2021

Fishtank Plus ELA K-2

Publisher
Fishtank Learning
Subject
ELA
Grades
K-2
Report Release
04/21/2023
Review Tool Version
v1.5
Format
Core: No Foundational Skills

EdReports reviews determine if a program meets, partially meets, or does not meet expectations for alignment to college and career-ready standards. This rating reflects the overall series average.

Alignment (Gateway 1 & 2)
Meets Expectations

Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.

Usability (Gateway 3)
Partially Meets Expectations
Key areas of interest

This score is the sum of all points available for all foundational skills components across all grades covered in the program.

The maximum available points depends on the review tool used and the number of grades covered.

Foundational Skills
NC = Not Claimed. The publisher does not claim that this component is addressed in the materials.
NC

This score represents an average across grade levels reviewed for: integrated reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language, and promotion of mastery of grade-level standards by the end of the year.

Building Knowledge
68/72
Our Review Process

Learn more about EdReports’ educator-led review process

Learn More

About This Report

Report for 1st Grade

Alignment Summary

The Fishtank Plus Grade 1 materials meet the expectations of alignment to the Common Core ELA Standards. Materials include instruction, practice, and authentic application of reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language work that is engaging and at an appropriate level of rigor for the grade.

1st Grade
Gateway 1

Text Quality

33/34
0
16
28
34
Alignment (Gateway 1 & 2)
Meets Expectations
Gateway 3

Usability

19/25
0
14
22
25
Usability (Gateway 3)
Partially Meets Expectations
Overview of Gateway 1

Text Quality & Complexity and Alignment to Standards Components

Instructional materials include content rich texts encompassing diverse topics and student interests by award winning authors. Texts have engaging illustrations with a variety of relatable characters including a blend of ethnicities, ages, genders and cultures. Anchor texts have the appropriate level of complexity for the grade and gradually increase in quantitative complexity over the course of the year. Associated tasks scaffold to become more complex throughout the year and several texts are used for multiple lessons and tasks. Instructional materials increase in complexity throughout the year to support student literacy growth. Texts become more complex with appropriate teacher guidance and scaffolds included. Materials break student tasks into smaller steps and allow students additional time for their completion. Materials contain text-specific and text-dependent questions and tasks that support students as they explore key details and academic language, make inferences, and examine the structure of texts. Materials include a number of formal protocols and informal structures in the Teacher Tools section to support students’ developing speaking and listening skills across the year and include teacher guidance to support the facilitation and monitoring of students’ evidence-based discussions and connect speaking and listening skills to the texts students are reading throughout the year.

Materials include explicit writing instruction lessons and the writing that students are expected to produce grows throughout the year, as the teacher models shared writing and students practice during independent writing using drawings, oral sentences, and writing. Students write in response to texts individually and with partners, complete research-based writing, and develop their writing as a form of personal expression to convey information to others. Materials provide multiple opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice and apply different types of writing required by the standards, and students often write about personal ideas and opinions in reaction to ideas within the text. Materials provide explicit instruction, practice and application for evidence-based writing opportunities across the school year. Materials provide some explicit instruction of grade-level grammar and usage standards by embedding skills, modeling, guided practice, shared writing, and classroom discussions in some lessons. Both the Literature and Science and Social Studies units include explicit instruction of grammar and usage standards and provide opportunities for students to practice and authentically apply their learning. Vocabulary words selected for each lesson include Tier I, II and III words; however, there is no rationale as to how or why specific words were selected for the unit or lesson. The Teacher Tools section provides content and strategies necessary to support vocabulary instruction but there is not a coherent and cohesive instructional plan within daily lessons or threaded across lessons and units.

Criterion 1.1: Text Quality and Complexity

18/18

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.

Instructional materials include content rich texts encompassing diverse topics and student interests by award winning authors. Texts have engaging illustrations with a variety of relatable characters including a blend of ethnicities, ages, genders and cultures. Each unit includes both literary and informational texts based on an appropriate grade level theme or topic. The anchor texts in each Literature and Science/Social Studies unit include a variety of genres including but not limited to, realistic and historical fiction, fantasy, biography, autobiography, folktale, poetry, illustrative guide, and fairytale. The yearlong balance of informational and literary texts is 46% informational and 54% literary. Anchor texts have the appropriate level of complexity for the grade and gradually increase in quantitative complexity over the course of the year. Quantitative, qualitative, and associated tasks have an overall complexity of accessible and moderate. Associated tasks scaffold to become more complex throughout the year and several texts are used for multiple lessons and tasks. Some texts that may be at a lower Lexile are more complex in qualitative measures making them appropriate for the grade level. The Text Selection Rationale for each unit includes a justification for the texts selected for the program and their educational placement in the grade, as well as a detailed analysis of the texts’ qualitative features. Instructional materials increase in complexity throughout the year to support student literacy growth. Texts become more complex with appropriate teacher guidance and scaffolds included. Materials break student tasks into smaller steps and allow students additional time for their completion. The Teacher Tools section includes independent reading supports, such as independent reading guidelines, an independent reading log, sample lesson plans, and a parent letter.

Indicator 1A
04/04

Anchor texts are of high quality, worthy of careful reading, and consider a range of student interests. *This does not include decodables. Those are identified in Criterion 3.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1a.

Instructional materials include content-rich texts encompassing diverse topics and student interests by award-winning authors. Texts have engaging illustrations with a variety of relatable characters including a blend of ethnicities, ages, genders, and cultures. Each unit contains texts based on literary themes and science and social studies topics that are age-appropriate and appealing to students. Texts are often read multiple times for different purposes. Texts contain academic vocabulary and varied complex sentence structures including verse and prose. Multi-dimensional text features to support student learning and task completion. 

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 Literature Unit 1, Teach Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson is an award-winning realistic fiction text with a strong theme of friendship. This text includes rich language and academic vocabulary. 

  • In Literature Unit  2, The Paper Crane by Molly Bang is a Japanese folktale with complex sentence structure and detailed illustrations. 

  • In Literature Unit  3, Fry Bread: A Native American Family Story by Kevin Noble Maillard is an award-winning text containing rich language, eye-catching illustrations, and a culturally relevant topic.

  • In Literature Unit  4, Lon Po Po: A Red-Riding Hood Story from China by Ed Young is an award-winning fairytale with complex sentence structure and academic vocabulary. 

  • In Literature Unit  5, Tomas and the Library Lady by Pat Mora is an award-winning bilingual English-Spanish text that supports the theme, the power of reading, and contains colorful illustrations.  

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, Explore North America by Bobbie Kalman is an Illustrative Guide including academic vocabulary, photographs, and graphic features. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 2, Who Eats What? by Patricia Lauber is a thought-provoking text with vibrant illustrations. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, Trombone Shorty by Troy Andrews is an award-winning autobiography with academic vocabulary and colorful illustrations.  

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 4, She Was the First! The Trailblazing Life of Shirley Chisholm by Katheryn Russell-Brown is an inspirational story about overcoming poverty and adversity.   

In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, National Geographic Readers: Pyramids by Laura Marsh contains academic vocabulary, text features, supportive illustrations and simple sentences.

Indicator 1B
04/04

Materials reflect the distribution of text types and genres required by the standards at each grade level. *This does not include decodables. Those are identified in Criterion 3.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1b.

Instructional materials include a variety of literary and informational texts. The anchor texts in each Literature and Science/Social Studies unit include a variety of genres including but not limited to, realistic and historical fiction, fantasy, biography, autobiography, folktale, poetry, illustrative guide, and fairytale. The yearlong balance of informational and literary texts is 46% informational and 54% literary.

Materials reflect the distribution of text types/genres required by the grade level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    • The Day You Begin by Jacqueline Woodson (realistic fiction)

    • Howard B. Wigglebottom Learns to Listen by Howard Binkow (fiction)

  • In Literature Unit 2, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    •  It Could Always Be Worse by Margot Zemach (folktale)

    • The Lion and the Mouse by Bernadette Watts (fable)

  • In Literature Unit 3, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    • Nan Akua Goes to School by Tricia Elam Walker (realistic fiction)

    • Sulwe by Lupita Nyong’o (fantasy)

  • In Literature Unit 4, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    •  Little Roja Riding Hood by Susan Middleton (fairytale)

    • Wolves by Laura Marsh (informational)

  • In Literature Unit 5, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    • Ruby’s Wish by Shirin Yim Bridges (realistic fiction)

    • The Good Little Book by Kyo Maclear (fantasy)

    • Little Libraries, Big Heroes by Miranda Paul (biography)

    • Nasreen’s Secret School: A True Story From Afghanistan by Jeanette Winter (informational)

    • The Story of Ruby Bridges by Robert Coles (informational)

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, there is one genre: 

    • Explore Africa by Bobbie Kalman (illustrative guide) 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 2, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    • Living Color by Steve Jenkins (informational) 

    • Red Eyed Tree Frog by Joy Cowley (narrative informational)

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    • When Marian Sang: The True Recital of Marian Anderson by Pam Munoz Ryan (biography) 

    • Trombone Shorty by Troy Andrews (autobiography) 

    • Misty Copeland (You Should Meet Series) by Laurie Calkhoven (biography) 

    • Firebird by Misty Copeland (poetry)

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 4, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    • Young Water Protectors: A Story About Standing Rock by Aslan Tudor, Kelly Tudor, and Jason Eaglespeaker (biography)

    • !Si, Se, Puede!/ Yes, We Can!: Janitor Strike in L.A. by Diana Cohn (realistic fiction)

    • A Boy and A Jaguar by Alan Rabinowitz (autobiography)

    • Stonewall: A Building, An Uprising, A Revolution by Rob Sanders (informational)

    • Let the Children March by Monica Clark-Robinson (informational) 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, examples of genres include, but are not limited to:

    • DK Find Out! Ancient Egypt by Dr. Angela McDonald (informational)

    • More Than Anything Else by Marie Bradby (historical fiction)

 

Materials reflect a 50/50 balance of informational and literary texts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • The yearlong balance of informational and literary texts is 46% informational and 54% literary.

  • The balance of informational and literary texts within each unit is as follows:

    • Literature Unit 1 contains 12 core texts and Science/Social Studies Unit 1 contains seven core texts. Of the 19 core texts included in these units, 37% are informational and 63% are literary. The Science/Social Studies Unit contains all of the informational texts and the Literature Unit contains all of the literary texts. 

    • Literature Unit 2 contains 16 core texts and Science/Social Studies Unit 2 contains nine core texts. Of the 25 core texts included in these units, 36% are informational and 64% are literary. The Science/Social Studies Unit contains all of the informational texts and the Literature Unit contains all of the literary texts.

    • Literature Unit 3 contains 23 core texts and Science/Social Studies Unit 3 contains 17 core texts. Of the 40 core texts included in these units, 43% are informational and 58% are literary. The Science/Social Studies Unit contains 16 informational texts and one literary text, and the Literature Unit contains one informational text and 22 literary texts. 

    • Literature Unit 4 contains 13 core texts and Science/Social Studies Unit 4 contains 17 core texts. Of the 30 core texts included in these units, 57% are informational and 43% are literary. The Science/Social Studies Unit contains 16 informational texts and one literary text, and the Literature Unit contains one informational text and 12 literary texts.

    • Literature Unit 5 contains 18 core texts and Science/Social Studies Unit 5 contains four core texts. Of the 22 core texts included in these units, 55% are informational and 45% are literary. The Science/Social Studies Unit contains four informational texts and zero literary texts, and the Literature Unit contains eight informational texts and 10 literary texts. 

Indicator 1C
04/04

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 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1c.

Anchor texts have the appropriate level of complexity for the grade and gradually increase in quantitative complexity over the course of the year. Quantitative, qualitative, and associated tasks have an overall complexity of accessible and moderate.The Lexile level range is from 440L to 1050L. Associated tasks scaffold to become more complex throughout the year and several texts are used for multiple lessons and tasks involving inference, discussion and writing. Some texts that may be at a lower Lexile are more complex in qualitative measures making them appropriate for the grade level. The Text Selection Rationale for each unit includes a justification for the texts selected for the program and their educational placement in the grade, as well as a detailed analysis of the texts’ qualitative features.

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 Literature Unit 2, the Read-Aloud text It Could Always Be Worse by Margot Zemach has a quantitative rating of 590L. The qualitative rating is high due to the dialogue, academic vocabulary, and complex sentence structure. The associated task is accessible. Students must use the words unfortunate and peaceful to explain what lesson the man learns and how the rabbi helps. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, the Read-Aloud text Wolves by National Geographic Readers has a quantitative rating of 570L. The qualitative measure is moderate due to academic vocabulary. The associated task is challenging. Students defend whether wolves deserve the stereotype of being evil animals.

