7th Grade - Gateway 1
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Text Quality and Complexity
Text Quality and Complexity and Alignment to the Standards with Tasks and Questions Grounded in EvidenceGateway 1 - Partially Meets Expectations | 72% |
|---|---|
Criterion 1.1: Text Quality and Complexity | 15 / 18 |
Criterion 1.2: Tasks and Questions | 11 / 18 |
The grade 7 materials include anchor texts that are well-crafted, award-winning texts from multiple perspectives that are content-rich with ideas, events, and experiences. While the materials include anchor and supporting texts that vary in complexity and support students’ literacy growth over the course of the school year, the teacher resources and supports are general and do not change as texts and tasks become more complex. The questions and tasks included in the materials require careful examination of texts over the course of a school year and provide insights into the Essential Questions for each unit.
There are frequent opportunities and protocols for evidence-based discussions in the program however, those are not consistently referenced or available in lessons. Students engage in on-demand and process writing opportunities across text types, although the opportunities do not reflect the distribution of text types expected of the standards. Explicit evidence-based writing instruction guidance in the materials is limited. In addition, while materials include limited explicit instruction for all the grade-level grammar and usage standards, students do not have sufficient opportunities to apply these in their writing. Lastly, the materials include general guidance on how to teach vocabulary but no explicit instruction.
Criterion 1.1: Text Quality and Complexity
Texts are worthy of students’ time and attention: texts are of quality and are rigorous, meeting the text complexity criteria for each grade. Materials support students’ advancing toward independent reading.
The grade 7 materials include anchor texts that are well-crafted, award-winning texts from multiple perspectives that are content-rich with ideas, events, and experiences. The materials include a higher number of informational texts than literary works, with a 77/23 split. Even though some of the texts are somewhat below the grade band level, the required tasks, as well as the concepts and language within the texts, allow for challenging material at the 7th-grade level.
While the materials include anchor and supporting texts that vary in complexity and support students’ literacy growth over the course of the school year, the teacher resources and supports are general and do not change as texts and tasks become more complex. Materials provide general scaffolding guidance in the “Providing Supports for Text Complexity” section of the Teacher Tools, not in individual units or lessons. The materials include a variety of text types and genres to provide a range and volume of reading that offer opportunities for independent reading; however, there is limited support in place connecting to specific texts as students engage in these readings. The supports are more general or overarching within the program.
Indicator 1a
Anchor texts are of high quality, worthy of careful reading, and consider a range of student interests.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 meet the criteria of Indicator 1a.
Anchor texts are well-crafted, award-winning texts from multiple perspectives that are content-rich with ideas, events, and experiences. The anchor texts in each unit are engaging, easily relatable, and will stretch students’ thinking while covering a range of socially-conscious topics and what it means to be an American. Students read award-winning texts from multiple perspectives and have the opportunity to explore both literary and nonfiction texts of different genres.
Anchor texts are of high quality and consider a range of student interests, are well-crafted, content-rich, and engage students at their grade level. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, students read a variety of anchor texts, including “What Does it Mean to be American?” by Damien Cave and Todd Heisler; "Hello, My Name Is _____" by Jason Kim; “Who’s Irish” by Gish Jen; and “Call Me American” by Abdi Nor Iftin. The full collection of anchor texts includes articles, short stories, poems, and audio interviews. The anchor texts weave a picture of immigrant experiences and what it means to be American and how America is a country of immigrants.
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, the anchor texts are Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin and Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix. Both texts tell the story of the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, focusing on how it came to be, the immigrant stories of the victims, and how greed enabled the tragedy to happen by combining the historical documents in Marrin’s text and Peterson Haddix’s historical fiction story.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, students read the anchor text, A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, an award-winning playwright. The Broadway play explores the enduring ideas around racism, class, and the barriers that exist between many people and the American dream. The text is engaging and relevant for students.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, the anchor text, The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, includes multiple vignettes about a Latino woman’s life with topics on gender roles, immigration, and harassment. The stories are engaging and include underlying messages, themes, and different forms of storytelling that are worthy of careful reading.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, students read the anchor text, American Born Chinese, an award-winning graphic novel, by Gene Luen Yang. The text includes vivid imagery and complex language that will help students understand stereotypes, prejudice, discrimination, and the impact on identity from the perspective of a son of Chinese immigrants.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, students read the anchor text: The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater. The text follows the lives of two teenagers, Sasha (a white teen) and Richard (a black teen), using a combination of narrative techniques, including social media posts and flashbacks, which increases the challenge of the text. The main ideas of the text are related to the criminal justice system and the experiences of a non-binary character.
Indicator 1b
Materials reflect the distribution of text types and genres required by the standards at each grade level.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 meet the criteria for Indicator 1b.
Materials include a variety of text types and genres across the year. The materials include a higher number of informational texts than literary works with a 77/23 split. However, instructional time spent with the literary works across the grade level is higher than informational texts. Text types include memoirs, articles, a speech, nonfiction books, interviews, comics, videos, graphic novels, drama, poems, short stories, historical fiction novels, and novels. The texts connect to a common topic or theme for each unit.
Materials reflect the distribution of text types/genres required by the grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, students read the article “What does it mean to be an American?” by Damien Cave and Todd Heisler, poems such as “The New Colossus” by Emma Lazarus, a short story “Who’s Irish?” by Gish Jen, explore a website “American Dreamers,” read a book excerpt “Call Me American” by Abdi Nor Iftin, listen to audio interviews “Philip and Andy” produced by Lyna Anwar with Andrés Caballero, and watch a video “DACA, explained” on Vox’s YouTube channel.
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, students read two anchor texts that center around the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire: a nonfiction book and a historical fiction account, Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix and Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin. Other texts include an informational article “Amnesty International Calls On Jeff Bezos To Address Amazon Employees’ Concerns About Working Conditions” by Angel Au-Yeung. Additional texts include multiple nonfiction articles detailing first-person accounts, a speech, and videos and photos that give visuals of the time period.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, students read a literary text with the same title by Lorraine Hansberry, a poem “Harlem” by Langston Hughes, articles such as “A Better Life: Creating the American Dream” by Kate Ellis and Ellen Guettler, listen to a radio segment “The Scarlet E, Part II: 40 Acres” by WNYC Studios, watch a movie A Raisin in the Sun,, and read a poetry anthology text entitled The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop by Kevin Coval, Quraysh Ali Lansana, and Nate Marshall.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, students read the literary work The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros that represents the vignette genre. Additional texts include the poem “There Was an Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe” by Mother Goose, an informational article “This is what happens when gender roles are forced on kids” by Emanuella Grinberg and Victoria Larned, and newspaper articles.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, students read a graphic novel with the same title by Gene Luen Yang, articles including “Where Bias Begins: The Truth About Stereotypes” by Annie Murphy Paul, watch a video “Prejudice and Discrimination: Crash Course Psychology #39” on CrashCourse’s YouTube channel, and read a comic “What is a Graphic Novel?” by Jessica Abel.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, students read The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives, a nonfiction LGBTQ novel written by Dashka Slater. Additional texts include five nonfiction newspaper articles about the fight for gender neutral bathrooms and hate crimes, an FBI website, three videos that include first-person interviews, a timeline “Milestones in the American Gay Rights Movement” by PBS, and a blog “Victory! Federal Court Rules Trans Students Must Have Access to Bathrooms That Match Their Gender” by Lambda Legal.
Materials reflect a balance of informational and literary texts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Materials reflect a 77/23 balance of informational and literary texts with 45 informational texts and 12 literary texts
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, the materials across the unit contain 13 informational texts and four literary texts. All texts are core texts.
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood so Cheap, the materials across the unit contain eight informational texts and one literary text. One of the core texts is informational, and the other core text is literary.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, the materials across the unit contain four informational texts and three literary texts. The core text is literary.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, the materials across the unit contain two informational and two literary texts. The core text is literary.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, the materials across the unit contain ten informational texts and one literary text. The core text is literary.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, the materials across the unit contain eight informational texts and one literary text. The core text is informational.
Indicator 1c
Core/Anchor texts have the appropriate level of complexity for the grade according to documented quantitative analysis, qualitative analysis, and relationship to their associated student task. Documentation should also include a rationale for educational purpose and placement in the grade level.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 meet the criteria for Indicator 1c.
Materials include anchor texts that are within or above the Lexile stretch band, ranging between 790L to 1350L, and the publisher consistently provides qualitative analysis rationales. There is a balance of accessible texts and more complex texts across the grade level. Even though some of the texts are somewhat below the grade band level, the required tasks, as well as the concepts and language within the texts, allow for challenging material. The qualitative analysis rationales for text selection and placement are in the Text Selection Rationale or the Notes for Teacher section. The Notes for Teacher section also informs educators what to be aware of and calls out certain features of the texts of which the teacher should be aware due to the content contained therein. Qualitative analysis shows that the complexity increases slightly for varying reasons, including text structure, language, and knowledge demands. The qualitative rationale states that the relationship between the texts and the associated student tasks are accessible for the grade level with instances when students move into more complex tasks. The qualitative text complexity is determined by the Achieve the Core’s Literary Text Complexity Rubric.
