Where MYP Language Arts actually lives (and where resources misfire)
Last Monday of Week 3, my MYP Year 4 class wrote thoughtful scene descriptions but barely touched our Statement of Inquiry about how perspective shapes representation. That’s the classic mismatch I see with generic ELA packs: skills are busy, but they skirt the MYP spine—key concept, related concepts, Global Context, ATLs, and Criteria A–D. A five-paragraph essay on symbolism might be on-topic, yet still flunk MYP alignment if it ignores command terms like “analyse” and never maps feedback to the 0–8 bands.
Inside the IB · MYP pathway, Language Arts is really Language and Literature. Tasks should move between literary and non-literary texts, invite comparative thinking, and keep the inquiry thread visible. I’ve binned gorgeous worksheets that reduce “analysis” to feature-spotting or that praise flowery style over audience and purpose. What I keep are resources that label the criterion upfront, include a banded rubric, and cue ATLs (e.g., “research note-making,” “media literacy”). When I want to see how other teachers frame those elements, I’ll browse the Language Arts threads in the community library and steal the framing—not the fluff.