  • In Literature Unit 5, the Read-Aloud text The Oldest Student: How Mary Walker Learned to Read by Rita Lorraine Hubbard has a quantitative rating of 830L. The qualitative rating is medium due to the background knowledge needed to understand why Mary Walker did not learn to read when she was young. The associated task is rated medium. Students discuss and write about the lessons they can learn from Mary. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, the Read-Aloud text Explore Europe by Bobbie Kalman has a quantitative rating of 690L. The qualitative rating is high due to graphic features and academic vocabulary. The associated task is accessible. Student partners discuss landforms and ecosystems and how they influence ways people live. Students write two or three sentences describing how different landforms and ecosystems influence the lives of people living in Europe. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, the Read-Aloud text When Angels Sing: The Story of Rock Legend Carlos Santana by Michael Mahin has a quantitative rating of 610L. The qualitative level is medium due to academic vocabulary, the use of Spanish words and phrases, and colorful illustrations. The associated task is medium. Students use this text in two lessons, discussing how Santana’s past influenced his music and why the author chose the title. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, the Read-Aloud text National Geographic Readers: Pyramids by Laura Marsh has a quantitative rating of 560L. The qualitative level is moderate due to the text having simpler sentences, academic vocabulary, and text features. The associated task is rated as accessible. Students discuss facts they learned about pyramids from the text. 

Anchor/core texts and 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 at times. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • The Text Selection Rationale for each unit includes quantitative and qualitative complexity information for some texts. Some of the text complexity information is a summary of the unit texts rather than text-specific information, making it difficult to verify the accuracy of the provided qualitative information. Materials do not provide associated task complexity information. The accuracy of the provided quantitative measures was verified using MetaMetrics on The Lexile Framework for Reading site.

  • In Literature Unit 2, the Text Selection Rationale includes the Lexile range, as well as qualitative information. The Read-Aloud text, The Empty Pot by Demi, is a folktale. According to the Text Selection Rationale, texts for this unit were chosen because of the higher Lexile levels, text demands, mildly complex messages, text structures, illustrations, and vocabulary.

  • In Literature Unit 5, the Text Selection Rationale includes the Lexile range, as well as qualitative information. The Read-Aloud text, Little Libraries Big Heroes by Miranda Paul, is a biography. According to the Text Selection Rationale, texts in this unit were selected  because they are between the Grade 2 and Grade 3 level band, have strong characters, nuanced themes with multiple meanings, and high cultural knowledge demands.

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, the Text Selection Rationale provides Lexile range as well as qualitative information. The Read-Aloud text, Explore Africa by Bobbie Kalman, is an illustrative guide. According to the Text Selection Rationale, texts were selected because they are within the grade level band, and have text features, context clues, academic vocabulary, and a broad overview of the continents.

In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, the Text Selection Rationale includes the Lexile range and qualitative information for the texts. The Read-Aloud text, Tut's Mummy...Lost and Found by Judy Donnelly, is a nonfiction text. According to the Text Selection Rationale, texts in this unit were chosen because of their high Lexile levels, advanced text structures, and knowledge demands.

Indicator 1D
04/04

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 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1d.

Instructional materials include both Literature units and Science/Social Studies units which increase in complexity throughout the year to support student literacy growth. Texts range in complexity from 440L to 1050L. Texts become more complex with appropriate teacher guidance and scaffolds included. Materials break student tasks into smaller steps and allow students additional time for their completion. Supporting teacher resources include suggestions to build background knowledge, graphic organizers, and discussion prompts. Texts represent a diverse range of perspectives, feelings, and experiences. Texts often span multiple lessons, appear in multiple associated tasks, and are grouped with other selections to build content knowledge. 

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:

  • In Literature Unit 2, texts range in quantitative complexity from 470L to 860L. In Lesson 5, the teacher reads the book, Anansi Goes Fishing (510L) by Eric A. Kimmel, stopping to ask questions about key details. Students discuss the character story lesson with a partner and share it with the class. After the discussion, students write two to three sentences about what the main character learned, and if they would be friends with the main character. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, texts range in quantitative complexity from 440L to 920L. In Lesson 14, the teacher reads aloud The Oldest Student: How Mary Walker Learned to Read by Rita Lorraine Hubbard (AD 830L), stopping throughout to ask questions about the setting, main character, and moral of the story. After reading, students discuss the lessons they learned from the main character, why the lessons are important, and how they can apply the lessons to their own life. Students also write their responses about their discussion. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, texts range in quantitative complexity from 610L to 720L. During Lessons 1–4, students recall specific details from the text Explore North America by Bobbie Kalman (720L). Students spend four days with the text and write three specific facts from the text. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, texts range in quantitative complexity from 610L to 1050L. During Lessons 2–3, the teacher reads aloud A Splash of Red: The Life and Art of Horace Pippin by Jen Bryant (610L). Students use a graphic organizer to recall details of the artist’s life.

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, texts range in quantitative complexity from 540L to 920L. During Lessons 12–14, students read and listen to different chapters of the text Tut's Mummy Lost...and Found by Judy Donnelly (540L). In Lesson 12, students engage in independent reading, shared reading, or a read-aloud depending on their reading levels and answer main idea questions. After reading or listening to the text, students decide if they agree or disagree with the statement, “Preparing a king for the Land of the Dead was a quick and sad process,” using details from the text to support their answers. Students share their answers during a discussion and in writing. 

As texts become more complex, appropriate scaffolds and/or materials are provided in Teacher Edition (i.e., spending more time on texts, more questions, repeated readings). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 5, while listening to Anansi Goes Fishing by Eric A. Kimmel, materials support students with understanding the central lesson in the text by providing scaffolded questioning and language supports, as well as the opportunities to build background, engage in partner discussion through turn and talk, and engage in whole group peer discussions. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 7, the teacher supports students during a class discussion in which students identify the moral of The Three Little Pigs by Paul Galdone. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 14, while listening to The Oldest Student: How Mary Walker Learned to Read by Rita Lorraine Hubbard, student supports include partner discussions, scaffolded questioning, building background knowledge, and a YouTube video on the life of the main character. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 1, while listening to What Do You Do with a Tail Like This? By Steve Jenkins, student supports include scaffolded questioning, peer discussion, prompting, and building background knowledge. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 5, the teacher reads aloud Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras by Duncan Tonatiuh. The teacher introduces students to words from the glossary and students recall specific details learned from the text.

In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 12, students spend multiple days listening to Tut’s Mummy Lost...and Found by Judy Donnelly. Supports include building background knowledge, peer discussions, teacher prompts, sentence stems, and graphic organizers.

Indicator 1E
02/02

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 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1e.

Materials include a large volume of literary and informational texts that range in variety. The Text and Materials tab includes a link to a suggested text list for Independent Reading. Guidance in the Teacher Tools section recommends allotting an additional 15–30 minutes a day for independent reading.  The Teacher Tools section includes independent reading supports, such as independent reading guidelines, an independent reading log, sample lesson plans, and a parent letter. 

Instructional materials clearly identify opportunities and supports for students to engage in reading a variety of texts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 12, students listen to the folktale, The Paper Crane by Molly Bang. Afterwards, students discuss and write in response to the following prompt: “How did the stranger’s gift change the man’s life? What lesson is the author trying to teach?” 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lessons 3–4, students listen to the realistic fiction text, In Our Mother’s House by Patricia Polacco. Students “[d]escribe how the family shows that they love and care for one another,” and “[e]xplain why the house is important to the family.”   

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lessons 8–9, students listen to the biography, Six Dots: A Story of Young Louis Braille by Jen Bryant. Students discuss and write about “the challenges Louis faces when he tries to find books and how it makes him feel,” as well as how Louis “helped all kids get access to books and why this was important.”  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lessons 1–4, students listen to the illustrative guide Explore North America by Bobbie Kalman. Students complete different tasks each day, such as identifying different things they might see in North America and creating a postcard of what they saw on their imagined trip to North America.    

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 14, students listen to the historical fiction text, Stonewall: A Building, An Uprising, A Revolution by Rob Sanders and “[e]xplain why the Stonewall Inn is an important part of the LGBTQ+ movement.”  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 9, students listen to the informational text, National Geographic Readers: Pyramids by Laura Marsh and “[i]dentify new or different information about pyramids.” 

Instructional materials clearly identify opportunities and supports for students to engage in a volume of reading. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, there are a total of 15 lessons. Students listen to 11 texts, and the Recommended Texts for Independent Reading list contains 11 fiction text suggestions with themes and topics that align to the unit theme, “Being a Good Friend.” In Lessons 1–5 and Lessons 8–11, students listen to a different anchor text each day. Students listen to The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi in Lessons 6–7 and Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson in Lessons 12–13. Students draw upon their learning from all of the unit texts to “[w]rite an opinion piece about what makes a good friend,” in Lesson 14.  

  • In Literature Unit 4, there are a total of 18 lessons. Students listen to 12 texts, and the Recommended Texts for Independent Reading list contains 15 fiction and nonfiction text suggestions with themes and topics that align to the unit theme, “Making Old Stories New.” Students listen to a different anchor text each day in Lessons 1–6 and apply their learning in Lesson 7, as they determine the moral of The Three Little Pigs stories and explain how that moral can be used in their own life. After writing their own version of The Three Little Pigs in Lesson 8, students listen to two versions of  Little Red Riding Hood by Paul Galdone and Jerry Picnkney respectively, in Lessons 9–11. Students listen to a different anchor text each day in Lessons 12–15 and complete a writing task about the moral of the Little Red Riding Hood stories and how the moral can be used in their own life. In Lesson 16, students listen to the informational text National Geographic Readers: Wolves by Laura Marsh.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, there are a total of 22 lessons. Students listen to eight texts, and the Recommended Texts for Independent Reading list contains 12 nonfiction text suggestions by author Steve Jenkins with themes and topics that align to the unit theme, “Amazing Animals.” In Lessons 1–2, students listen to What Do You Do with a Tail Like This? by Steve Jenkins. After working on ending punctuation in Lesson 3, students listen to What Color is Camouflage? by Carolyn B. Otto in Lesson 4. Students listen to Living Color by Steve Jenkins in Lessons 5–7 and Red-Eyed Tree Frog by Joy Cowley in Lessons 8–9. After listening to What Do You Do When Something Wants to Eat You? by Steve Jenkins in Lesson 10, students use their learning from the texts they listened to to debate whether “camouflage is the most effective way for animals to protect themselves” in Lesson 11. Students listen to Sisters and Brothers: Sibling Relationships in the Animal World by Steve Jenkins and Robin Page in Lessons 12–14 and participate in a discussion and writing activity in Lesson 15. Students listen to Lizards by Laura Marsh in Lessons 16–17 and  Frogs by Elizabeth Carney in Lessons 18–19 before finishing out the unit with a discussion and writing task and an informational report writing task.   

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, there are a total of 25 lessons. Students listen to 17 texts, and the Recommended Texts for Independent Reading list contains 31 nonfiction text suggestions with themes and topics that align to the unit theme, “Inspiring Artists and Musicians.” After viewing a variety of paintings by different artists in Lesson 1, students listen to A Splash of Red: The Life and Art of Horace Pippin by Jen Bryant in Lessons 2–3, Action Jackson by Jan Greenberg and Sandra Jordan in Lesson 4, and Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras by Duncan Tonatiuh in Lessons 5–6. In Lessons 7–9, students listen to a different anchor text each day and complete an opinion writing piece on their favorite artist in Lesson 10. After listening to and describing music by various artists in Lesson 11, students listen to Duke Ellington: The Piano Prince and His Orchestra by Andrea Davis Pinkey in Lesson 12. In Lessons 13–14, students listen to When Marian Sang: The True Recital of Marian Anderson by Pam Munoz Ryan, Piano Starts Here: The Young Art Tatum by Robert Andrew Parker in Lesson 15, and Rock & Roll Highway: The Robbie Robertson Story by Sebastian Robertson in Lessons 16–17. Students listen to When Angels Sing: The Story of Rock Legend Carlos Santana by Michael Mahin in Lessons 18–19, When the Beat Was Born: DJ Kool Herc and the Creation of Hip Hop by Laban Carrick in Lesson 20, and Trombone Shorty by Troy Andrews in Lesson 21, before writing an opinion piece about their favorite musician in Lesson 22. 

There is teacher guidance to foster independence for all readers.(e.g., proposed schedule, tracking system for independent reading, independent reading procedures are included in the lessons.) Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Tools, the Reading Structures and Routines section outlines several ways to incorporate independent reading into daily lessons. 