Anchor/core texts have the appropriate level of complexity for the grade according to quantitative and qualitative analysis and relationship to their associated student task. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, students read a series of texts, including poetry, such as “Where You From” by Gina Valdez (NP). Of the five texts that are leveled, three are above the grade level band, one is below, and one falls in the middle. Qualitatively, the text is of moderate difficulty as it contains high-level vocabulary, graphs and images that include data, and first-person experiences. The associated student tasks are moderate. The overall complexity measure is moderate.
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, students read two core texts by the same names. Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin (1000L) falls within the Grades 6–8 range, while Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix (790L) has a lower quantitative measure appropriate for the beginning of the year. Qualitatively, the texts are of medium complexity due to the content, and since students read both texts simultaneously, they need to draw conclusions from both texts. The associated student tasks are medium, giving the text an overall complexity measure of moderate.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, students read the text, A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry (1150L), which is within the stretch band. The qualitative analysis is of high difficulty due to unfamiliar stage directions, dated language, idioms, and vernacular dialogue. The associated tasks are accessible. The overall complexity measure is moderate.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, students read The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (870L), which falls below the Grades 6–8 range. Qualitatively, the text is of moderate difficulty due to figurative language, Spanish words and phrases, point of view, and a variety of sentence types. The associated tasks overall are moderate, requiring students to make connections to the larger theme. The overall complexity measure is accessible.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, students read the text American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang (GN530L), which falls below the Grade 6–8 range. The qualitative analysis is of high difficulty due to multiple perspectives, complex stories, time lapses, and archaic vocabulary. The associated tasks are accessible and include a Socratic Seminar. The overall complexity measure is moderate.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LBGTQ+ Experiences in the United States, students read The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater (930L), which falls below the Grade 6–8 range. Qualitatively, the text is of medium difficulty due to two narrators and an unconventional text structure. The associated tasks are challenging, requiring students to analyze and synthesize the text and write an argument. The overall complexity measure is complex.
Anchor/Core texts and a series of texts connected to them are accompanied by an accurate text complexity analysis and a rationale for educational purpose and placement in the grade level. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, there is no provided Text Selection Rationale for the unit, but the publisher provides Lexile ranges between 840L and 1350L for five of the 17 texts, and all the texts support the unit theme of immigration. The Notes for Teachers section states that the topic may be difficult for some students to discuss; it is suggested that teachers tread carefully with their student population, creating a safe space for those of many backgrounds to discuss openly. A summary of the unit includes the educational purpose of the readings: “Students will read about the experiences of first-generation Americans, and the unique challenges they face as native-born Americans with immigrant parents.”
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, the Text Selection Rationale includes Lexile ratings for Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix (790L) and Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin (1000L). The rationale includes qualitative features to consider, such as a combination of both primary documents and quotations from people who lived during that time, the use of the third person limited point of view, setting, and vocabulary. The rationale for Uprising mentions the lower Lexile but states, “The structure of this text is unique in that the author employs a third-person limited point of view, pushing students to think critically about how the same setting and events can be perceived differently by different characters.” The rationale for Flesh and Blood So Cheap notes: “Although this book addresses a complex time in US history and covers a number of topics with which students will likely be unfamiliar, the structure used and text features included in the book makes it quite accessible.” The educational purpose of the text is to provide students with a “necessary schema to understand the setting and social context” of a historical event, the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, in the early 20th century before they read Uprising.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, the Text Selection Rationale includes a Lexile for A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry (1150L). The rationale includes qualitative features to consider, such as students navigating “some slang and idioms may be unfamiliar; additionally some of the characters use African American Vernacular English, which (depending on students’ background and experiences) may impact the accessibility of the text.” The Notes for Teachers section includes many warnings of explicit material, including references to abortion, racial slurs, and violent occurrences, such as lynching. The educational purpose of the text is for students to make connections between today and Hansberry’s compelling interrogation of the American dream.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, the Text Selection Rationale includes a Lexile for The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (870L). The rationale includes qualitative features to consider, such as figurative language, symbols, allusions, repetition, and unusual syntactical formations. The rationale also states that the “structure, language, and meaning of this novella'' make it an appropriate choice for students of this age. The educational purpose of the text is for students to “find that these seemingly simple vignettes are rich with meaning, as Cisneros confronts themes around gender, misogyny, coming-of-age, social class, and racial identity.”
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, the Text Selection Rationale includes a Lexile level for American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang (GN530L). The rationale includes qualitative features, such as vocabulary demands and complex text structure. “The book tells three stories with three protagonists; each story is told from a different literary perspective; each story is written in a different genre; and time moves unpredictably within stories and between them.” In the Notes for Teachers section, additional resources are available to help teachers create a safe space as students grapple with references to stereotypes. While the text includes “several examples…of ‘casual’ references to homophobia, sexism, and sexual harassment”, the publisher “recommend[s] pointing these incidents out to students so that they do not go unnoticed and unnamed, and therefore normalized (as they so often are).”
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LBGTQ+ Experiences in the United States, the Text Selection Rationale includes a Lexile level for The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater (930L). The rationale includes qualitative features, such as a narrative with two different people, nontraditional structures/genres in chapters (text messages, poetry, social media posts, etc.), idioms, instances of figurative language, and many tier-two and tier-three vocabulary words.” The educational purpose of the text is to introduce students to a number of concepts related to sex, sexuality, and gender and to analyze the criminal justice system.
Indicator 1d
Series of texts should be at a variety of complexity levels appropriate for the grade band to support students’ literacy growth over the course of the school year.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1d.
Materials include anchor and supporting texts that vary in complexity and support students’ literacy growth over the course of the school year; however, the teacher resources and supports are general and do not change as texts and tasks become more complex. The Unit Summary and individual lessons outline a path for growth in literacy skills over time. Each unit includes texts of varying complexity that are interconnected to add meaning to unit topics. Students practice skills during the beginning, middle, and end of the year and learn concepts and standards through repeated opportunities to approach their learning and build on previous assignments. Each lesson includes a Standards Map that shows when the literacy skills appear as core or supporting standards in units.
Materials provide general scaffolding guidance in the “Providing Supports for Text Complexity” section of the Teacher Tools, not in individual units or lessons and it is the same document for Grade 7 as it is for Grade 6. This page provides scaffolding support and suggestions, but they are not leveled or specific to texts or tasks. The supports include more time on the text, but that is suggested for all students, not a specific suggestion if students are struggling. Teacher Tools remain consistent, and there are no increasing supports or considerations for more complex texts and tasks. Students repeat similar activities over the course of the year, so increased assistance is not provided.
The complexity of anchor texts students read provides an opportunity for students’ literacy skills to increase across the year, encompassing an entire year’s worth of growth. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
One literacy skill taught throughout the year is to determine the meaning of words and phrases. In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, students read texts of moderate complexity with Lexile levels ranging from 840–1350. In Lesson 4, the lesson objective states: “Identify examples of figurative language used in ‘America and I,’ and explain the impact of these on meaning. In the Close Reading Questions, Discussion Question, and the Writing Prompt students analyze the figurative language and connect it to the author’s feelings about life in America. In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, the anchor text has a Lexile level of 1150L and is highly complex. In Lesson 4, the lesson objective states: “Explain the meaning and impact of word choice and literary devices in Langston Hughes’s ‘Harlem,’ and how they work together to develop a theme.” Students read “Harlem,” define words and phrases, analyze complicated imagery and metaphors, and analyze rhymes. In the Close Read Questions, students analyze imagery, connotation, similes, and Hughes’ use of questions in the poem. In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, in Lesson 8, the lesson objective for the anchor text The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (870 Lexile, moderately complex) states: “Explain how Cisneros uses word choice and figurative language to develop tone and meaning.” Close Read Questions ask: “What is Espreanza’s tone as she tells the story of her Aunt Lupe in the vignette, ‘Born Bad’? Find at least three different words and phrases that help develop her tone.”
Another literacy skill taught throughout the year is to determine two or more central ideas in a text and analyze their development over the course of the text; provide an objective summary of the text. In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, in Lesson 26, the lesson objective states: “Determine the central message of Rose Schneiderman’s speech and explain the impact of word choice on meaning and tone.” A Close Reading Question asks: “Schneiderman writes in paragraph 3, ‘The life of men and women is so cheap and property is so sacred.’ What is the impact of Schneiderman’s juxtaposition of the words ‘cheap’ and ‘sacred’ in this sentence?” The text is at the high end of the stretch band for students in Grade 7 and accompanies the reading of two core texts Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin (1000L, medium complexity)and Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix (790L, medium difficulty). In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, in Lesson 10, the lesson objective for the anchor text The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (870L, moderately complex) states: “Explain the impact of gender norms and expectations on the lives of young teenagers around the world.” Students read two articles, “Most Teenage Girls Still Experience Sexual Harassment” by Jennifer McNulty and “This is what happens when gender roles are forced on kids” by Emanuella Grinberg and Victoria Larned. Students must understand the main idea to explain the impact, therefore they must be able to “Determine two or more central ideas in a text and analyze their development over the course of the text; provide an objective summary of the text.” In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, in Lesson 14, the lesson objective for the anchor text The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater (930L, medium complexity) states: “Identify central ideas in The 57 Bus and explain how Slater develops ideas over the course of the text.” The discussion and writing prompt connect to the reading of the text: “What central idea does Slater develop on the topic of binaries? How does she use both Sasha and Richard’s stories to develop this central idea? Carefully explain your thinking.”
