7 Great Ideas for Main Idea and Key Details in Upper Elementary

A student reaches toward glowing lightbulbs with the text “Main Idea in Upper Elementary.”

If you are looking for tips on teaching main idea and key details in upper grades, you’re in the right place! This blog post is for all of you 4th and 5th grade teachers who are getting ready to teach main idea in informational text.

  • 4th Grade RI: Determine the main idea of a text and explain how it is supported by key details; summarize the text.
  • 5th Grade RI: Determine two or more main ideas of a text and explain how they are supported by key details; summarize the text.

Introduce Main Idea and Key Details with Anchor Charts:

Ice cream cone anchor chart showing scoops labeled as key details and the cone as the main idea.

Main idea is a skill that can give students some trouble. You may introduce the skill in seclusion and work toward mastery, but I also suggest revisiting the skill throughout the year.

When introducing main idea, an anchor chart is a good place to start. Students need to understand the purpose and parameters of main idea. An anchor chart needs to have a clear description of the topic or skill. So, you can create (or print/display) an anchor chart and revisit it throughout your unit. The anchor charts below can be printed or displayed digitally. Then, as you revisit main idea throughout the year, pull the anchor chart back out to reinforcement.

Modeling with Mentor Texts

Collection of mentor texts for teaching main idea and key details, including She Persisted, Moonshot, and Ivan.

Another essential component to teaching main idea in upper grades is modeling. There are so many high-quality informational texts out there! For main idea, I like to choose texts that have a straight-forward message. These texts may be shorter/simpler than a typical intermediate mentor text. But, they will provide you with the information students need to properly learn main idea skills.

Each of the links below are affiliate links to Amazon! To grab your copy of some of these mentor texts, click the links below:

Lesson Additions

Student watching a BrainPOP video about main idea on a laptop.

Don’t forget about adding informational videos and activities, like BrainPop! Tim and Moby make the idea of main idea easier to understand for students with great visual elements and explanations. There are graphic organizers and quizzes that your kids can use, too!

(Link: Brain Pop Main Idea Video)

Focusing On Key Details

Blue worksheet with cut-and-paste supporting details about bees.

Your next step will be working with key details. It is important for students to be able to differentiate details. This activity requires students to match details with specific main ideas. This will help students learn how to determine which details are important. It will also help them with understanding what kind of details support a main idea.

What about Multiple Main Ideas?

Anchor chart explaining that texts may have multiple main ideas

In 5th grade, students will be identifying multiple main ideas. For this, students will be looking for sections of information that are about a similar topic. Texts are longer and more detailed in 4th and 5th grade, so the information will be divided into sections. So, students will need to learn how to identify the main ideas of these subsections of text. Then, they will be able to figure out what the entire test is about.

Use Graphic Organizers & Mentor Texts

Student practice pages alongside mentor texts like She Persisted and Ada Lovelace

Using mentor texts is a powerful way to teach main idea and key details. Letting your students use your mentor texts to reread AFTER you’ve used it within your lesson is powerful! Mentor texts also make lessons more engaging and relatable for upper elementary learners.

Provide Reading Passages for Practice

Passages about plastic straws with highlighting and comprehension questions for identifying multiple main ideas

Reading passages give students authentic opportunities to practice identifying main idea and key details. Use markers to highlight evidence and answer comprehension questions.

Want Ready-to-Go Lessons & Activities?

The resources seen in today’s post are from my ELA units. Each grade level has a complete unit for teaching Main Idea. These units have lesson plans, graphic organizers, reading passages with comprehension questions, task cards, interactive notebook pages, assessments, and more!

Third grade main idea and key details passages and activities with Lexile-leveled texts.
Fourth grade passages and activities for teaching main idea and key details with scenario cards.
Fifth grade main idea and supporting details resource with passages and comprehension activities.

Looking for more Upper Grades blog posts?


Want a free Main Idea activity to add?

FREE MAIN IDEA ACTIVITY

This free digital activity comes with links to Seesaw and Google Slides for your students. They will practice their main topic or main idea skills.


Or… Check out the All-Year-ELA Membership!

With this membership, you will get all of my ELA standards-based units. This includes my standards-based materials for Reading Informational, Reading Literature, Writing, Language and Grammar, Vocabulary, Foundational Skills, and Speaking & Listening!

Membership Invitation for All Year ELA reading and writing materials

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