  • In Teacher Tools, Independent Reading (K–5), guidelines for independent reading note the following: tasks should be relevant to students; students should experience a wide range of materials, genres, and text types; students should have choice in both books they read and how they respond to reading; students should have opportunities to share their reading with peers; and students need sustained independent reading time. Guidance encourages teachers to provide books that align with the unit themes and topic for student choice during independent reading.

  • In Teacher Tools, Independent Reading (K–5), the Monitoring Student Comprehension section includes independent reading routines for teacher use to monitor students as they read independently. Independent reading routines include Discussion/Book Groups, Book Talks, Book Reviews, and Conferences. Book Review guidance states, “Students can have one reading log/journal for a variety of purposes, or a separate log/journal for different purposes,” and references the sample Student Independent Reading Log, Student Independent Reading Journal (Writing Prompt), and Student Independent Reading Journal (Summary) templates provided.  

  • In Teacher Tools, Independent Reading (K–5), the Planning for Independent Reading section includes questions for teachers to consider as they prepare their classroom for independent reading. This teacher support also contains independent reading weekly planning templates, examples of how teachers can successfully begin and sustain independent reading, and examples of parent letters that address independent reading.

Criterion 1.2: Alignment to the Standards with Tasks and Questions Grounded in Evidence

15/16

Materials provide opportunities for rich and rigorous evidence-based discussions and writing about texts to build strong literacy skills.

Materials contain text-specific and text-dependent questions and tasks that support students as they explore key details and academic language, make inferences, and examine the structure of texts. Questions and tasks provide opportunities for students to engage with the text and build content knowledge and provide guidance for teachers to plan and implement text-based questions and tasks. Materials include a number of formal protocols and informal structures in the Teacher Tools section to support students’ developing speaking and listening skills across the year. The Academic Discourse section in the Teacher Tools includes varied protocols for whole group, small group, and partner discussions. Materials include teacher guidance to support the facilitation and monitoring of students’ evidence-based discussions and connect speaking and listening skills to the texts students are reading throughout the year. Support for teachers on how to provide instruction and support with Speaking and Listening can be found in the Academic Discourse Teacher Tool. The majority of discussions pertain to the unit texts or topics and the Teacher Tools also provide guidance for developing and implementing student discussion protocols across the curriculum and include ways to monitor student discussions. Materials include explicit writing instruction lessons and the writing that students are expected to produce grows throughout the year. Lessons and the Teacher Tools contain sentence frames, teacher modeling, teacher feedback, writing exemplars, and writing rubric. The teacher models shared writing and students practice during independent writing using drawings, oral sentences, and writing. Students write in response to texts individually and with partners, complete research-based writing, and develop their writing as a form of personal expression to convey information to others. Materials provide multiple opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice and apply different types of writing required by the standards, and students often write about personal ideas and opinions in reaction to ideas within the text. Teacher instruction attends to the different demands required of opinion, informational, and narrative writing, equipping students with the skills and knowledge to identify qualities of each type. Materials provide explicit instruction, practice and application for evidence-based writing opportunities across the school year. Although writing lessons do not occur daily, materials provide writing lessons in every unit. Writing opportunities integrate speaking, listening and reading and connect to the texts students listen to.

The teacher leads discussions, models the writing process, and provides sentence frames prior to students engaging in independent writing. Materials provide some explicit instruction of grade-level grammar and usage standards by embedding skills, modeling, guided practice, shared writing, and classroom discussions in some lessons. Materials include a sufficient focus on the grammar and usage standards. Both the Literature and Science and Social Studies units include explicit instruction of grammar and usage standards and provide opportunities for students to practice and authentically apply their learning. Vocabulary words selected for each lesson include Tier I, II and III words; however, there is no rationale as to how or why specific words were selected for the unit or lesson. The Teacher Tools section provides content and strategies necessary to support vocabulary instruction but there is not a coherent and cohesive instructional plan within daily lessons or threaded across lessons and units.

Indicator 1F
02/02

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 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1f.

Materials contain text-specific and text-dependent questions and tasks that support students as they explore key details and academic language, make inferences and examine the structure of texts. Questions and tasks provide opportunities for students to engage with the text and build content knowledge. Students use pictures and information from texts to support their speaking and writing responses. Materials provide guidance for teachers to plan and implement text-specific questions and tasks. Each lesson includes sample responses to questions and tasks, as well as Language Supports and Additional Supports for discussion questions. The Unit Launch contains the Essential Questions and guidance for teachers to customize the unit for their students. The Teacher Tools section titled Academic Discourse provides guidance for teachers during class discussions.  

Text-specific and text-dependent questions and tasks support students in making meaning of the core understandings of the text being studied. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 9, after listening to Enemy Pie by Derek Munson, students respond to text-specific questions such as, “Why is the narrator’s summer not starting out as a perfect summer? How does it make him feel?”; “What does the narrator think about enemy pie? How do his feelings change?”; “What does the narrator have to do for the day? Why? How does it make the narrator feel?”; “How has the narrator changed? What caused the narrator to change? Give two specific examples.”; “Why does the narrator feel relieved?”; and “Do you think enemy pie really exists?”

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 18, during the read-aloud Grandmother’s Visit by Betty Quan, students respond to the following text-specific questions: “How do Grace and her grandmother show that they love and care for each other? Give multiple examples.”; “How is Grandma changing?”; “How is Grace feeling? How do you know?”; “What happens to Grace’s grandmother? How do you know?”; and “Why does the family turn on all of their outside lights?” After reading, students discuss and write in response to the Target Task, “How do things change in Grace’s family? How does she respond?”

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 6, while listening to Digging for Words: José Alberto Gutiérrez and the Library He Built by Angela Burke Kunkel, students respond to Key Questions such as, “Describe the two Josés. Give two to three details about each.”  

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 1, during the read-aloud What Do You Do with a Tail Like This? by Steve Jenkins, students respond to the following text-specific questions: “How do humans use their noses for survival? How do you think these different animals might use their noses for survival?”; “How do platypuses and elephants use their noses for survival?”; “How do humans use their ears for survival? How do you think these different animals might use their ears for survival?”; “How do jackrabbits, bats, and hippopotamuses use their ears to survive?”; “How might animals use their tails to survive?”; and “How do the skunk, scorpion, or lizard use their tails to survive?” After the reading, students write in response to the following prompt, “Pick one animal and explain how it uses its nose, ears, or tail to survive.”

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 5, during the read-aloud, Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras by Duncan Tonatiuh, and close reading, Calaveras by Jose Guadalupe (Lupe) Posada, students respond to text-specific questions such as, “What are calaveras? Give an example of when you might see a calavera.”; “What was Lupe passionate about as a child?”; “Why did Lupe move to León? What happened once he moved there?”; “What are ‘broadsides?’ How did creating broadsides help Don Lupe’s career?”; “Don Lupe made literary calaveras, what were they? How did they help his career?”; and “How does etching work? Why did Don Lupe switch to etching?”

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 1, after listening to Mummies and Pyramids: A Nonfiction Companion to Magic Tree House #3: Mummies in the Morning by Mary Pope Osborne, students write in response to the Target Task, “Why did the Egyptian civilization start near the Nile River? Give multiple reasons.” 

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 Literature Unit 1, Lesson 5, after reading The Sandwich Swap by Queen Rania Al Abdullah and Kelly DiPucchio, students respond to the following text-specific questions: “What do the two girls learn about friendship? How do they learn it?” Materials provide a sample response for teacher use: “The two girls learn that even if someone is a little bit different from you, that is okay, you can still be friends! They learned this lesson when they insulted each other about their lunches and argued. When they were calm, they tried each other's lunches and realized they were pretty good! They became friends again and will never insult each other. Instead, they might ask one another to explain things they do not understand!”

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 18, materials include additional questions for the teacher used to support students with responding to the Target Task for the text Grandmother’s Visit by Betty Quan. “Once students have a strong understanding of the Target Task, prompt students to think about how Grace’s family showed that they loved and cared for one another. If needed, prompt with the following questions: How did Grace’s family support one another? How did they show they loved and cared about each other? What can we learn from her family?”

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 19, after reading Ruby’s Wish by Shirin Yim Bridges, students write in response to the following Target Task: “What was Ruby’s wish?  How did she make it come true?” To support the teacher with implementing these text-specific questions, materials include Language Supports and guidance for their use: “Encourage students to use the words ‘insist’ and ‘unusual’ when answering the Target Task question. If needed, provide students the following frames: Ruby insisted ___, so ___.  Ruby insisted ___, but ___.  It was unusual for girls to go to university, but ___.  It was unusual for girls to go to university, so ___.” 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 14, after reading Explore Europe by Bobbie Kalman, students respond to text-specific questions such as, “What types of water are found in Europe? Identify two to three.” Materials include the following sample response: “There are lots of different seas in Europe. There are many different rivers. The Danube is the second-longest river in Europe. Lake Ladoga is the largest lake in Europe. It is in Russia.” The provided Additional Support states, “Before reading, have students review the potential types of water they might see: oceans, seas, lakes, rivers.”

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 4, materials include sample student responses for the Target Task for the book Action Jackson by Jan Greenburg and Sandra Jordan and the painting One: Number 31 by Jackson Pollock. The Target Task prompt is: “The author says that, ‘Jackson Pollock is doing something original, painting in a way that no one has ever seen before.’ In what ways is Jackson’s work original?” Sample responses include, “Jackson’s work is original because he did not paint recognizable objects; instead, he made abstract images.” and “Jackson’s work is original, but not everyone liked the work he was doing.” 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 5, before listening to DK FindOut! Ancient Egypt by Dr. Angela McDonald, “[s]tudents Turn and Talk to share one to two ways life in ancient Egypt is similar to their lives now and one to two ways it is different.” In the Additional Supports section, materials include a sample graphic organizer for teachers to use to track students’ responses. 

  • In the Teacher Tools, Types of Formative Assessments, materials provide a table that includes teacher guidance on how to utilize the Key Questions as checks for understanding during the daily lesson, as well as how to use the Target Tasks to monitor student comprehension, content knowledge, writing, or oral language development. This section also includes Target Task Rubrics for reading responses.

  • In the Teacher Tools, Components of an ELA Lesson, materials include definitions for each part of an ELA lesson. In the Internalizing a Lesson section, teacher guidance supports teachers with determining which Key Questions are critical to students understanding the text and Target Task, and brainstorming what support students might need to answer the key questions.

Indicator 1G
02/02

Materials provide frequent opportunities and protocols for evidence-based discussions.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1g.

Materials include a number of formal protocols and informal structures in the Teacher Tools section to support students’ developing speaking and listening skills across the year. The Academic Discourse section in the Teacher Tools includes varied protocols for whole group, small group, and partner discussions. Materials include teacher guidance to support the facilitation and monitoring of students’ evidence-based discussions. 

Materials provide varied protocols to support students’ developing speaking and listening skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Tools, the Types of Academic Discourse section of Academic Discourse lists the program’s speaking and listening protocols for each tier. Materials provide two whole group, four small group, and five partner discussion protocols. 

    • Whole Class Discussion Protocols: Take a Stand and Fishbowl

    • Group Discussion Protocols: Simultaneous Round Table, Rally Coach, Talking Chips, and Numbered Heads Together

    • Partner Conversation Protocols: Think-Pair-Share, Write-Pair-Share, Timed-Pair-Share, Think-Pair-Share-Revise, and Partner A/B

Speaking and listening instruction includes facilitation, monitoring, and instructional supports for teachers. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • The Teacher Tools contains a section titled Academic Discourse. The Overview page of this section includes links to additional guidance: Preparing for Academic Discourse, Types of Academic Discourse, Tiers of Academic Discourse, and Monitoring and Supporting Academic Discourse. These supports, which are introduced and reinforced throughout units and linked in lessons, allow teachers to leverage their expertise and select the protocol that best meets the needs of their students and the lesson content.

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 6, students participate in a Turn and Talk about whether Anansi is a good friend. Guidance for the teacher-led discussion includes, “Push students to give specific examples to support why Anansi is or is not a good friend. Chart student ideas.” The Suggested Supports inset includes sentence frames for students as Language Supports and references using the Discussion Recording Form (K–2) for the teacher “to assess and track student participation” and the Academic Discourse Rubric (K–2) for students to self-assess their participation.   