As texts become more complex, appropriate scaffolds and/or materials are not provided in the Teacher Edition (e.g., spending more time on texts, more questions, repeated readings, skill lessons). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Tools, the general description of the supports available states: “The Fishtank ELA curriculum includes five types of supports to help provide students access to different features of text complexity-language supports, background knowledge supports, additional supports, foundational skills supports, and opportunities for enrichment. After you have determined the aspect of the texts that will be most challenging for your students, you can decide which supports are most appropriate. These supports can be used with the whole group, in small groups, or individually.” The guidance for teachers is the same across all grade levels.
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, students read texts of moderate complexity with Lexile levels ranging from 840–1350. In Lesson 4, the “Knowledge” section includes key facts about the reading, definitions of three academic vocabulary words (figurative language, metaphor, and simile,) and sample responses to the writing prompts. The “Knowledge” section is in every unit with key facts about different academic vocabulary words.
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, in Lesson 1, students begin reading the anchor texts, Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin (1000L, medium complexity)and Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix (790L, medium difficulty). Students use both texts to answer a Close Read Question: “What impact did witnessing the Triangle Fire have on spectators like Frances Perkins in Flesh and Blood So Cheap? Provide at least two pieces of textual evidence to support your answer.” They also answer a Writing Prompt “How was Mrs. Livingstone impacted by the Triangle Fire? Pull out specific words and phrases that demonstrate the impact of this event on her life.” In Lessons 29 and 30, students read three articles, all are above the stretch grade band level for Grade 7. Students use the texts as they create an op-ed that answers the question, “Does our country need to take steps to protect the health and safety of workers at Amazon?” Materials do not provide the extra time or additional scaffolds in consideration of the more complex texts.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, students read The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater, a novel that is quantitatively rated as 930L, falling at the beginning of the 6–8 Grade band. Other materials include articles that range from 1010L–1610L, some within and some far above the stretch grade band for Grade 7. Materials do not provide additional scaffolds in consideration of the more complex texts.
Indicator 1e
Materials provide opportunities for students to engage in a range and volume of reading to support their reading at grade level by the end of the school year, including accountability structures for independent reading.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1e.
Materials include a variety of text types and genres to provide a range and volume of reading that offer opportunities for independent reading; however, there is limited support in place connecting to specific texts as students engage in these readings. The supports are more general or overarching within the program. Over the course of the year, students read different types of texts ranging from traditional print sources; such as literary and informational novels, newspaper articles, and magazine articles; to non-traditional sources such as graphic novels, films, and videos. Students engage in a volume of reading across the school year, including reading during and outside the school day on a consistent basis. The Teacher Tools section includes procedures and routines for different types of reading, including Interactive Read Alouds, Shared Reading, Partner Reading, and Small Group Reading. The materials include independent reading opportunities that are often homework assignments; students take part in comprehensive discussions and activities related to the homework reading in class the following day. The resource, Recommended Texts for Independent Reading, makes recommendations for fiction and non-fiction texts with aligned themes and topics and additional texts by the same author.
Teacher Tools provide additional guidance for educators relating to independent reading procedures, though the guidance is general rather than lesson-specific. For example, the Components of an ELA Lesson under the Homework heading states: “Some lessons require students to read sections of the text prior to class. Homework for the next lesson is identified. Homework should be assigned at the end of the class period.” Teacher Tools also offer guidance relating to Reading Structures and Routines, including information for Independent Reading for Homework (6–12): “...to ensure that all students spend at least 30 minutes reading a day, and to ensure that students have already done some of the literal thinking that will make close, thoughtful reading in class possible, sections of text are assigned for homework.” The Teacher Tools are consistent across grade levels, and the guidance provides suggestions for accountability measures, such as graphic organizers, annotations, and written checks for understanding. Though there is no specific tracking system provided, students are expected to complete reading homework on a regular basis to be able to complete in-class activities.
Instructional materials identify opportunities and provide limited supports for students to engage in reading a variety of text types and genres. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, students read multiple informational texts as anchor texts, including articles, poems, essays, websites, audio interviews, and videos, and one short story.
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, students read from two novels as anchor texts, Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin and Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix. Supplemental texts include articles, videos, a speech, and a photograph.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 4, students read the play, A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, as the anchor text. Supplemental texts include articles, a poem, a radio segment, the movie version of the play, a radio segment, and an informational book.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, students read the anchor text, The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros. Supplemental texts include articles and a poem.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lessons 15, students read the anchor text, American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang. Supplemental texts include articles, a comic, and a video.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, students read the anchor text, The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater. Supplemental texts include articles, videos, and a website.
Instructional materials identify opportunities and provide limited supports for students to engage in reading a variety of text types and genres. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, students read multiple texts such as: Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin, Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix, and “Speech at the Metropolitan Opera House” by Rose Schneiderman. Throughout the unit, students engage in Close Read and Discussion Questions connecting to the assigned texts, allowing teachers to monitor student progress toward key understandings and connecting to the essential questions of each unit. Students also complete Target Tasks which provide an opportunity to demonstrate their understanding, practice essential skills, and receive feedback in preparation for the content assessments at the end of each unit. Opportunities are also available for students to engage in independent reading of assigned pages of the text as homework.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, students read multiple texts such as: A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, “Harlem” by Langston Hughes, and “A Better Life: Creating the American Dream” by Kate Ellis and Ellen Guettler. Throughout the unit, students engage in Close Read and Discussion Questions connecting to the assigned texts, allowing teachers to monitor student progress toward key understandings and connecting to the essential questions of each unit. Students also complete Target Tasks which provide an opportunity to demonstrate their understanding, practice essential skills, and receive feedback in preparation for the content assessments at the end of each unit. Opportunities are also available for students to engage in independent reading of assigned pages of the text as homework.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, students read multiple texts such as: The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, “There Was an Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe” by Mother Goose, and “Most Teenage Girls Still Experience Sexual Harassment” by Jennifer McNulty. Throughout the unit, students engage in Close Read and Discussion Questions connecting to the assigned texts, allowing teachers to monitor student progress toward key understandings and connecting to the essential questions of each unit. Students also complete Target Tasks which provide an opportunity to demonstrate their understanding, practice essential skills, and receive feedback in preparation for the content assessments at the end of each unit. Opportunities are also available for students to engage in independent reading of assigned pages of the text as homework.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, students read multiple texts such as: The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater, “Milestones in the American Gay Rights Movement” by PBS.org, and “Hate Crimes, Explained” by Swathi Shanmugasundaram. Throughout the unit, students engage in Close Read and Discussion Questions connecting to the assigned texts, allowing teachers to monitor student progress toward key understandings and connecting to the essential questions of each unit. Students also complete Target Tasks which provide an opportunity to demonstrate their understanding, practice essential skills, and receive feedback in preparation for the content assessments at the end of each unit. Opportunities are also available for students to engage in independent reading of assigned pages of the text as homework.
There is minimal teacher guidance to foster independence for all readers (e.g., independent reading procedures, proposed schedule, a tracking system for independent reading). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Teacher Tools, Reading Structures and Routines, Independent Reading for Homework (6–12), guidance for a proposed schedule for independent reading is explained: “In order to show accelerated reading growth, students need to read for at least 15 minutes a day, with the greatest growth being shown in students who read over a half-hour to an hour a day. Due to the block structure of most middle and high schools, it would be nearly impossible for students to read in class for 30 minutes a day while also having time to critically analyze the text through discussion and writing. Therefore, to ensure that all students spend at least 30 minutes reading a day, and to ensure that students have already done some of the literal thinking that will make close, thoughtful reading in class possible, sections of text are assigned for homework.”
In Teacher Tools, Reading Structures and Routines, Independent Reading for Homework (6–12), guidance related to accountability is stated:
“Assign an annotation focus. Have students annotate the text to show their understanding of the text. Student annotations can be used to show that students are reading and that they understand what they are reading. Students can return to their annotations during class discussions and writing.
Provide Graphic Organizers. While reading, have students use different graphic organizers to interact with the text. Potential graphic organizers include: Say, Mean, Matter Graphic Organizer or Double Journal Entry.”
