative meaning in their own words. This is what the FAST test requires.

Figurative Language in Books

During read-alouds, stop when you encounter figurative language. Have students identify the type and explain the meaning in context.

Materials in This Kit

Resource Description When to Use
Student Concept Worksheet Introduces all 5 types with examples and practice Days 1-3 introduction
Practice Worksheet 12 questions identifying and explaining figurative language Day 4 practice
FAST Practice Quiz 10-question assessment mirroring FAST format Day 5 assessment
Parent Activity Guide Home activities for practicing figurative language Ongoing home support
Answer Keys Complete answers with explanations Teacher/parent reference