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 21, while listening to Last Stop on Market Street by Matt De La Peña, students respond to the following Key Question: “Based on what we know about Nana so far, what words can be used to describe her?” The response exemplars describe Nana as positive and accepting. The Suggested Supports inset includes the following Language Supports: “Teach students the words ‘positive’’ and ‘accepting.’ In what ways is Nana positive? Nana is positive because _______. In what ways is Nana accepting? Nana is accepting because ______. “

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 2, students listen to The Good Little Book by Kyo Maclear. During the read-aloud, the teacher asks the Key Question, “How does the little boy feel?  How do you know?” Materials include the following prompts in Additional Supports for students who may struggle to respond: “What do you notice about the little boy’s facial expressions? What do you notice about the way he is sitting? “What does it mean if something dazzles you? How are you feeling if you laugh and gasp?”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 9, while listening to Explore Africa by Bobbie Kalman, students respond to the Key Question, “What might you see in the Saharan desert?” The Suggested Supports inset includes this Additional Support: “Make sure you are pushing students to describe what they might see. If a student says, ‘You will see sand dunes.’ Encourage them to tell you more by adding more details.” 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 1, the teacher and students analyze a painting. Materials include nine questions that “move from describing the painting to analyzing and interpreting it” to support this activity. Lesson guidance directs the teacher to divide students into five groups and “Use a gallery walk protocol to have students observe the paintings by each artist.” Materials include a list of four students to discuss as they spend three minutes analyzing each painting.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 8, while listening to Sit In: How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down by Andrea Davis Pinkney, students respond to this Key Question: “What words can be used to describe the students? Explain.” The embedded Suggested Supports includes the following Additional Support: “If students are struggling to determine traits for the students, prompt with the following questions: What do the students do? How do they behave? What does this show about them? What word can we use to describe someone who acts that way?”

Indicator 1H
02/02

Materials support students’ listening and speaking about what they are reading (or read aloud) and researching (shared projects) with relevant follow-up questions and support.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1h.

Materials connect speaking and listening skills to the texts students are reading throughout the year. Support for teachers on how to provide instruction and support with Speaking and Listening can be found in the Academic Discourse Teacher Tool. This tool provides support structures for varied discussions and time for students to develop skills in collaborative, reciprocal conversations that build and develop ideas or the ideas of others through careful listening and responding. The majority of discussions pertain to the unit texts or topics and the Teacher Tools also provide guidance for developing and implementing student discussion protocols across the curriculum and include ways to monitor student discussions. Lessons provide sentence stems for students and recommendations for ways that teachers can model speaking and listening skills. 

Students have multiple opportunities over the school year to demonstrate what they are reading. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • Follow agreed-upon rules for discussions (e.g., listening to others with care, speaking one at a time about the topics and texts under discussion). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 8, the Suggested Supports inset includes an Additional Support in which the teacher reviews discussion norms introduced so far this year. The norms include, look at the speaker, put your hand down when someone else is speaking, do not interrupt others, use a loud voice so that everyone can hear you, and use body language to show listening. It is unclear if this support is optional or mandatory and the lesson does not require students to use the norms during discussions. 

  • Add drawings or other visual displays to descriptions when appropriate to clarify ideas, thoughts, and feelings. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 30, if students finish writing the beginning and middle of their stories, they add illustrations to their work. Students include additional details in their illustrations to show exactly what happened at the end of their stories.

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 1, students discuss the read aloud Fiesta by Pat Mora. Afterwards, “students Turn and Talk about the following questions: Where is your favorite place to read? Where do you get the books that you read? What is your favorite book? How do you get to school?” Students then write answers to the questions and the teacher “[encourages] students to draw an illustration to match that shows what they look like when they are reading and enjoying a book.” 

Speaking and listening work sometimes requires students to utilize, apply, and incorporate evidence from texts and/or sources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Build on others' talk in conversations by responding to the comments of others through multiple exchanges. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 1, Students are introduced to the focus area of building on talk in conversations. The teacher models how to build on, specifically when agreeing or disagreeing. Students are given the following sentence stems:

      • I agree with _____ because ______.

      • I disagree with ____ becaus ______.

      • I want to add on to _____. I would also say _____.

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 7, Discussion focuses of building on through multiple exchanges are introduced. The teacher models what it looks like and gives students potential sentence stems to use. 

  • Ask questions to clear up any confusion about the topics and texts under discussion. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 5, students think of additional questions they have about Don Lupe based on what they have read so far on pages 1–18 of, Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras by Duncan Tonatiuh. Students review how to use different question words and how to craft questions if needed. 

  • Ask and answer questions about key details in a text read aloud or information presented orally or through other media. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 6, while listening to The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi, students respond to Key Questions about the text individually, with a partner, during a class discussion, or as a Stop and Jot. Students do not have an opportunity to ask questions. 

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 3, students listen to The Three Little Javelinas by Susan Howell. While reading, students retell what happened to each javelina. Students do not ask questions about key details in the text. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 5, before the teacher reads aloud Living Color by Steve Jenkins, students “Turn and Talk about the different ways that animals use camouflage to survive.” Students also “share any questions they may have about camouflage.”  

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 5, after listening to a read aloud of Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras by Duncan Tonatiuh, students participate in a Turn and Talk with partners to discuss what they learned about Don Lupe. Students respond to the following questions: “What was the main topic of this text? What are two specific facts that the author wanted us to learn?” Students also “think of additional questions they have about Don Lupe based on what they have read so far.” The teacher reviews “how to use different question words and how to craft questions” with students. 

  • Ask and answer questions about what a speaker says in order to gather additional information or clarify something that is not understood. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 19, after listening to a read aloud of I Love Saturdays y domingos by Alma Flor Ada, the teacher leads the class in a discussion about what makes both sets of grandparents similar and different. The teacher reminds students “that they should be building onto their peers’ answers and asking questions if they need clarification.” Materials provide sentence stems for student use during the discussion.

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 17, after students share their research with the class, students ask questions in order to clarify what the speaker is saying. Students “share one thing they liked and one question they have.” Materials provide sentence stems for student use. 

  • Describe people, places, things, and events with relevant details, expressing ideas and feelings clearly. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In LIterature Unit 1, Lesson 6, after listening to The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi, students Turn and Talk with a partner about what the main character was worried about and why she was so worried. Students use specific details to support their answers. 

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 3, students listen to The Three Little Javelinas by Susan Howell. Students describe what trick the coyote tries in the story and what happens.

    • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 1, students listen to Fiesta by Pat Mora. Students explain the phrase, “fly away in their books” from the text.

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 2, the class creates a timeline about Horace Pippen and his paintings in order to organize facts about his childhood and early life. The teacher provides students with background information to guide their partner discussions. Students discuss what they think are the most important things they learned about Horace Pippin. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 3, students listen to Kamala Harris: Rooted in Justice by Nikki Grimes. Students explain how life changed for Kamala when she moved to Berkeley and how the changes made her feel. 

In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 5, students listen to DK Find Out! Ancient Egypt by Dr. Angela MacDonald. Students explain how medicine is different today than in ancient Egypt.

Indicator 1I
02/02

Materials include a mix of on-demand and process, grade-appropriate writing (e.g., grade-appropriate revision and editing) and short, focused projects, incorporating digital resources where appropriate.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1i.

Materials include explicit writing instruction lessons and the writing that students are expected to produce grows throughout the year. Lessons and the Teacher Tools contain sentence frames, teacher modeling, teacher feedback, writing exemplars, and a writing rubric. The teacher models shared writing and students practice independent writing, constructing detailed sentences and engaging in the full writing process, including editing, revising, and sharing the final draft. Students write in response to texts individually and with partners, complete research-based writing, and develop their writing as a form of personal expression to convey information to others. Students learn to self-assess their writing using editing checklists. Materials include some digital resources, such as Google and Youtube videos.

Materials include on-demand writing opportunities that cover a year’s worth of instruction. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 7, students finish listening to The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi and write one thing they learned from Unhei about what it means to be a good friend. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 16, after listening to A Tale of Two Seders by Mindy Avra Portnoy, students write about how “the narrator’s parents show they love and care for her even though they are no longer married,” using multiple examples from the text in their response. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 12, after listening to More Than Anything Else by Marie Bradby, students write about what Booker T. Washington wanted more than anything else and how he made his dream come true. After the teacher provides additional information, students revise and add to their short answer responses. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 4, students draw upon their learning from the text Explore North America by Bobbie Kalman to create a postcard about their imaginary visit to North America. On the front, they draw a picture of what they saw and on the back, they write a few sentences describing what they did when they visited North America. Students who need support can use a sentence frame. Students share their postcards with a partner. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 19, students listen to a reading of the text When the Beat Was Born: DJ Kool Herc and the Creation of Hip Hop by Laban Carrick Hill and the song Let Me Clear My Throat by DJ Kool. After participating in a class discussion, students write about one of the key features of Hip Hop. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 12, after listening to the first chapter of Tut’s Mummy: Lost…and Found by Judy Donnelly, students use three to four details to support their opinion of the following statement: “Preparing a king for the Land of the Dead was a quick and sad process.” After engaging in a class discussion, students “write their final opinion about if preparing a King for the Land of the Dead was a quick and sad process.” 

Materials include process writing opportunities that cover a year’s worth of instruction. Opportunities for students to revise and edit are provided. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 9, after listening to various stories about Anansi the Spider in previous lessons, students write a narrative story about “another trick Anansi plays on his friends.” The story must contain a beginning, middle, and end; feature Anansi as the main character, and describe what Anansi does with a ball when playing a trick on another character. Students edit their writing individually or with a partner to ensure they print all uppercase and lowercase letters correctly, use learned spelling patterns to spell words correctly, and use word wall lists to spell irregular words. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 6, after exploring texts about various types of families, students “write about their own families and what makes their families special.” Students’ writing must include two exclamations, two to three details about who is in their family, and one to two examples of how they show love to one another using examples of traditions. Students edit their writing for use of possessive pronouns and possessive apostrophes.  

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 25, after learning “about a range of barriers people have faced when trying to learn how to read,” students write a thank-you note to someone who has helped them get books, get to school, or learn how to read. Students’ thank-you notes must include a clear reason for why they are thankful for the person; two to three examples of how the person helped them; one to two vocabulary words learned in the unit; and a statement, question, and exclamation sentence. Students edit and revise their work as a class, in small groups, or individually to make sure their thank-you notes include complete sentences and the three required sentence types, specific details, correct spelling using known sound-spelling patterns, and correct capitalization. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 22, students write a Creature Feature Report about a specific animal. The informational report must include four to five key details about the animal, two questions students have about the animal, and a picture of the animal. On Day 4, students edit their reports, focusing on the use of capital letters at the beginning of sentences and proper nouns, correct punctuation usage, and the correct spelling of words with frequently occurring spelling patterns. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 10, after exploring paintings and texts from various artists and authors in Lessons 1–9, students brainstorm which artist is their favorite in order to convince others of their opinion. Students share their reasons with a partner who has chosen the same artist and revise their original work. On the second day of instruction, the teacher uses one piece of student writing as an exemplar, and students revise their writing to ensure they include specific details; capitalize proper nouns; and use conjunctions, different sentence types, and possessive nouns and pronouns.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 17, students create a class book about ancient Egypt over the course of four days. After brainstorming a list of things about ancient Egypt to write about, the teacher assigns students different things to write about for the class book. Students work on drafting a topic sentence and key details for their paragraphs. Students also add illustrations and three text features to add to their writing. On the final day, students edit their writing to ensure the use of correct ending punctuation, verb tense, capitalization, possessives, and spelling of words that use previously learned sound-spelling patterns. Students use the editing checklist (K–2) to assess their own writing.

Materials include digital resources where appropriate. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 13, one of the Suggested Supports insets includes an Opportunity for Enrichment. Students may watch a YouTube video in which Rukhsana Kahn, the author of Big Red Lollipop, narrates her story. Students compare and contrast both versions of the story afterward. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, materials include the following enrichment opportunity option as a Suggested Support: “If time allows, use Google Earth to have students explore different parts of North America.”

Indicator 1J
02/02

Materials provide opportunities for students to address different text types of writing(year-long) that reflect the distribution required by the standards.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1j.

Materials provide multiple opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice and apply different types of writing required by the standards. Students often write about personal ideas and opinions in reaction to ideas within the text. Writing instruction often begins with a task-related discussion followed by teacher modeling and shared writing or a practice activity before students independently craft their own products. Teacher instruction attends to the different demands required of opinion, informational, and narrative writing, equipping students with the skills and knowledge to identify qualities of each type. Supports include sentence frames and prompting questions. Materials ground most writing tasks in the texts students listen to, with texts serving as the basis for prompts or models. 

Materials provide multiple opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice, and apply different genres/modes/types of writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • Percentage or number of opportunities for opinion writing:

    • Students have 17 out of 31 (55%) opportunities to learn, practice, and apply opinion writing across the school year.

    • In Literature Unit 1, there is one opportunity for opinion writing. This is the sole writing opportunity for this unit.  