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 5, students continue reading and working with the play version of A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry. For homework, a section of the play is assigned to be independently read. There are no specific directions given or trackers used for the independent reading that occurs in this lesson and throughout the rest of the unit; however, the Independent Reading for Homework portion of the Teacher Tools includes ideas for teachers to increase accountability, such as including written checks for understanding or the inclusion of graphic organizers. All units use this same reference as support for teachers.
In Unit 4: Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 9, Homework in the lesson plan instructs students to read “Most Teenage Girls Still Experience Sexual Harassment” by Jennifer McNulty and “This is what happens when gender roles are forced on kids” by Emanuella Grinberg and Victoria Larned. Questions are provided for students to answer, including: “What point is the author of each article trying to make? Identify two to three key ideas from each article.”
Criterion 1.2: Tasks and Questions
Materials provide opportunities for rich and rigorous evidence-based discussions and writing about texts to build strong literacy skills.
The grade 7 materials include questions and tasks that require careful examination of texts over the course of a school year. The questions and tasks provide insights into the Essential Questions for each unit. Materials provide frequent opportunities and protocols for evidence-based discussions; however, those are not consistently referenced or available in lessons.
Materials include a mix of on-demand and process writing; however, materials do not provide ample time and tasks to build students’ literacy development in writing, and the guidance is minimal for specific skills. While the materials include opportunities for students to practice and apply different types of writing, the distribution does not reflect the requirements of the standards. Overall, explicit evidence-based writing instruction in student lessons is limited.
Materials also include limited explicit instruction for the grade-level grammar and usage standards, and students do not explicitly apply them in their writing. The materials include general guidance on how to teach vocabulary but no explicit instruction.
Indicator 1f
Most questions, tasks, and assignments are text-specific and/or text-dependent, requiring students to engage with the text directly (drawing on textual evidence to support both what is explicit as well as valid inferences from the text).
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 meet the criteria for Indicator 1f.
Materials include questions, tasks, and assignments that are text-specific and text-dependent, even at times referencing specific page numbers or portions of the text. The questions and tasks in the materials require careful examination of texts over the course of a school year, and the questions and tasks provide insights into the Essential Questions for each unit. Almost all segments of the Lesson Plan, including Writing Prompts, Close Read Questions, and Discussion Questions, require students to return to the text and provide evidence to support their ideas and support students in making meaning of core understanding of the texts being studied. The program uses a common system of organization, and students answer a series of writing prompts and questions to comprehend the text, build knowledge, and understand how the reading and tasks connect to each unit's overall topic/theme.
Materials provide support for planning instruction and implementing text-based questions and tasks, including Sample Responses and Notes for Teachers that highlight areas where students might struggle. The Notes for Teachers include suggestions for teaching and links to sources of support both within and outside of the materials. Some lessons, such as Unit 5, Lesson 4, include additional lesson-specific Notes.
Text-specific and text-dependent questions and tasks support students in making meaning of the core understandings of the texts being studied. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 3, students read Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin and answer Close Read Questions: “What is Marrin’s primary purpose in the section of text between pages 32–38? How do you know? Explain your reasoning.” and “What is Marrin’s point of view on tenements? What specific words and phrases help communicate this perspective? Provide at least three examples from pages 35–38 and explain how they reveal his perspective.” Then students answer the Writing Prompt: “What is the author’s point of view on ‘rich folk’ in New York? What specific details from the text reveal this perspective? Provide at least two examples from the text and explain how they reveal his perspective.”
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 3, students listen to a radio segment titled “The Scarlet E, Part II: 40 Acres.” After listening, students complete a Writing Prompt where they assess the claim made in the segment in relation to the American dream, provide evidence from the text and then ascertain whether or not the evidence is relevant and sufficient. Students follow this by completing Close Read Questions that extend the learning with questions such as but not limited to: “The radio story quotes a historian who says, ‘Homeownership for white people, rental for black people. And we're still living with that legacy today.’ The historian does not provide any specific evidence to support the claim that “we’re still living with that legacy today.” What kind of evidence would you need to have in order to determine that the claim was sufficiently supported?”
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 14, students answer three Close Read Questions about in The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater. Specifically, they identify at least four big ideas from the text and name the main idea about justice and explain where the author develops this main idea. These questions align to the standard: “Determine two or more central ideas in a text and analyze their development over the course of the text; provide an objective summary of the text.”
Teacher materials provide support for the planning and implementation of text-based questions and tasks. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In all units, materials provide support for teachers. In the Unit Summary, materials provide a number of supports for teachers when approaching the unit texts, including an overview of both the text and the learning outcomes. The Unit Summary includes the Notes for Teachers section which contains pertinent information about teaching the core text, such as how to approach specific lessons and where to find further support in the materials. In each lesson, the Key Understandings section provides an overview of the Skills and Strategies that students should be learning and using. The Knowledge section provides the main ideas and plot details from the text(s).
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 6, students complete a Writing Prompt: “What is each character’s perspective on what should be done with the insurance money? How does the author develop each of their perspectives? Provide one piece of evidence that demonstrates each character’s (Beneatha, Walter, Ruth, and Mama) perspective.” Materials provide a Sample Response as support with an additional note stating, “You may wish to provide students with a graphic organizer like the one that follows:” and lists three columns with the following labels: Character’s Perspective; Revealed through…; Evidence.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 5, the Notes section provides help for students to discuss and understand the text: “Students may not know the ‘meaning’ of their name or their name might not have a particular meaning. Some websites may provide meanings of different names, and you may wish to look these up in preparation for this lesson (to save time!). Tell students who do not know, or whose names do not have specific meanings, or who do not know why their parents chose their names that they have the awesome opportunity to make up what their names mean to them!”
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 7, students read a section of American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang and complete a Writing Prompt response. The Prompt asks: “On page 105, Jin asks Amelia out. What does he most likely believe is the reason she agrees? What is likely the reason she agrees? Support your answer with specific evidence from the text.” Materials include a Sample Response for teachers to use as a reference. All Writing Prompts include a Sample Response throughout the program.
Indicator 1g
Materials provide frequent opportunities and protocols for evidence-based discussions.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1g.
Materials provide frequent opportunities and protocols for evidence-based discussions; however, those are not consistently referenced or available in lessons. Students practice speaking and listening skills with Discussion Questions in each lesson, which are “open-ended questions designed to prompt student reflection on the day’s reading and to make connections between the text, larger social issues, and their own lives. Discussion questions often come at the end of lessons and are an opportunity to bring students together to speak and listen to one another.” Each unit also includes a full day of Socratic Seminar discussion. The protocols provided in the Academic Discourse section support students’ developing speaking and listening skills for a variety of discussions, including different formats of whole class, small group, and partner discussions.
Materials provide teachers with many options for including discourse in the classroom and the freedom to choose which protocols are appropriate for their students; however, teachers do not always have specific guidance relating to which Academic Discourse protocol to use in each situation. The Academic Discourse section in the Teacher Tools includes varied protocols for whole group, small group, and partner discussions; however, some individual lessons do not indicate specific protocols to use when students answer Discussion Questions. The materials provide some guidance for use of protocols with formal discussions such as Socratic Seminar, but it is not consistent in all lessons or units. Instructional supports and resources that help with engaging students in discourse, creating a classroom culture that supports conversation, and monitoring student growth are available for teachers consistently in the Teacher Tools and with additional Notes in some lessons. The Academic Discourse section provides teachers with four different resources for guiding and supporting students in developing speaking and listening skills. These resources are referenced and linked for Socratic Seminars across the units but not for informal discussion opportunities.
Materials provide varied protocols to support students’ developing speaking and listening skills across the whole year’s scope of instructional materials; however, protocols are not always readily available for teachers. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Tools, Academic Discourse section, different types of protocols are provided. One option is Think-Pair-Share-Revise:
“Teacher or student poses a question worthy of discussion.
Teachers give students time to think about how they will answer.
Students pair up.
Students take turns sharing their answers.
Students revise their original theories or ideas.”
In each unit, a Socratic Seminar is provided as a formal discussion, and students use one teacher-chosen, an open-ended question from the multiple Discussion Questions provided in the lesson. The same directions are provided for the teacher in the Notes section of each Socratic Seminar lesson: “Decide which Type of Academic Discourse you want to use in this lesson. We recommend a table-group discussion, fishbowl, or whole-class discussion. Then, choose which of this lesson’s Discussion Questions you are going to have students answer. Consider how much discussion time will be devoted to each question.”
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 13, students answer a Discussion Question based on Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix: “Share your opinion: Do you agree with the idea that ‘you can’t expect to change the world in a few short months and that small gains should be celebrated? Do you agree more closely with Rahel’s feelings about the end of the strike or Yetta’s?” There is no recommended protocol to use in the lesson plan.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 14, students participate in a Socratic Seminar about the book The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros: Seven open-ended Discussion Questions are provided in the lesson, and teachers choose one question, such as: “How and why does Esperanza change over the course of the text? What is the difference between a house and a home? What do these things symbolize for Esperanza? How does Esperanza’s Latinx identity (and her identity as a second-generation immigrant to the United States) shape her experience of the world and her understanding of her place in it?” There are no teacher directions on whether all the questions are discussed in small group or partner discussions prior to the Socratic Seminar. Teachers can choose a protocol by accessing the Academic Discourse section in Teacher Tools; they are not included in the lesson.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 15, students participate in a Socratic Seminar after reading The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater. Seven open-ended Discussion Questions are provided in the lesson and teachers choose one question. There are no teacher directions on whether all the questions are discussed in small group or partner discussions prior to the Socratic Seminar. Teachers can choose a protocol by accessing the Academic Discourse section in Teacher Tools; they are not included in the lesson.
Speaking and listening instruction includes facilitation, monitoring, and instructional supports for teachers. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Tools, Academic Discourse tab, the Overview states: “During effective academic discourse, students are engaging in high-quality, productive, and authentic conversations with each other (not just the teacher) in order to build or clarify understanding of a topic. To ensure that academic discourse is effective, teachers need to establish a classroom culture and routines that foster productive discourse.” Suggestions for Establishing a Strong Discourse Culture include creating shared norms in the classroom, modeling what a successful conversation looks like, and providing specific feedback to students. Following this statement, materials provide teachers with an overview of the linked resources: Preparing for Academic Discourse, Types of Academic Discourse, Tiers of Academic Discourse, and Monitoring and Supporting Academic Discourse. In the Types of Academic Discourse resource, materials provide teachers with specific protocols and directions to facilitate Whole Class Discussion, Small Group Discussion, and Partner Conversation.
In the Teacher Tools, the Monitoring and Supporting Academic Discourse document outlines ways that teachers can “progress monitor and support students’ development of key conversation and discourse strategies.” The document includes other suggestions for support, such as:
“Provide sentence frames for students to use. Sentence frames should help students articulate their thoughts. Include sentence frames that use a variety of sentence structures to ensure that students have multiple options.
Provide scaffolding questions. If students are unable to initially answer the original question, provide scaffolding questions that build students to the deeper understandings.”
In the Teacher Tools, the Tiers of Academic Discourse resource provides an explanation of each tier. Tier 1 describes how students clarify and share their thoughts. Materials provide information on three elements of instruction: Key Student Discourse Strategies, Key Teacher Talk Moves, and Sentence Frames. In Tier 2, students engage with the thinking of others; as with Tier 1, materials provide information on the three elements of instruction. In Tier 3, students critique and analyze the reasoning of others; as found in Tiers 1 and 2, materials provide information on the three elements of instruction.
In the Teacher Tools, the Monitoring and Supporting Academic Discourse resource includes an Overview statement: “The goal is that by the end of the year, students will be able to participate in academic discourse using strategies from all three components, allowing them to show a deeper and more nuanced understanding of key content. Based on data from progress monitoring, students may need additional support in order to effectively orally communicate key ideas. Use the suggested supports below to decide which support to add for the whole class or for subsets of students.” Materials provide teachers with the following downloadable tools to use in the classroom: Academic Discourse Rubric, Discussion Self Assessment, Discussion Peer Assessment, Socratic Seminar Recording Form, and End-of-Discussion Assessment.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 20, the Types of Academic Discourse and Tiers of Academic Discourse resources are linked within the lesson. The Types of Academic Discourse document provides teachers with a set of discussion types (e.g., whole class discussion, small group discussion, and partner conversations) with specific discussion strategies (e.g., Rally Coach, Fishbowl, and Take a Stand) and instructions on each.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 14, materials include Teacher Tools for guidance when deciding which Type of Academic Discourse to utilize in the classroom (table-group discussion, fishbowl, or whole-class discussion). Teachers can select which of the lesson’s Discussion Questions students will answer. Other Teacher Tools include guidance for Supporting Students with Academic Discourse, such as ensuring the transfer of knowledge: “Provide students with sentence frames. Provide students with sentence frames that reflect how their opinion or understanding may have changed.
At first I thought, _____________________. Based on the discussion, I now think ____________________.
Prior to the discussion I thought ____________________. My classmates ideas confirmed my ideas because _____________________.”
Indicator 1h
Materials support students’ listening and speaking about what they are reading and researching (including presentation opportunities) with relevant follow-up questions and evidence.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 meet the criteria for Indicator 1h.
Materials include multiple opportunities for students to demonstrate what they are reading through various speaking and listening tasks in all units. The speaking and listening activities all require evidence from unit texts. Many discussions require students to have read the texts in advance to identify the author’s argument, create their own claims, and provide enough evidence to support their claims. Lessons regularly include Discussion Questions that allow students to practice speaking and listening skills. Each unit includes a Socratic Seminar. Research and formal presentation activities require data and images and offer students opportunities to ask clarifying questions of peers and work cooperatively.
Students have multiple opportunities over the school year to demonstrate what they are reading through varied speaking and listening opportunities. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Tools, Academic Discourse, Monitoring and Supporting Academic Discourse, Ensuring Transfer of Knowledge, teachers' instructions state: “ensure that students are able to synthesize understanding built through academic discourse.” Sentence frames are provided to support students in reflecting on their own growth during discussion: “At first I thought, _____________________. Based on the discussion, I now think ____________________.” This connects to Tier 3 discussion sentence frames: “I want to change my idea because ______________. I want to revise my thinking. I think ______________. At first I thought ______________ but now I think ______________ because ______________.”
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 8, students listen to four audio interviews by American immigrants and answer Close Read Questions: “Read and then listen to the conversation between Philomena Luciani and Alison Purcell (Interview 2). How does listening to the audio version change the impact of their words? What does this story reveal about the American and/or immigrant experience? Provide evidence to support your answer.”
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 14, students participate in a Socratic Seminar connecting to The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros. The lesson addresses the core standard SL.8.1.d (acknowledge new information expressed by others, and, when warranted, modify their own views). Teacher Tools are available including an Academic Discourse Rubric that assesses students’ ability to clarify and share their own thoughts, engage with the thinking of others, and critique and analyze the reasoning of others. Additional resources are available to support students with sentence stems they can utilize during the academic discourse.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 17, students participate in a Socratic Seminar in a whole class or group conversation. The Teacher Tools, Academic Discourse section includes the Monitoring and Supporting Academic Discourse which provides multiple organizers to track participation and progress towards goals. One document is the Academic Discourse Rubric where teachers provide feedback on how students clarify their own thoughts or how they critique the opinions of others.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 2, students create a poster that educates classmates about a significant event or aspect of LGBTQ+ American history. A sample poster is available, and the requirements are available as a support.
Speaking and listening work requires students to utilize, apply, and incorporate evidence from texts and/or sources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 17, students participate in a Socratic Seminar after reading and viewing the texts. Students use textual evidence to answer various Discussion Questions, such as: “How do expectations of America compare to the realities faced by immigrants?” Students draw evidence from all the texts studied in the unit. The intent is that the Socratic Seminar is conducted as a whole class discussion, where the Types of Academic Discourse document specifically notes the execution: “All students hear the shared thoughts of the class and build on ideas together.”
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 3, students listen to the radio segment, “The Scarlet E, Part II: 40 Acres.” After listening, students answer a Writing Prompt to compare and contrast White and Black Americans’ access to the American Dream and then evaluate: “What evidence does the story provide to support this idea? Is the evidence provided relevant and sufficient?”
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 17, students participate in a Socratic Seminar to discuss the text American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang. The objective of the lesson includes, “responding directly to others by rephrasing and delineating arguments, determining the strength of evidence, and posing clarifying questions.” The Teacher Tools include support for the Tiers of Academic Discourse, including sentence frames “To question/clarify to fully understand classmates’ ideas.”
Indicator 1i
Materials include a mix of on-demand and process writing (e.g., multiple drafts, revisions over time) and short, focused projects, incorporating digital resources where appropriate.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1i.
Materials include a mix of on-demand and process writing; however, materials do not provide ample time and tasks to build students’ literacy development in writing. The guidance is minimal for specific skills. Students complete on-demand prompts that connect to the discussions and activities for each lesson, and each unit includes process writing that spans more than one lesson. Specifically, students write longer essays to prompts that connect to the core and supplemental texts using the steps of the writing process. In some units, students use digital resources to conduct research and create digital materials for presentations. The Teacher Tools include multiple resources with further details on how to provide guidance on both process and on-demand writing, including planning and executing writing lessons and strategies for giving feedback. Within each lesson and student-facing materials, opportunities to edit and revise are present; however, instruction and practice of those skills do not exist beyond mentioning it as an objective.
Materials include on-demand writing opportunities that cover a year’s worth of instruction; however, opportunities for students to revise and edit are minimal. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 15, students reflect on the quotation from Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix where Jane tells Bella and Yetta, “Everything I have was bought with blood.” Then, students answer the Writing Prompt, providing evidence: “What does she mean by this figurative language? How does this show that Jane’s perspective of her own life has changed? What caused this change in her perspective?”