    • In Literature Unit 2, there is one opportunity for opinion writing. One of three writing opportunities for this unit is opinion in nature. 

    • In Literature Unit 3, there is one opportunity for opinion writing. One of three writing opportunities for this unit is opinion in nature.  

    • In Literature Unit 4, there are two opportunities for opinion writing. Two of three writing opportunities for this unit are opinion in nature. 

    • In Literature Unit 5, there are two opportunities for opinion writing. All writing opportunities for this unit are opinion in nature.  

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, there is one opportunity for opinion writing. One of six writing opportunities for this unit is opinion in nature. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, there are no opportunities for opinion writing. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, there are two opportunities for opinion writing. Two of four writing opportunities for this unit are opinion in nature. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, there are six opportunities for opinion writing. All writing opportunities for this unit are opinion in nature.

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, there is one opportunity for opinion writing. One of two writing opportunities for this unit is opinion in nature. 

  • Percentage or number of opportunities for informative/explanatory writing:

    • Students have nine out of 31(29%)  opportunities to learn, practice, and apply informative/explanatory writing across the school year.

    • In Literature Units 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5,  there are no opportunities for informative/explanatory writing. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, there are five opportunities for informative/explanatory writing. Five of six writing opportunities for this unit are informative/explanatory in nature. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, there is one opportunity for informative/explanatory writing. This is the sole writing opportunity for this unit. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, there are two opportunities for informative/explanatory writing. Two of four writing opportunities for this unit are informative/explanatory in nature. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, there are no opportunities for informative/explanatory writing.

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, there is one opportunity for informative/explanatory writing. One of two writing opportunities for this unit is informative/explanatory in nature. 

  • Percentage or number of opportunities for narrative writing:

    • Students have five out of 31(16%) opportunities to learn, practice, and apply narrative writing across the school year.

    • In Literature Unit 1, there are no opportunities for narrative writing. 

    • In Literature Unit 2, there are two opportunities for narrative writing. Two of three writing opportunities for this unit are narrative in nature. 

    • In Literature Unit 3, there are two opportunities for narrative writing. Two of three writing opportunities for this unit are narrative in nature. 

    • In Literature Unit 4, there is one opportunity for narrative writing. One of three writing opportunities for this unit is narrative in nature. 

    • In Literature Unit 5, there are no opportunities for narrative writing. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, there are no opportunities for narrative writing. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, there are no opportunities for narrative writing. 

    • In Science and Social Studies, Unit 3, there are no opportunities for narrative writing. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, there are no opportunities for narrative writing.

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, there are no opportunities for narrative writing.

  • Explicit instruction in opinion writing: 

    • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 24, on Day 1, the teacher leads a discussion about the lessons they have learned from various folktales. Next, the teacher explains what opinion writing should include and models how to write an opinion paragraph using the Mastery Response. On Day 2, the teacher explains and models how to use pronouns to edit sentences.

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 5, on Day 1, the teacher leads a review discussion of women’s rights. The teacher explains the task and provides the Single Paragraph Outline explaining the parts of a paragraph. The teacher models outlining a topic sentence, three details, and a closing sentence. On Day 2, the teacher models using the Single Paragraph Outline to write a paragraph.

  • Explicit instruction in informative/explanatory writing:

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 22, on Day 1, the teacher provides research materials on animals and explains the task. On Day 2, the teacher provides a Creature Feature Template for students to use to describe their animal. The teacher explains how to use adjectives to describe their animal and models adding adjectives to example sentences. On Day 3, the teacher models writing cause and effect sentences. On Day 4, the teacher models editing sentences for capitals, punctuation, and spelling. 

  • Explicit instruction in narrative writing: 

    • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 7, the teacher charts student story ideas about Anansi finding a talking ball. Next, the teacher uses the Narrative Writing Brainstorm Template (1st Grade) to model brainstorming a story. The teacher models completing the beginning, middle, and end sections of the template and adds a specific drawing to match. In Lesson 9, the teacher models how to turn the brainstorm into a story using details. The teacher circulates around the room as students are writing ensuring students are using specific details. 

Different genres/modes/types of writing are distributed throughout the school year. For example: 

  • Students have opportunities to engage in opinion writing. 

    • Write opinion pieces in which they introduce the topic or name the book they are writing about, state an opinion, supply a reason for the opinion, and provide some sense of closure.

      • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 24, students write an opinion paragraph in response to the following prompt: ”Your friend told you folktales are just silly stories that do not connect to our lives. Do you agree or disagree? Explain why using examples and lessons from different stories.” After discussing lessons learned from previously read books, including “how that particular lesson does or does not connect to their lives,” students participate in a shared writing activity with the teacher. After completing the model writing activity with the teacher, “students share what they noticed.” Students then independently write their own opinion paragraph. The teacher selects one or two paragraphs to display and students “share what they notice their classmate did well.” Language supports include the following sentence frames: “I disagree/agree that folktales are just silly stories.”; “In ___ we learn ___.”; and “This connects to our classroom because ___.”

      • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 5, on Day 1, “students decide if they want to write about Shirley Chisholm or Kamala Harris” and work in pairs based on their decision. Students “orally discuss how the world would be different if the person had not stood up for women’s rights,” before completing their Single Paragraph Outline. Language supports for crafting a topic sentence include sentence frames, such as “If Kamala Harris had not fought for women’s rights, ___.” On Day 2, students independently turn their completed Single Paragraph Outline into a paragraph. Afterwards, students “add an illustration to their writing,” and share their work with a partner who wrote about someone different if time allows.

  • Students have opportunities to engage in informative/explanatory writing. For example: 

    • Write informative/explanatory texts in which they name a topic, supply some facts about the topic, and provide some sense of closure.

      • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 17, students create a class book about ancient Egypt. Students select a topic to write about. Then, students use the Single Paragraph Outline as a pre-write and draft their paragraphs. Afterwards, students add different types of text features to their writing, and edit and revise their writing before submitting a final draft for the class book.

  • Students have opportunities to engage in narrative writing. For example: 

    • Write narratives in which they recount two or more appropriately sequenced events, include some details regarding what happened, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide some sense of closure.

      • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, on Day 1, students write their own version of the Three Little Pigs. After working with the teacher to brainstorm things that were different in each version, students complete a brainstorm graphic organizer to help them determine the characters included in their story, the types of materials the houses will be built from, and what events will happen in the beginning, middle, and end of their story. After sharing their ideas with a partner and the class, students draw their ideas onto the graphic organizer. On Day 2, students draft their narratives using their completed brainstorm graphic organizer. Students may also begin their drafts in the Book Template. Once the written portion is complete, students “add details to the illustrations to help readers visualize what is happening.” On Day 3, students revisit their writing and select a few sentences “in which they can add ‘when,’ ‘where,’ details.” Students share their revisions with a partner. Students may use and expand two sentence frames as language supports when writing their stories. On Day 4, students edit and assess their writing using the Editing Checklist (K–2) and create final drafts of their stories using the Book Template. Afterwards, students share their stories with a partner.

Where appropriate, writing opportunities are connected to texts and/or text sets (either as prompts, models, anchors, or supports). For example: 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 20, students read the book, I Love Saturdays y domingos by Alma Flor Ada, and write how the narrator’s abuelitos and grandparents are similar following a class discussion. Materials include sentence frames for student use as a support.

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 25, after reading the book Grandfather Counts by Deborah J. Short, students write in response to the prompt, “Explain how the train helps bring Helen and Gong Gong together and what lessons we can learn from them.”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 3, students read the book Explore North America by Bobbie Kalman and discuss what they would see in North America with a partner. After the discussion, students write two to three sentences about what they might see in North America.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 4, students engage in a read aloud and class discussion around the book Action Jackson by Jan Greenberg and Sandra Jordan. After the class discussion, students analyze the One: Number 31 painting and explain how Jackson Pollock’s work was original using the “Because, But, So” writing strategy.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 5, students write about women’s rights. Students write about one woman and detail her fight for women’s rights using texts they studied in the unit. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 12, students read chapter 1of Tut’s Mummy Lost...and Found by Judy Donnelly, and decide if they think preparing a King for the Land of the Dead was a quick and sad process. Students choose a position, find three to four details to support their opinion, and engage in a class discussion. After the discussion, students write their final opinion about the process.

Indicator 1K
02/02

Materials include regular opportunities for evidence-based writing to support recall of information, opinions with reasons, and relevant information appropriate for the grade level.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 1k.

Materials provide explicit instruction, practice, and application for evidence-based writing opportunities across the school year. Although writing lessons do not occur daily, materials provide writing lessons in every unit. Writing opportunities integrate speaking, listening, and reading and connect to the texts students listen to. Students use details from the readings in their illustrations and labels. The teacher leads discussions, models the writing process, and provides sentence frames prior to students engaging in independent writing. 

Materials provide opportunities across the school year for students to practice and apply writing using evidence.  Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 24, the teacher leads a brainstorm of stories from the unit, what lessons the stories taught, and if the stories connect to the students’ lives. Then the teacher provides sentence frames “I agree/disagree because___.” The teacher models writing an opinion by focusing on having a clear opinion, using a few details, and answering the prompt.

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 18, students explain barriers people face when learning to read and explain how they have overcome barriers using specific examples from texts they have read. The teacher displays the question and models thinking out loud about a potential barrier that children have faced and how they have overcome this barrier. Students brainstorm additional barriers each character from the unit faced, and how that character broke the barrier. Students share in a class discussion. The teacher charts student answers as they share and prompts students to build on each other’s ideas. After the discussion students chose one barrier to write about providing specific examples from a text and explaining how the character overcomes the barrier. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 16, students write a travel poster highlighting what students would see or do in Europe. Students brainstorm with partners the places they can visit or sightsee while in Europe recalling facts from the readings in the unit, as well as different text features they can use. The teacher models writing a travel poster including text features using the Master Response. The curriculum provides examples of questions and answers teachers can utilize if they are unfamiliar with the strategy. Students write their travel posters while the teacher circulates around the room to ensure they are meeting the criteria. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 20, students explain how animals of the same kind are similar or different. The teacher explains the task and uses a Think Aloud to model how lizards and frogs are the same and different.  Next, the teacher leads a class discussion of other animals and the teacher provides sentence frames, “I think___ because ___.” and “I think __. An example is ___.” The teacher prompts students to generalize specific examples for all animals and provides new sentence frames, “Animals of the same kind can be similar because ___. For example, ___.” and “Animals of the same kind can be different because ___. For example, ___.” The Grade 1 Reading Response Rubric is used for grading however, this lesson is not considered a writing lesson.

  • In Science and Social Studies and Science Unit 3, Lesson 23, students engage in a class discussion about the essential question selected by the teacher. Students brainstorm orally with a partner gathering two to three specific details to support their thinking. The teacher leads a class discussion asking students to use their notes from brainstorming. After the discussion students write an answer to the Essential Question using details from their brainstorming and the classroom discussion. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 20, students create a poster to educate people about the disability rights movement. The teacher leads a class discussion to review key ideas from the unit and what students think people should know. Next, the teacher gives the students a Single Paragraph Outline graphic organizer. The teacher models by drawing a poster and using the outline to include the information on the poster.   

Writing opportunities are focused on students’ recall of information to develop opinions from reading closely and working with evidence from texts and sources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 14, students write about what makes a good friend using details from the unit texts to support their opinions. With a partner, students brainstorm two or three characteristics of a good friend. As students share their responses, the teacher charts their answers. Students write their own opinion pieces while the teacher circulates ensuring students meet the writing criteria listed in the curriculum. Students illustrate their opinions. 

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 6, students write about whether Anansi the Spider is a good friend and explain why or why not. Students also write about how Anansi could be a better friend. Students include an introductory opinion statement, then add reasons to explain their opinion, including specific events in the unit stories. Students create illustrations to match their opinions.

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 10, students write advice they would give to a friend who is going to have a new sibling. Students brainstorm with a partner and think of examples from the books they read as a class and on their own in the unit. The teacher engages students in a lesson around writing questions, and then models writing advice using different types of sentences including a question. Students then write their advice using different sentence types. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 22, students write an opinion piece on which continent they would like to visit and support their opinion with two to three reasons. Students brainstorm with a partner using the Boxes and Bullets graphic organizer. The teacher models how to write their opinion using a topic sentence and details that would convince others to visit the same place. The teacher leads a discussion on noticing specific details. Students then write their own opinions as the teacher circulates to monitor students’ work.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 11, students write an opinion piece on whether camouflage is the most effective way for animals to protect themselves. Students must include two to three specific examples from the unit texts. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 5, students write about one of the women’s rights activists from the unit and how the world would be different if the activist did not stand up for women’s rights. Students must include a topic sentence that answers the prompt question and states their opinion, three details from the texts that support their opinion, and a closing sentence.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 10, students write about whether they would like to live in ancient Egypt and support their opinion with details and facts. On Day 1, students brainstorm with a partner and then engage in a class discussion as the teacher charts student responses. The teacher models writing an outline using the Think Aloud strategy. Students create an outline while the teacher circulates to ensure student outlines follow the criteria. On Day 2, the teacher models how to use the brainstorming to write a complete paragraph and adds details and facts using the Write Aloud strategy. Students turn and talk about what they notice about the paragraph. Students use their outlines to write a paragraph and elaborate with details and facts. As students write, the teacher circulates to ensure student paragraphs meet the criteria listed for the task.

Indicator 1L
02/02

Materials include explicit instruction of the grade-level grammar and usage standards, with opportunities for application in context.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria for Indicator 1l. 

Materials include a sufficient focus on the grammar and usage standards. Both the Literature and Science and Social Studies units include explicit instruction of grammar and usage standards and provide opportunities for students to practice and authentically apply their learning. 

Materials include explicit instruction of the grade-level grammar and usage standards. Materials include authentic opportunities for students to demonstrate application of skills in context, including applying grammar and convention skills to writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Students have opportunities to print all upper- and lowercase letters. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 9, after students have finished writing, the teacher models the process for editing to ensure all upper and lower case letters are printed correctly. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, students use an editing checklist to edit for capitalization and complete sentences. 

  • Students have opportunities to use common, proper, and possessive nouns. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 6, the teacher explains possessive apostrophes. The teacher discusses an example paragraph with possessive nouns. Students complete sentence frames that start with possessive nouns. Students independently write a few sentences using possessive nouns. Guidance directs the teacher to reinforce this skill throughout the unit when students are writing. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, students write their own stories about the three little pigs, using common, proper and possessive nouns.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 4, the teacher explains that common and proper nouns can help the reader understand exactly what they saw in North America. Next, the teacher reviews what nouns are, noting that proper nouns are capitalized because they are names of a specific thing, person or place. The teacher displays a mentor paragraph. As a class, the students and the teacher chart different nouns and proper nouns used in the writing. The teacher models how to write the rest of the letter on the back of the postcard. 

  • Students have opportunities to use singular and plural nouns with matching verbs in basic sentences (e.g., He hops; We hop). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 30, the teacher explains that the noun and verb in a sentence need to match. The teacher discusses example sentences and students create their own sentences. Students add to their writing, ensuring that the nouns and verbs they use match. Students edit their previous writing for matching nouns and verbs. 

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, students write their own version of the Three Little Pigs. The teacher reviews that sentences must be complete with a subject and verb and that verbs tell us what something or someone does. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 25, the teacher demonstrates writing past, present, and future verb tenses and points out the patterns in the spellings. The teacher leads guided practice of changing verb tenses in sentences. Students practice changing previously written sentences to past tense. Students independently write six to nine sentences with different verb tenses using their research on Misty Copeland. 

  • Students have opportunities to use personal, possessive, and indefinite pronouns (e.g., I, me, my; they, them, their, anyone, everything). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 24, the teacher explains that pronouns are substitutes for nouns. The teacher displays a chart of commonly used pronouns. The teacher displays a mentor paragraph and asks the students questions to help students identify the pronouns in the paragraph. During the group practice, students practice using pronouns in sentences. Students then go back to their writing to look for places to use pronouns. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 6, the teacher defines possessive pronouns as words that take the place of a noun used to show belonging. The teacher lists possessive pronouns and discusses example sentences. Students complete sentence frames that start with possessive pronouns. Students independently write a few sentences about their families using possessive pronouns and add possessive pronouns to the previous day’s writing. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 25, students use personal possessive pronouns such as I, my, and they to write thank you letters to someone who has helped them to read or get books.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 5, the teacher explains pronouns take the place of a noun. The teacher models revising a sentence using a pronoun, and as a class, the students and the teacher write two more sentences with pronouns. Students write independently and the teacher circulates to see if they are using pronouns correctly.

  • In Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 10, students write an opinion essay in first person, to answer whether they would like to live in Ancient Egypt and why.

  • Students have opportunities to use verbs to convey a sense of past, present, and future (e.g., Yesterday I walked home; Today I walk home; Tomorrow I will walk home). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, the teacher explains that verbs are used to show action as well as time—past, present and future. The teacher provides students with examples of sentences and students identify verbs that are past, present and future tenses. Then the teacher gives students three verbs and students write the verbs in their past, present, and future tenses.

    • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 10, students write an action plan for helping their community get access to books. Students use the provided “I will…” sentence frame and support their actions using “who, what, where, when details.”

  • Students have opportunities to use frequently occurring adjectives. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lessons 5–7, students work with partners and use the adjectives  persistent, resourceful, or intelligent to describe the three little pigs. Students collect adjectives to describe the wolf. Then the class works together to collect adjectives that describe each pig.

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 11, the teacher explains that adjectives help readers better understand and visualize what is happening in the story. Students find adjectives used in the story and if needed, the teacher reviews simple adjectives.

    • In Literature Unit 5, lesson 11, students use the adjectives determined and eager to complete sentence strands. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 22, the teacher displays the Creature Feature Template and explains that students will describe what their creature looks like. The teacher displays three sentences and asks students if the sentences describe what the red-eyed tree frog looks like. The teacher explains that adjectives help readers visualize. As a class, the teacher and students brainstorm a list of adjectives that describe the red-eyed tree frog. The teacher then models adding adjectives from the brainstormed list to the original sentences that were displayed earlier. As a class, the teacher and students work together to add adjectives to a list of three new sentences. Next, students write three sentences using adjectives to describe the animal they picked. 

  • Students have opportunities to use frequently occurring conjunctions (e.g., and, but, or, so, because). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 5, student pairs work together to craft three sentences using because, but, or so to describe the three little pigs. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lessons 1–3, the Common Core Standards list includes L.1.6, but there is no evidence of the teacher or students doing work related to this standard. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 10, students independently write in response to the Target Task question. If needed, the teacher provides students with sentence frames to use when writing to ensure they use the conjunctions when, if, or so.

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 10, the teacher models writing sentences that include the conjunction because and discusses the reason for using the word. Students write independently as they respond to the Target Task, and the teacher circulates to ensure students use conjunctions to describe key details. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 10, the teacher models adding a conjunction to a sentence. Then the teacher provides examples of sentences with because, but, and so. Students  write independently while responding to the Target Task, and the teacher circulates to see if students include conjunctions in their writing. 

  • Students have opportunities to use determiners (e.g., articles, demonstratives). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 10, the teacher provides two phrases: “a new baby” and “the baby”. The teacher explains “a” is used when talking about any baby and “the” is used when talking about a specific baby. The teacher provides additional examples but students do not engage in guided practice. Students independently write in response to the Target Task, and the teacher and other students check to see if they are using articles correctly. 

  • Students have opportunities to use frequently occurring prepositions (e.g., during, beyond, toward). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, the teacher tells students to use prepositions when they describe where and when something happened. The teacher  displays the following list of prepositions that describes where—above, below, inside, over, under, between, near and by—and a list of prepositions that describes when—by, from, on, to, until, after, and during. Students use the lists of prepositions to expand provided sentences during guided practice and during their independent writing.

    • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 10, students use specific details that describe “who, what, when, where, why, or how.” The teacher encourages students to use the preposition lists from Unit 4 in their writing.

  • Students have opportunities to produce and expand complete simple and compound declarative, interrogative, imperative, and exclamatory sentences in response to prompts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 8, the teacher orally models how to determine sentence types by asking specific questions, “Does this tell us who? Does this tell us what they did? How can we make this a complete sentence?” During shared writing, partners turn fragments into complete sentences by using the questioning strategy. Students complete a few sentences orally, then finish the rest by writing. During independent writing, students turn three fragments into sentences. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 6, the teacher explains the four types of sentences, statements, questions, exclamations, and commands. The teacher provides examples and students decide the type of each. Students work with partners to create statements and exclamations. Students independently write about their families and have to include two exclamatory sentences. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 15, the teacher reviews statements, exclamations, and questions, and defines command sentences. The teacher provides examples of commands and displays a story exemplar using different types of sentences. Students name the types of sentences included. Students independently write when responding to the Target Task and must include at least one of each type of sentence in their response. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, when writing their own version of the Three Little Pigs, students expand sentences to help the reader understand what is happening by using more descriptive words and prepositions to provide “when” and “where” details.

  • In Literature Unit 5,  Lesson 10, when writing about ways to take action and get books into their community, students use imperative sentences to tell others what they will do to distribute books and where this will take place. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 10, the teacher explains the importance of writing in complete sentences. The teacher orally shares fragments and prompts students to explain who, or what or what the fragments do/who they are. Students work together to orally create complete sentences out of all of the fragments. In partners, students practice creating sentences out of more fragments orally or in writing. If done in writing, the teacher ensures students add a capital letter and period. The teacher models writing the Mastery Response, ensuring it is a complete sentence. As students independently write in response to the Target Task,  students write three to four sentences making sure they have included both parts of the sentence to make them complete. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 3, the teacher explains the four different types of sentences: declarative, imperative, interrogative, and exclamatory. During two practice sets, students orally distinguish between the four types, giving a strong reason for their answer. Next, the teacher and students work together as a class to craft a few of each sentence type. Then, sStudents work with a partner to write different types of sentences using guidance from the two practice sets. The teacher circulates as students work to ensure students are able to produce each of the four types of sentences with the correct punctuation. During independent writing, the students write in response to the Target Task questions: Write a question using the word “survive.” Write a statement using the word “prey.” Write an exclamation using the word “tail.” Write a command using the word “watch.”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 16, the teacher reviews the types of sentences using a piece of student writing as a model. Students write independently, responding to the prompt: You are on a walk with a friend and you see a LGBTQ+ flag on a neighbor's house. Your friend wonders what the flag means. Explain to your friend what the flag represents and why it is important.

  • In Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 7, students use the word because to expand their explanations of why each step in making a mummy was important. Students respond to the prompt: How were mummies made? Describe each step using details from both texts.

  • Students have opportunities to capitalize dates and names of people. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 6, after the class discusses why Hyena is a good friend, the teacher asks students, “How does the author use capitalization? Why?” The teacher guides students to notice that names of people and specific things are capitalized because they are proper nouns. During independent writing, the teacher circulates to ensure students are capitalizing proper nouns. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 5, after reading, students turn and talk about what they see in South America with a partner. The teacher reminds students to use specific nouns, such as the Andes Mountains instead of just mountains. The teacher models how to use specific names of places and explains that it is important to capitalize proper nouns. During independent writing, the teacher circulates to make sure students capitalize the names of all proper nouns. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 2, the teacher reviews that students need to capitalize proper nouns such as specific names and specific dates. The teacher circulates to ensure students are capitalizing proper nouns correctly. The Language Supports box includes additional practice sentences for capitalizing proper nouns. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 13, the teacher models writing dates with capital letters. Guidance states students need to write the date on their classwork every day for practice.

  • Students have opportunities to use end punctuation for sentences. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 22, students write an opinion paragraph, making sure to include a period at the end of their complete sentences. 

    • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 5, as students independently write in response to the Target Task, the teacher circulates to ensure they are using the correct punctuation for each of the four types of sentences. 

  • Students have opportunities to use commas in dates and to separate single words in a series. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 22, students write letters using commas as needed within the letter writing format—for dates, for greeting, within the body of the letter, and in the closing.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 4, the teacher models how to write a letter on the back of a postcard using the Mastery Response, making sure to point out that there is a comma after the greeting and a comma after the closing.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 22, the teacher displays a paragraph exemplar containing words in a series separated by commas. The class discusses where they notice commas and the purpose of the commas. Students create sentences using words in a series separated by commas. Students then independently write about their favorite musician from the unit but students do not have to include words in a series separated by commas in their writing. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 13, the teacher models writing dates with commas. Students write the date on their classwork. Guidance directs the teacher to have students write the date on their classwork every day for practice. 

  • In Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 7, the teacher provides students with a sequence chart as a guide for using the words first, next, then, and last and for using commas after sequence sentences. Students reference the chart when describing the steps used to create a mummy in their writing.

  • Students have opportunities to use conventional spelling for words with common spelling patterns and for frequently occurring irregular words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 9, after students finish writing, the teacher models the process for editing using the spelling patterns from prior learning and the word wall lists to spell irregular words correctly. The teacher displays a piece of writing that contains words with familiar spelling patterns that are misspelled. As a class, the teacher and students edit the writing together. The teacher reviews how to use the resources in the room to spell words correctly. Students finish editing their writing individually or with a partner, if needed. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, teachers model how to edit writing for spelling patterns, high frequency words, as well as any frequently misspelled words that students should check for in their final drafts.