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 10, students read the poem, “Say My Name” by Idris Goodwin. After reading, they complete a Writing Prompt where they write an analytical paragraph discussing how the speaker of the poem feels about his name. Students must “Include a topic sentence, evidence from the text, analysis, and a conclusion in your argument.”
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 14, students read The 57 Bus by Dashka Slater and answer the Writing Prompt; “What central idea does Slater develop on the topic of binaries? How does she use both Sasha and Richard’s stories to develop this central idea? Carefully explain your thinking.”
Materials include process writing opportunities that cover a year’s worth of instruction; however, opportunities for students to revise and edit are minimal. Examples include, but are not limited to the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 21, one Objective states: “Compose a complete narrative and revise for transitions, mechanics, and organization.” There is no guidance in the lesson for when or how teachers help students revise their narratives. Teachers would need to access the Giving Writing Feedback document in the Teacher Tools section that gives suggestions for Individual or Group feedback to assist with editing. The Narrative Writing Feedback and Support—Middle School document help teachers direct students on what and how to edit when students are struggling with organizing an event sequence, such as “Review how to use paragraphs to manage the sequence of events.”
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lessons 21–23, students write an essay: “Write a five-paragraph literary analysis about how one main character from A Raisin in the Sun changes from the beginning to the end of the play.” Over three lessons, students write a thesis, draft introductory, body, and concluding paragraphs and then revise the essay for clarity, mechanics, and organization. In Lesson 23, as homework, students check their work for the requirements using the Argumentative Writing: Literary Analysis Essay Rubric. The rubric provides criteria for the introduction, three body paragraphs, and conclusion. There are also criteria available relating to Form and Style and Language and Mechanics. Teacher guidance includes, “Students who finish early may benefit from working as a peer-editor.” Teachers could access the Giving Writing Feedback document in the Teacher Tools for guidance.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lessons 16–19, students complete a research project: “In this writing project, you will research the life, work, and accomplishments of a member of the LGBTQ+ community to be celebrated on a postage stamp. Nominate this leader through a letter to the United States Postal Service's Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee, which honors ‘extraordinary and enduring contributions to American society, history, culture or environment.’ Support your argument with evidence from the research to support your thesis. Include a strong introduction, three body paragraphs, and a conclusion in your letter.” The three lessons focus on different parts of writing the letter, including an opportunity to “revise for clarity, mechanics, and organization” in Lesson 19. There is no guidance in the lesson or the materials for when or how teachers help students revise.
Materials include digital resources where appropriate. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 14, students work in groups to collect research from diverse sources as they begin creating an informational poster about DACA and the DREAMers. Students receive digital sources to consult, including a website, a video, and an article.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 10, students begin work on an informational essay to discuss “how racism has impacted the lives of young Asian Americans since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.” Students begin to research, looking specifically for examples, statistics, and quotes from experts. Materials include four web articles from which to gather data.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lessons 16–19, students research a person from the LGBTQ+ community who should have a commemorative stamp and write a letter to the “Citizens Stamp Advisory Committee'' to argue for that person to have a stamp. Students use digital resources to research.
Indicator 1j
Materials provide opportunities for students to address different text types of writing that reflect the distribution required by the standards.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1j.
Materials include opportunities for students to practice and apply different types of writing; however, the distribution does not reflect the requirements of the standards. Students write argumentative, informative, and narrative assignments, though the percentage of informative and narrative lessons is less than the percentage of argumentative lessons, reflecting a 50/17/33 split. All writing assignments are text-specific or text-dependent and are connected to a unit theme and/or yearlong theme. Materials include explicit instruction in the different types of writing, though the instruction is not directly included in the teacher's plans for each lesson. The resources are found in the Teacher Tools, Instructional Strategies for Writing Lessons (6–8) section. In addition, materials offer teacher support for planning instruction and guiding student thinking with example answers in each lesson and Notes that highlight areas where students might struggle. These Notes include suggestions for teaching and links to sources of support within and outside of the materials.
Materials provide multiple opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice, and apply different genres/modes/types of writing; however, opportunities do not reflect the distribution required by the standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Materials include uneven distribution of writing types with the following percentages for the different modes of writing: 50% argumentative, 17% informative, and 33% narrative. The number of writing opportunities in each mode is six argumentative, two informative, and four narrative.
Percentage or number of opportunities for argumentative writing: Three units address argumentative writing. Approximately 50% of writing opportunities over six units are argumentative.
Unit 1: 0
Unit 2: 1
Unit 3: 2
Unit 4: 1
Unit 5: 0
Unit 6: 2
Percentage or number of opportunities for informative/explanatory writing: Two units address informative writing. Approximately 17% of writing opportunities over six units are informative.
Unit 1: 0
Unit 2: 0
Unit 3: 0
Unit 4: 0
Unit 5: 1
Unit 6: 1
Percentage or number of opportunities for narrative writing: Three units address narrative writing skills. Approximately 33% of writing opportunities over six units are narrative.
Unit 1: 2
Unit 2: 0
Unit 3: 0
Unit 4: 1
Unit 5: 1
Unit 6: 0
Explicit instruction in argumentative writing: Materials include Teacher Tools to provide Persuasive/Argumentative Writing Feedback and Support. For example, if students are struggling to create topic sentences that flow from the thesis statement, one “strategy is to work backward through specific evidence to build the main claim and the topic sentences. This can also be modeled by:
selecting a particularly persuasive line of evidence from the research
building next to a topic sentence that would flow from that evidence
finally crafting a thesis statement that would include the sub claim from the topic sentence as part of the comprehensive argument”
Explicit instruction in informative/explanatory writing: Materials include Teacher Tools to provide Informational Writing Feedback and Support. One example includes if students are struggling to use transitional words, phrases, or clauses to manage the sequence of events, teachers can “Review and model how to use transitional phrases to manage the sequence of events.
Transitional words or phrases can be used to show there is a transition in time. (The next day, after a while, before long, late that afternoon, the next thing I knew, etc.)”
Transitional words and phrases can be used to show there is a transition in setting or location. (In our backyard, when we went upstairs, at the post office, behind the trees, etc.)
Transitional words and phrases can be used to show a sequence of events or to show the connection between events. (At the beginning, as a result, it started when, as soon as, in the end, etc.)”
Explicit instruction in narrative writing: The Teacher Tools include guidance to provide Narrative Writing Feedback and Support. For example, if students are struggling to develop a point of view or establish a context, teachers can prompt students to think about the following questions when brainstorming setting:
What is the main location?
Are there any features of the main location that make it unique and should be highlighted?
Are there activities or occupations that are unique and/or important to the setting?
Does the setting influence the mood?
How does the setting influence the character’s actions?
Different genres/modes/types of writing are distributed throughout the school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Students have opportunities to engage in argumentative writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Introduce claim(s), acknowledge alternate or opposing claims, and organize the reasons and evidence logically. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 21, students write a five-paragraph literary analysis and must support their argument with evidence from the play to support the thesis. Students must analyze how one main character from A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry changes from the beginning to the end of the play.
Support claim(s) with logical reasoning and relevant evidence, using accurate, credible sources and demonstrating an understanding of the topic or text. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 21, students use the play A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry to include evidence that supports their claim.
Use words, phrases, and clauses to create cohesion and clarify the relationships among claim(s), reasons, and evidence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 17, students study a mentor text for homework that is applicable to their current writing assignment. While reading, students are instructed to annotate the mentor text, paying specific attention onthe following pieces of the body paragraphs:
“Topic sentence (with sub-claim)”
“Introduce the words/ideas from research (the citation)”
“Strong, relevant proof/evidence”
“Explanation (connecting the topic sentence and the thesis to the evidence)”
“Transitions (between ideas or paragraphs)”
Establish and maintain a formal style. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 23, students check their works for the requirements utilizing the Argumentative Writing: Literary Analysis Essay Rubric. Students practice establishing and maintaining a formal style as a supporting standard during the lesson.
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the argument presented. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 9, students answer a Writing Prompt question regarding the effect of a second-person narrator in the text The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater. Students are reminded to include multiple pieces of an argumentative response, including a conclusion.
Students have opportunities to engage in informative/explanatory writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Introduce a topic clearly, previewing what is to follow; organize ideas, concepts, and information, using strategies such as definition, classification, comparison/contrast, and cause/effect; include formatting (e.g., headings), graphics (e.g., charts, tables), and multimedia when useful to aiding comprehension. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 10, students “Write an informational essay in which you explain how racism has impacted the lives of young Asian Americans since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.” Students are required to “clearly introduce the topic” and “state at least three effects or impacts of racial harassment and violence.”
Develop the topic with relevant facts, definitions, concrete details, quotations, or other information and examples. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 16, after researching the life and accomplishments of an individual in the LGBTQ+ community, students write a letter to the United States Postal Service's Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee to explain why this individual should have a postage stamp. To support the thesis statement, students share details from their researched information about this person’s life and accomplishments.