  • Students have opportunities to spell untaught words phonetically, drawing on phonemic awareness and spelling conventions. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 8, students use phonetic understandings to write words. The teacher does not provide explicit instruction on spelling unknown words phonetically; however, the teacher models using previously learned spelling patterns to edit work.

Indicator 1M
01/02

Materials include a cohesive, year-long plan for students to interact with and build key academic vocabulary in and across texts.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria of Indicator 1m.

Instructional materials identify key vocabulary words and list them at the beginning of each unit and lesson throughout the year. Vocabulary words selected for each lesson include Tier I, II, and III words; however, there is no rationale as to how or why specific words were selected for the unit or lesson. The Teacher Tools section, provides content and strategies necessary to support vocabulary instruction but there is not a coherent and cohesive instructional plan within daily lessons or threaded across lessons and units. During lessons, the teacher decides how to introduce vocabulary words and how students will engage with the words. Resources for vocabulary are primarily text-based, with few opportunities for students to interact with the words while speaking, listening, and writing. The assessment of student grade level acquisition of vocabulary is not consistent, often reflects a few words, and does not align with the requirements of grade-level standards.

Materials provide teacher guidance outlining a cohesive year-long vocabulary development component. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Instructional components for vocabulary are found in the Teacher Tool Section. Vocabulary words address text-dependent Tier I, II, and III words used in lessons. 

The teacher can download a vocabulary package for each unit that contains a handout with all the vocabulary words, a space to label the part of speech, a space to draw a picture of the word, and a space to write a definition of the word. The vocabulary package also includes word cards that contain the word, definition, part of speech, and a picture. Within each unit, a list of vocabulary words is located at the top of the lesson map. When the teacher accesses lesson plans, the vocabulary list along with definitions is visible. Additional vocabulary support within lessons includes word banks, sentence frames, word maps, games, and a visual glossary. Teacher Tools guidance suggests vocabulary instruction occurs daily for ten minutes or less using a routine that becomes familiar to students; however, the structure for these opportunities is rarely included in daily lessons. The end-of-unit vocabulary assessment provides student choice in determining which two words from the unit list to illustrate and define. Few vocabulary words are used across multiple units and lessons.

Vocabulary is sometimes repeated in contexts (before texts, in texts) and across multiple texts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 5, when reading The Sandwich Swap by Queen Rania Al Abdullah and Kelly DiPucchio, the word ashamed is introduced. The lesson specifies “use the protocol” to teach ashamed but does not specify what the protocol is. The word is not included in questions nor does it repeat in other lessons, but it does appear in one sample response and it is included in the assessment. Of the 19 vocabulary words in the unit, half of the words repeat in multiple lessons and three appear on the unit assessment. The unit assessment also includes three vocabulary words that are not included on the unit list. For example, the word frustrated is on the assessment but is not a unit vocabulary word.

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 1, clever from Unit 1 and wise from Unit 2 is used in addition to the new word outsmart

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 1, while reading The Three Little Pigs by Paul Galdone, the language support section suggests reviewing the meaning of the word clever from Unit 1, and wise from Unit 2,  if needed.  The definitions are provided and the teacher asks students: Why is the third little pig clever? Is the third little pig wise?  Why or why not?  In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 10, the materials tell the teacher to teach the vocabulary word clever when reading Big Al by Andrew Clements, however, there are no details explaining how to teach it.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 17, the word disability is not a vocabulary term for the unit; rather the teacher teaches the term by telling students that “disability is a physical, mental, or emotional condition that limits how a person can move or sense the world or do daily activities. Some disabilities are obvious, like needing a wheelchair or a guide dog. Other disabilities, like hearing loss or anxiety, are not as visible.” Materials do not provide opportunities for students to understand and use the word disability

Attention is paid to vocabulary essential to understanding the text and to high-value academic words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 3, two vocabulary words are glare and adopt. Understanding these words is necessary to help students make sense of the text In Our Mother’s House by Patricia Polacco. The teacher can choose to download the vocabulary package. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 7, after reading six different versions of The Three Little Pigs, the teacher introduces and defines the word moral as the lesson of a story.  Students are asked to determine the moral of the Three Little Pigs and explain how the moral can be used in their own life.  

  • In Science and Social Studies, Unit 1, Lesson 3, when reading Explore North America by Bobbie Kalman, key questions discussed include: What is a rural area?  What is life like in a rural area?  Vocabulary words urban and rural are introduced in this lesson and are essential to understanding the text.  

  • In Science and Social Studies, Unit 5, Lesson 1, when reading Mummies and Pyramids: A Nonfiction Companion to the Magic Tree House #3: Mummies in the Mountain by Mary Pope Osborne, the teacher introduces the vocabulary word civilization.  The discussion and writing prompt for the lesson is Why did the Egyptian civilization start near the Nile River?  A Key Question for the unit is How did King Menes start the Egyptian civilization?  Understanding of the word civilization is essential for completing the tasks of this lesson.

Overview of Gateway 2

Building Knowledge with Texts, Vocabulary, and Tasks

Materials are organized around themes and topics. Units focus on literature or science and social studies content. Some units focus on themes, such as being a good friend and a good person in a community, rather than building knowledge and the ability to read/listen to and comprehend texts. Materials provide opportunities to analyze sequences of questions and tasks within and across multiple literary and informational texts, and the questions are sequenced in ways that prepare students with background knowledge in order to deepen content knowledge, draw conclusions, and support their opinions. Text-based questions and tasks integrate knowledge and ideas over the course of the year using single and multiple texts. Students use information from read-alouds, class discussions, and illustrations to answer questions and complete tasks. Sequential questions and tasks support the growth of ideas and knowledge and prepare students for the completion of the culminating task that integrate reading, writing, speaking, and listening skills. Units contain coherently sequenced questions and tasks that lead to the culminating tasks. Over the course of the year, students learn how to use a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing to compose explanatory and opinion writing. Writing tasks build in complexity over the school year from simple sentence responses to multiple sentences used to support an opinion, inform or explain an event or topic. Research tasks are embedded within each unit and include a progression of skills, building to mastery of grade level standards. Instruction, tasks, and assessment questions are aligned to grade-level standards. Materials employ teacher modeling during instruction, and students often respond to and complete standards-aligned questions and task. The materials provide ample questions for teachers to ask students and students to answer. Many standards are repeated throughout multiple units across the year. Assessments leverage knowledge from the unit. Instructional materials provide 123 days of Literature lesson plans and 131 days of Science and Social Studies lesson plans. The sample schedule requires up to three hours daily to implement all the recommended components. Lessons are structured as suggested frameworks to support the core and supporting English Language Arts standards selected by the curriculum authors.

Materials do not include a foundational skills component. 

Criterion 2.1: Building Knowledge

22/24

Materials build knowledge through integrated reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language.

Materials are organized around themes and topics. Units focus on literature or science and social studies content. Some units focus on themes, such as being a good friend and a good person in a community, rather than building knowledge and the ability to read/listen to and comprehend texts. Units organized around a topic provide multiple texts connected to the topic and allow a variety of opportunities for students to engage through repeated lessons, class discussions, writing prompts, word cards, and the final assessment. Materials provide opportunities to analyze sequences of questions and tasks within and across multiple literary and informational texts, and the questions are sequenced in ways that prepare students with background knowledge in order to deepen content knowledge, draw conclusions, and support their opinions. Materials support students’ development of the analysis of knowledge and ideas. Text-based questions and tasks integrate knowledge and ideas over the course of the year using single and multiple texts. Students use information from read-alouds, class discussions, and illustrations to answer questions and complete tasks. Sequential questions and tasks support the growth of ideas and knowledge and prepare students for the completion of the culminating task that integrate reading, writing, speaking, and listening skills. Most tasks allow students to demonstrate acquired knowledge of the unit topic. Each unit has at least one culminating task involving drawing and writing. Units contain coherently sequenced questions and tasks that lead to the culminating tasks. Over the course of the year, students learn how to use a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing to compose explanatory and opinion writing. Writing tasks build in complexity over the school year from simple sentence responses to multiple sentences used to support an opinion, inform or explain an event or topic. Research tasks are embedded within each unit and include a progression of skills, building to mastery of grade level standards. Students are encouraged to use specific examples in research projects. Shared research projects are included to help develop students’ research skills. Materials support teachers in employing projects that develop students’ knowledge on a topic.

Indicator 2A
02/04

Texts are organized around a cohesive topic(s) to build students’ ability to read and comprehend complex texts independently and proficiently.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria of Indicator 2a.

Materials are organized around themes and topics. Units focus on literature or science and social studies content. Some units focus on themes, such as being a good friend and a good person in a community, rather than building knowledge and the ability to read/listen to and comprehend texts. Units organized around a topic provide multiple texts connected to the topic and allow a variety of opportunities for students to engage through repeated lessons, class discussions, writing prompts, word cards, and the final assessment. According to the authors, the purpose of the curriculum is to build knowledge of the world and achieve grade level language arts and speaking and listening standards. 

Some texts are connected by a grade-appropriate cohesive topic/line of inquiry. Some texts build knowledge and the ability to read/listen and comprehend complex texts across a school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 3, texts are organized around the topic of “Love Makes a Family.” The materials state, “Students learn that families come in all different shapes and sizes, and that no matter what a family looks like, all families love and care for one another, by reading fiction books on various types of families.”

    • Throughout the unit, students read/listen to various texts read aloud that relate to the topic. Texts include: Stella Brings the Family by Miriam B. Schiffer (Lesson 1); Marisol MacDonald Doesn’t Match by Monica Brown (Lesson 2); In Our Mother’s House by Patricia Polacco (Lessons 3–4); Fry Bread: A Native American Family Story by Kevin Noble Maillard (Lesson 5); Pecan Pie Baby by Jacqueline Woodson (Lesson 7); When Aiden Became a Brother by Kyle Lukoff (Lesson 8); First Laugh—Welcome Baby! by Rose Ann Tahe & Nancy Bo Flood (Lesson 9); Sulwe by Lupita Nyong’o (Lesson 11); The Proudest Blue: A Story of Hijab and Family by Ibtijah Muhammad and S.K. Ali (Lesson 12); Big Red Lollipop by Rukhsana Khan (Lesson 13); My Brother Charlie by Holly Robinson Peete and Ryan Elizabeth Peete (Lesson 14); A Tale of Two Seders by Mindy Avra Portnoy (Lesson 16); Visiting Day by Jacqueline Woodson (Lesson 17); Grandmother’s Visit by Betty Quan (Lesson 18); I Love Saturdays y domingos by Alma Flor Ada (Lesson 20); Last Stop on Market Street by Matt De La Pena (Lesson 21); Freedom Soup by Tami Charles (Lesson 22); Nana Akua Goes to School by Tricia Elam Walker (Lesson 23); Jingle Dancer by Cynthia Leitcih Smith and Ying-Hwa Hu (Lesson 24); Grandfather Counts by Deobrah J. Short (Lesson 25); Mango, Abuela, and Me by Meg Medina (Lesson 26); Dear Juno by Soyung Pak (Lesson 27); Ojiichan’s Gift by Chieri Uegaki (Lesson 28).

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Essential Questions: “What is a family? What makes some families different from others? How does having different kinds of families make the world and our classroom community a richer place?”

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Content Knowledge and Connections:  

      • “All families are different, but no matter what, families show love.

      • Families might not always be around, but that does not mean they do not love each other.

      • Parents and other family members support and help dreams come true.

      • Having siblings can create a wide range of emotions.

      • Extended family are an important part of a family.

      • Families like to spend time together.  Different families have different rituals and traditions that they do together.

      • Families communicate with each other in many different ways.”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, texts are organized around the topic of “Amazing Animals.”  The materials state “ In this unit, students begin their exploration of animals and animal adaptations by reading a collection of nonfiction texts.”

    • Throughout the unit, students read/listen to various texts read aloud that relate to the topic. Texts include: What Do You Do With a Tail Like This? by Steve Jenkins (Lessons 1–2); What Color is Camouflage by Carolyn B. Otto (Lesson 4); Living Color by Steve Jenkins (Lessons 5–7); Red-Eyed Tree Frog by Joy Cowley (Lessons 8–9); What Do You Do When Something Wants to Eat You? by Steve Jenkins (Lesson 10); Sisters and Brothers: Sibling Relationships in the Animal World by Steve Jenkins and Robin Page (Lessons 12–14); LIzards by Laura Marsh (Lessons 16–17); Frogs by Elizabeth Carney (Lessons 18–19).