Use appropriate transitions to create cohesion and clarify the relationships among ideas and concepts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 10, students“Write an informational essay in which you explain how racism has impacted the lives of young Asian Americans since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.” Students are required to “Include at least three linking words that clarify the relationship between ideas.”
Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to inform about or explain the topic. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 16, after researching the life and accomplishments of an individual in the LGBTQ+ community, students write a letter to the United States Postal Service's Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee to explain why this individual should have a postage stamp. To do so, students must consider that, in order to earn a postage stamp, individuals must make “extraordinary and enduring contributions to American society, history, culture or environment.” Therefore, students must connect their research to one or more of these ideas.
Establish and maintain a formal style. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 18, after researching the life and accomplishments of an individual in the LGBTQ+ community, students write a letter to the United States Postal Service's Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee to explain why this individual should have a postage stamp. In this lesson, students learn about sentence types that they can use to write in a formal style.
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the information or explanation presented. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 12, students “Write an informational essay in which you explain how racism has impacted the lives of young Asian Americans since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.” Students are asked to “Elaborate arguments into an introduction and conclusion.”
Students have opportunities to engage in narrative writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Engage and orient the reader by establishing a context and point of view and introducing a narrator and/or characters; organize an event sequence that unfolds naturally and logically. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 6, the lesson objective includes establishing a narrator’s point of view and introducing at least one character to the student’s vignette. The task requires students, “Establish a clear narrator’s voice.”
Use narrative techniques, such as dialogue, pacing, and description, to develop experiences, events, and/or characters. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 6, students continue to work on their vignettes. Students practice the skill of using narrative techniques, such as dialogue, pacing, and description, to develop experiences, events, and/or characters as a supporting standard in the lesson.
Use a variety of transition words, phrases, and clauses to convey sequence and signal shifts from one time frame or setting to another. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 7, students write a prose poem that explores their experience of America. Students practice the skill of using a variety of transition words, phrases, and clauses to convey sequence and signal shifts from one time frame or setting to another as a supporting standard in the lesson.
Use precise words and phrases, relevant descriptive details, and sensory language to capture the action and convey experiences and events. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 7, students construct their own prose poems about what it means to be an American. The directions state that while prose poems are short, they still include descriptive details such as similes and metaphors as well as other language choices.
Provide a conclusion that follows from and reflects on the narrated experiences or events. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 5, students work on their “My Name” vignette, and the task specifies that students must “Provide a strong conclusion.” A Sample Response is available for guidance, and a similar vignette is available in the text The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros.
Where appropriate, writing opportunities are connected to texts and/or text sets (either as prompts, models, anchors, or supports). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 30, students read multiple articles relating to current workplace conditions at Amazon and then take a stance on the question, “Does our country need to take steps to protect the health and safety of workers at Amazon?” The task connects to the two core texts, Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix and Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lessons 5–6, students write their own “My Name” vignette, modeling how Sandra Cisneros introduces her narrator in The House on Mango Street.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 10, students gather appropriate evidence, including facts, quotes, and statistics, to develop their informational essays. The writing task connects to articles from the unit, “The recent rise in Asian American hate crimes could have impacts beyond the pandemic” by Candice Wang and “Anti-Asian Hate Has Surged During the Coronavirus Pandemic, Reports Find” by Sara Li.
Indicator 1k
Materials include frequent opportunities for evidence-based writing to support careful analyses, well-defended claims, and clear information.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1k.
Although materials include opportunities for students to participate in writing tasks requiring analysis of and evidence from texts and other credible sources, explicit evidence-based writing instruction in the student lessons is limited to teacher guidance such as a sample writing response. Students engage in close reading tasks, develop claims for an intended audience, and support their position with evidence. Evidence used throughout the units comes primarily from texts included in the materials and independent research at times. Writing opportunities connect purposefully to the texts students are reading, and the tasks provide a means for building knowledge and writing skills across the school year. Students practice utilizing claims and support consistently, and rarely is writing done simply based on opinion.
Materials provide opportunities across the school year for students to practice and apply writing using evidence; however, materials provide limited opportunities across the school year for students to learn about writing using evidence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 10, students read the essay, “Hello, My Name Is ______” by Jason Kim, and answer the Writing Prompt: “By the end of the essay, the writer describes his feelings about being of Korean descent: ‘it makes me happy and deeply proud.’ How did Jason Kim transition from hating his Asian identity to feeling proud of it? Support your answer with two pieces of specific evidence from the text.” Materials provide a Sample Response for reference. The teacher does not provide students with explicit evidence-based writing instruction and materials do not offer any other teacher guidance for the writing prompt in the lesson.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 3, students listen to a radio story, “The Scarlet E, Part ii: 40 Acres,” and answer the Writing Prompt: “What claim does the radio story make about the differences between Black Americans’ and white Americans’ access to the American dream between 07:40–13:19? What evidence does the story provide to support this idea? Is the evidence provided relevant and sufficient?” Materials provide a Sample Response for reference. The teacher does not provide students with explicit evidence-based writing instruction and materials do not offer any other teacher guidance for the writing prompt in the lesson.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 6, students answer a Discussion & Writing Prompt about the text, The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater: “Select three chapters from the section titled “Richard” that you think are most useful in helping you understand who Richard is as a person. Explain what you learned from these three chapters and why they helped to develop your understanding of his life and character. Provide at least one piece of quoted evidence from each chapter to support your answer.” Materials provide a Sample Response for reference. The teacher does not provide students with explicit evidence-based writing instruction and materials do not offer any other teacher guidance for the writing prompt in the lesson.
Writing opportunities are focused on students’ careful analysis and claims developed from reading closely and working with evidence from texts and sources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 30, students write an argument to support a thesis with clear reasons and relevant evidence. The writing task provides an opportunity for students to draw evidence from informational texts, such as “‘I'm not a robot’: Amazon workers condemn unsafe, grueling conditions at warehouse” by Michael Sainato. The task connects to the topic of unsafe working conditions they have studied in the core text Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin. Students answer the question, “Does our country need to take steps to protect the health and safety of workers at Amazon?”
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 9, students answer the Writing Prompt: “How is Marin’s perspective of Geraldo different from how others see him? How does Cisneros develop this difference in perspective?” The instructions direct students to pull evidence from a specific vignette from the text, “Geraldo No Last Name,” from The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 11, students answer the Writing Prompt: “Gene Luen Yang explores the dangerous power of stereotypes and bias in the lives of his characters. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been a surge in racial harassment and violence toward Asian Americans.” Students use the four informational texts in the unit to “explain how racism has impacted the lives of young Asian Americans since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.” Students develop a precise thesis statement and provide “examples, facts/statistics, and quotations from experts” to support the thesis.
Indicator 1l
Materials include explicit instruction of the grade-level grammar and usage standards, with opportunities for application in context.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1l.
Materials include limited explicit instruction for the grade-level grammar and usage standards, and based on the information provided in the lessons, students do not explicitly apply them in their writing. The grammar standards are listed as core standards in the Standards Map, are referred to in some lesson objectives, and are named in writing rubrics; however, the guidance for educators is minimal and not lesson-specific. Explicit instruction in the lessons is insufficient to ensure students meet all the grade-level grammar and usage standards with the necessary support for application in context. Within writing lessons, students have opportunities to notice how authors use language and its conventions; however, there are no specific lessons, protocols, or practice opportunities for students to learn and apply the skills. In Teacher Support, the Writing section addresses grammar in the Approach to Language and Grammar Instruction: “Fishtank ELA units teach grammar and language in context by integrating grammar and mechanics with craft and analysis. Students see how grammar and language help authors communicate specific ideas, and then learn how to use the same techniques in their Before writing.” This section also provides tips and a blank graphic organizer for students to use to create an Editing Checklist; however, this is not called out in the individual lessons within the units. The Teacher Tools encourage educators to provide opportunities for progress monitoring, including thinking about questions from Mechanically Inclined, such as “What have I done to teach this grammar of mechanics pattern?” The Teacher Tools are general, connecting to all grade levels and units.
Materials include very limited explicit instruction of the grade-level grammar and usage standards and few include authentic opportunities for students to demonstrate the application of skills in context, including applying grammar and convention skills to writing.
Students have minimal opportunities to explain the function of phrases and clauses in general and their function in specific sentences. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 18, the objective states that students will “differentiate between phrases and clauses.” Students complete a narrative Writing Prompt, but the Lesson Materials do not mention phrases or clauses.
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 32, the objective states that students will “incorporate simple, compound, and complex sentences into writing.” At the end of the lesson, the standards identify that students should be working on L.7.1.a and that they should “explain the function of phrases and clauses in general and their function in specific sentences.” Materials do not include any other guidance for teaching or reinforcing this skill.
In Unit 6, Claiming Our Place: LGBTQ+ Experiences in the United States, Lesson 18, the objective states that students will “Incorporate simple, compound, and complex sentences into their own writing.” However, the lesson does not explain the function of phrases and clauses. The Notes section provides teachers with assistance: “The supplemental language lessons for this unit also support student writing and would fit well as additional writing support for sentence variety and style during the drafting and editing/revising process.”
Students have minimal opportunities to choose among simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences to signal differing relationships among ideas. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 32, the objective states that students will “incorporate simple, compound, and complex sentences into writing.” At the end of the lesson, the standards identify that students should be working on L.7.1.b and that they should be able to “choose among simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences to signal differing relationships among ideas.” Materials do not provide any other guidance for teaching or reinforcing this skill.
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 16, the objective states that students will “gather evidence and develop a claim on the impact of a specific symbol in The House on Mango Street.” and “Differentiate between simple, compound, and complex sentences.” At the end of the lesson, the standards identify that students should be working on L.7.1.b and that they should be able to “choose among simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences to signal differing relationships among ideas.” In Lesson 17, the Objective states that students will “combine simple sentences into compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences.” Materials do not include any other guidance for teaching or reinforcing this skill.
Students have minimal opportunities to place phrases and clauses within a sentence, recognizing and correcting misplaced and dangling modifiers. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 22, the objective states that students should “construct a strong thesis statement and compose effective body paragraphs.” At the end of the lesson, the standards identify that students should be working on L.7.1.c and that they should be able to “place phrases and clauses within a sentence, recognizing and correcting misplaced and dangling modifiers.” Materials do not provide any other guidance for teaching or reinforcing this skill.
Students have opportunities to use a comma to separate coordinate adjectives (e.g., It was a fascinating, enjoyable movie but not He wore an old [,] green shirt). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
No evidence found
Students have minimal opportunities to spell correctly. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 33, standard L.7.2.b is a supporting standard. The lesson does not address this standard.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 23, students check their literary analysis essays for “Appropriate spelling, grammar, and punctuation.” This is one of the requirements in the Argumentative Writing: Literary Analysis Essay Rubric. Materials do not provide any other guidance for teaching or reinforcing this skill.
Students have minimal opportunities to choose the language that expresses ideas precisely and concisely, recognizing and eliminating wordiness and redundancy. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Finding Home: The House on Mango Street, Lesson 18, standard L.7.3.a is a supporting standard. The lesson does not address this standard.
Indicator 1m
Materials include a cohesive, year-long plan for students to interact with and build key academic vocabulary words in and across texts.
The materials reviewed for Grade 7 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1m.
Materials include a rationale for how vocabulary should be taught and how the publisher views vocabulary as part of a lesson; however, there is no explicit instruction on the vocabulary that is essential to understanding the text within lessons. Although vocabulary words and definitions are listed in each lesson, the words are not addressed during the lesson. Vocabulary is not part of questions and activities. Students have multiple opportunities to engage with domain-specific vocabulary words across units but do not have the same opportunity for text-based vocabulary in lessons. There is no mechanism that teachers can use to assess student learning around text-based vocabulary. Some guidance is provided for how vocabulary is structured in the units, how to teach vocabulary, and how to support a range of learners during vocabulary instruction. The Teacher Tools share a brief overview: “Within units, students build their academic vocabulary by learning and interacting with Tier II and Tier III vocabulary words that are essential for unlocking the meaning of the text, task, or topic.” Students interact with vocabulary words through reading, writing, speaking, and listening tasks. Teacher Tools include routines such as Explicit Instruction of Vocabulary and Implicit Instruction of Vocabulary. However, the lessons do not include sufficient guidance or reminders for teachers to ensure the routines support students in their vocabulary development and meet grade-level standards.
Materials provide some teacher guidance outlining a cohesive year-long vocabulary development component. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In each unit and lesson, vocabulary words are introduced before reading texts as necessary to understand the texts or the context surrounding them.
Within the units, vocabulary words are intentionally included in many ways, so students become familiar with them through repetition, such as the words being present in questions, used during discussions, and heard in teacher-provided sentence stems. Some words are revisited from previous lessons, and students are asked to use them to indicate authentic learning of the words. More often, once the lesson where the word is taught is passed, the word is not revisited.
The Teacher Tools include Vocabulary guidance to share the two types of words in the materials: words to teach quickly and drop-in and words to study in-depth. The guidance includes instructions for teachers to “decide if the words are inferrable or not inferrable” and encourage learning vocabulary “indirectly and unconsciously through daily reading, writing, listening, and speaking routines” rather than through explicit instruction.
The Vocabulary Teacher Tool shares the ways that students interact with vocabulary words within a lesson and across the unit, such as “Close reading moments are included within lessons to analyze the use of words in context” or “When applicable, vocabulary words are used in later units in key questions or as part of word banks and sentence frames.”
Materials include Explicit Instruction of Vocabulary guidance, which includes routines to introduce and review priority vocabulary. There is not sufficient guidance or reminders in the lessons to assist teachers.
Vocabulary is sometimes repeated in contexts (before texts, in texts) and across multiple texts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Domain-specific vocabulary is taught across multiple units. For example:
Across multiple units, students learn about and analyze theme which is defined as “the author’s message in the text about the way the world works or what it means to be human. Generally applied to literary texts (fiction, poetry, dramatic works).”
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 3, students read the poem “The New Colossus” by Emma Lazarus to consider the theme and the evidence that supports that message.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 4, students read the poem “Harlem” by Langston Hughes to identify the theme and find supporting evidence for that message.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 12, students read a selection from American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang to identify a specific theme of self-acceptance and provide evidence to support that claim.
Across multiple units, students learn about and analyze structure.
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 13, students explain how the structural choices help to develop meaning in the poem “Where You From?” by Gina Valdez. Students complete a Writing Prompt by answering the following question: “In this poem, the poet writes in both English and Spanish. How does this structural choice develop the meaning of the poem?”
In Unit 2, Fighting Injustice: Uprising & Flesh and Blood So Cheap, Lesson 6 students review structure when they explain how the text Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix is structured: “What is unique about the way this book is structured? Why do you think Haddix chose this structure? What are the benefits of structuring the book this way?”
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 4, students explain how Gene Luen Yang uses both text, images, and structures to develop meaning in the text American Born Chinese. Students complete the following Writing Prompt: “Reread pages 30 and 36. What is similar and different about these pages? What impact does this structural choice have on the reader’s understanding of the plot and characters?”
Academic vocabulary words found in texts are introduced in units, but not always taught across multiple texts and lessons. For example:
In Unit 1, Defining America: Poems, Essays, and Short Stories, Lesson 1, the vocabulary word assimilate is introduced. In Lesson 16, the word is repeated in the Knowledge section of the lesson. The word is not explicitly used in other parts of the lesson presented to students, but it is listed as part of the knowledge that students should understand upon finishing the lesson.
In Unit 3, Pursuing Dreams: A Raisin in the Sun, Lesson 3, the word languish is introduced in the list of vocabulary words. It is used in the radio segment, “The Scarlet E, Part II: 40 Acres.” It is not used in the Writing Prompt, Close Read Questions, or Discussion Questions, nor is it listed in the information in the Key Understandings. In lesson 7, languish appears when students answer the question, “Which character in A Raisin in the Sun would most likely say that they are ‘languishing’ in their life? Explain your thinking.” These are the only two mentions of the vocabulary word in the unit. In addition, bitter is listed as a vocabulary word for this unit on the Unit Summary page; however, the word does not appear in any of the lessons in the unit.
In Unit 5, Exploring Identity: American Born Chinese, Lesson 3, students are reintroduced to the word stereotype. In the first lesson, they watch a video and read an article that focuses on stereotypes as a concept. In Lesson 4, stereotype is used in the Sample Response for the Writing Prompt. In Lesson 5, students read the article, “That’s Not Who I Am: Calling Out and Challenging Stereotypes of Asian Americans.” The concept is repeated several times throughout this lesson. In Lesson 10, students answer the Writing Prompt about the stereotypes that the author of American Born Chinese explores and then use the novel and information from the Anti-Defamation League to write an informational essay in which they explain how racism has impacted the lives of young Asian Americans since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Attention is sometimes paid to vocabulary essential to understanding the text and to high-value academic words (e.g., words that might appear in other contexts/content areas). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Materials include a complete Vocabulary Glossary for each grade that notes the Part of Speech and Definition. The teacher can search for vocabulary words in the list, create a comprehensive list of all vocabulary words when “Select a Unit” appears, and create a list for each individual unit by selecting a specific unit. The Tier II and Tier III vocabulary words are broken down into the following categories: text-based, root/affix, and academic. For example, in Unit 1, the text-based vocabulary words are assimilate, asset, contentious, disdain, perplexing, polarize, profound, quota, and undaunted. The academic vocabulary words are connotation, enjambment, figurative language, literary device, metaphor, personification, point of view/perspective, simile, structure, symbol, theme, and tone. Even though the words are introduced, none of the lessons include explicit instruction for how to teach the vocabulary, and no specific words are identified as more critical than the others. Rarely are the words referenced or explicitly used again in the unit after they are initially taught, so, even though students use the words repeatedly during the lesson in which they are taught, they are not using them routinely over the course of the unit.