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Essential Questions: “How do animals use their body parts to survive? What behaviors do parents, siblings, and babies engage in to help each other survive?  In what ways are individual animals of the same kind similar?  In what ways can they differ?”

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Content Knowledge and Connections:  

      • “Different animals use their body parts in different ways to see, hear, grasp objects, protect themselves, and move from place to place,and find and take in food, water, and air.

      • Adult animals can have young, and the parents engage in behaviors that help the offspring survive.

      • Animals have body parts that capture and convey different kinds of information needed for growth and survival.

      • Different animals respond to different behaviors to help them survive.

      • Individuals of the same kind of animal are recognizable as similar but also vary in many ways.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, texts are organized around the topic of “Movements for Equality.”  The materials state, “ Students learn about the concepts of fairness and justice and people who wanted to overcome justice, while developing informational reading strategies for reading narrative nonfiction texts.”

    • Throughout the unit, students read/listen to various texts read aloud that relate to the topic. Texts include: Elizabeth Leads the Way: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Right to Vote by Tanya Lee Stone (Lesson 1); She Was the First! The Trailblazing Life of Shirley Chisholm by Katheryn Russell-Brown (Lesson 2); Kamala Harris: Rooted in Justice by Nikki Grimes (Lessons 3–4); Someday is Now: Clara Luper and the 1958 Oklahoma City Sit-Ins by Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich (Lessons 6–7); Sit-In: How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down by Andrea Davis Pinkney (Lesson 8); Let the Children March by Monica Clark-Robinson (Lesson 9); Brave Girl: Clara and the Shirtwaist Makers’ Strike by 1909 by Michelle Markel (Lesson 11); !Si, Se Puede!/Yes, We Can!: Janitor Strike in L.A. by Diana Cohn (Lesson 12); Stonewall: A Building, An Uprising, A Revolution by Rob Sanders (Lesson 14); Pride: The Story of Harvey Milk and the Rainbow Flag by Rob Sanders (Lesson 15); All the Way to the Top: How One Girl’s Fight for Americans with Disabilities Changed Everything by Annette Bay Pimentel (Lesson 17); A Boy and a Jaguar by Alan Rabinowitz (Lesson 18); Emmanuel’s Dream: The True Story of Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah by Laurie Ann Thompson (Lesson 19); The Water Walker by Joanne Robertson (Lesson 21); We are Water Protectors by Carole Lindstrom (Lesson 22); Young Water Protesters: A Story About Standing Rock by Asian Tudor, Kelly Tudor, and Jason Eaglespeaker (Lesson 23). 

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Essential Questions: “Why are movements for equal rights important?  How have people who are not in positions of power led the fight for equity and justice? What can we learn from them?”

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Content Knowledge and Connections:  

      • *The fight for women’s rights focuses on ensuring that women have the same legal rights, opportunities, and personal freedom as men.

      • The civil rights movement was a time in our country when people came together to fight racial discrimination.  People were fighting against laws that said that segregation was legal, meaning that Black and white people were not allowed in the same public places.

      • The fight for fair labor and workers’ rights focuses on protecting the common interests of workers.  This means making sure that workers have fair wages, reasonable hours, and safe working conditions.

      • The LGBTQ+ movement advocates equal rights for LGBTQ+ people.

      • The disability rights movement focuses on making sure that people with disabilities are able to participate in everyday life.

      • Water is a sacred part of Indigenous communities, but it is at risk.  Water Protectors work to keep water safe and clean and to teach others about why it is important to protect water.”

Some texts are connected by a theme, as opposed to building knowledge on a topic. Examples include:

  • In Literature Unit 1, texts are organized around the theme of “Being a Good Friend.” The materials state, “ Students read texts focused on what it means to be a good friend, and examine key details about characters through discussion and writing, helping to facilitate building friendships in the classroom.” Additionally, “This unit will also serve as a launch unit of the year long theme, what it means to be a good person within the community.  Over the course of the year, students will deepen their understanding of what it means to be a good person and grow up in different communities, part of which involves being a good friend.”

    • Throughout the unit, students read/ listen to various texts read aloud that relate to the topic. Texts include: The Day You Begin by Jacqueline Woodson (Lesson 1); Stand Tall, Mary Lou Melon by Patty Lovell (Lesson 2): Ruby the Copycat by Peggy Rathmann (Lesson 3); The Invisible Boy by Trudy Ludwig (Lesson 4); The Sandwich Swap by Queen Rania Al Abdullah and Kelly DiPucchio (Lesson 5); The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi (Lessons 6–7); Jamaica and Brianna by Juanita Havill (Lesson 8); Enemy Pie by Derek Munson (Lesson 9); Big Al by Andrew Clements (Lesson 10); Matthew and Tilly by Rebecca C. Jones (Lesson 11); Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson (Lessons 12–13).

    • The Unit Prep section includes the Essential Question, “What does it mean to be a good friend?”

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Content Knowledge and Connections:  

      • “Being a good friend means:

        • You tell the truth and do not lie to your friends. 

        • You do and say kind things to each other.

        • You are proud of each other’s differences and do not make fun of one another.

        • You do not copy each other.

        • You include others.

        • You do not judge people.  You ask questions to learn more.

        • You do not judge based on looks, clothes, or skin color. 

        • You get to know people before you decide they will not be your friend.

        • You are not jealous of each other.

        • You work together to solve conflicts.”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, texts are organized around the theme of “Inspiring Artists and Musicians.” The materials state, “In this inspirational biography unit, students read and learn about a diverse assortment of artists, musicians, and dancers, while focusing on identifying evidence from texts and illustrations.”

    • Throughout the unit, students read/ listen to various texts read aloud that relate to the theme. Texts include: A Splash of Red: The Life and Art of Horace Pippin by Jen Bryant (Lessons 2–3); Action Jackson by Jan Greenberg and Sandra Jordan (Lesson 4); Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras by Duncan Tonatiuh (Lessons 5–6); Diego Rivera: His World and Ours by Duncan Tonatiuh (Lesson 7); Frida Kahlo and her Animalitos by Monica Brown (Lesson 8);  Radiant Child: The Story of Young Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat by Javaka Steptoe (Lesson 9); Duke Ellington: The Piano Prince and His Orchestra by Andrea Davis Pinkey (Lesson 12); When Marian Sang: The True Recital of Marian Anderson by Pam Munoz Ryan (Lessons 13–14); Piano Starts Here: The Young Art Tatum by Robert Andrew Parker (Lesson 15); Rock & Roll Highway: The Robbie Robertson Story by Sebastian Robertson (Lessons 16–17); When Angels Sing: The Story of Rock Legend Carlos Santana by Michael Mahin (Lessons 18–19); When the Beat Was Born: DJ Kool Herc and the Creation of Hip Hop by Laban Carrick Hill (Lesson 20); Trombone Shorty by Troy Andrews (Lesson 21); Misty Copeland (You Should Meet Series) by Laurie Calkhoven (Lesson 25); Firebird by Misty Copeland (Lesson 25); Misty Copeland: Ballet Star by Sarah Howden (Lesson 25); Bunheads by Misty Copeland (Lesson 25).

    • The Unit Prep section includes the Essential Question which refers to the theme: “How do people get access to books?  What barriers have people faced when trying to learn to read?  How do they overcome them?”

    • The Unit Prep section includes the following Content Knowledge and Connections:

      • “A biography is a text written about someone’s life.

      • There are many inspiration painters, each with their own style and technique.

        • Horace Pippin was a self-taught African-American painter who painted about pivotal experiences in his life.

        • Jackson Pollock was an influential American painter known for his abstract “drop” paintings.

        • Diego Rivera was a Mexican painter known for his murals.

        • Frida Kahlo was a Mexican painter known for her folk art and paintings that represented her dreams.

        • Jose Guadalupe Posada was a Mexican printmaker known for his calaveras, or skeletons.

      • There are many inspiration musicians, each with their own sound and genre.

        • Duke Ellington was an American composer, pianist, and bandleader of jazz orchestras.

        • Marian Anderson was an African-American contralto and one of the most celebrated singers of the twentieth century.

        • DJ Kool (John Bowman) is an American DJ and rapper who produced several popular rap singles.

        • Art Tatum was an American jazz pianist. He was visually impaired from childhood, but he did not let that hold him back from showing his talent as a pianist.

        • Robbie Robertson is a Canadian musician who was part of the rock and roll band The Band and also produced many solo albums that highlighted his indigenous roots.

        • Carlos Santana is a Mexican and American guitarist whose music combines rock, jazz, blues, and Afro-Cuban rhythms with Latin sound.

        • Trombone Shorty is a well-known jazz trombone player from New Orleans.

      • Authors are often recognized for their outstanding writing or illustrations. Some awards that authors can receive include the following:

        • The Pura Belpré Award is given to a Latino/Latina writer and illustrator whose work best portrays, affirms, and celebrates the Latino cultural experience.

        • The Caldecott Medal is given to the artist of the most distinguished illustrations.

        • The Newbery Medal is given to the author of the most distinguished children’s book of the year.

        • The Coretta Scott King Book Award is given as a way to recognize outstanding books for young adults and children by African-American authors and illustrators that reflect the African-American experience.

        • The Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Medal is presented for most distinguished informational book.”

Indicator 2B
04/04

Materials require students to analyze the key ideas, details, craft, and structure within individual texts as well as across multiple texts using coherently sequenced, high-quality questions and tasks.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 2b.

Materials provide opportunities to analyze sequences of questions and tasks within and across multiple literary and informational texts. Questions are sequenced in ways that prepare students with background knowledge in order to deepen content knowledge, draw conclusions, and support their opinions. With prompting and support, questions require students to recall information, compare and contrast, retell story events, identify key details, formulate opinions, and make inferences. 

For most texts (read-aloud texts K–1 and anchor texts Grade 2), students analyze key ideas and details (according to grade-level standards). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 13, students answer questions about key details in the text, Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson, during a class read-aloud. Students examine a few sentences from the text and identify the lesson the main characters, Chloe and Maya, learn. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 2, students recall key details to understand all the events that led Marisol to feel she did not match while listening to the text, Marisol McDonald Doesn’t Match by Monica Brown. Afterward, students write a letter explaining what they learned about Marisol.

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 4, students listen to the read-aloud, The Three Ninja Pigs by Corey Rosen Schwartz. Students identify the central lesson that Pig One and Pig Two learn and use the words impatient and persistent in their answers. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, students listen to the Red-Eyed Tree Frog by Joy Cowley. Students use the text and illustrations to describe how a red-eyed tree frog gets its food. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 2, after listening to She Was the First! The Trailblazing Life of Shirley Chisholm by Katheryn Russell-Brown, students analyze and explain why Shirley Chisholm was a trailblazer using key details from the text. 

For most texts, students analyze craft and structure (according to grade-level standards). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 19, students listen to Martina the Beautiful Cockroach: A Cuban Folktale by Carmen Agra Deedy and respond to the question, “Martina reached for the coffee with a ‘heavy heart.’ What does that mean?” 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 7, using the text Pecan Pie Baby by Jacqueline Woodson, students pay attention to words that help identify feelings as they analyze the points of view of Gia and her mother towards the arrival of a new baby.

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 8, while listening to Six Dots: A Story of Young Louis Braille by Jen Bryant, students respond to the question, “Why does the author use the words ‘dark and dangerous’ to describe Louis’ new life?” 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 11, after listening to the book, Explore Asia by Bobbie Kalmanstudents, students describe what text features the author included to help the reader better understand what they would see in the desert. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 14, students listen to Sisters and Brothers: Sibling Relationships in the Animal World by Steve Jenkins and Robin Page and respond to the question, “Why does the author use the caption ‘I’m having my family for dinner…’ to describe black widow spiders?”

In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 6, students learn about the word activist as they listen to Someday is Now: Clara Luper and the 1958 Oklahoma City Sit-ins by Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich. Students respond to the following question, “Based on what we read today, in what ways is Clara an activist? What social change is she working for?”

Indicator 2C
04/04

Materials require students to analyze the integration of knowledge and ideas within individual texts as well as across multiple texts using coherently sequenced, high-quality text-specific and/or text-dependent questions and tasks.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 2c.

Materials support students’ development of the analysis of knowledge and ideas. Text-based questions and tasks integrate knowledge and ideas over the course of the year using single and multiple texts. Students use information from read-alouds, class discussions, and illustrations to answer questions and complete tasks. Sequential questions and tasks support the growth of ideas and knowledge and prepare students for the completion of the culminating task. 

Most sets of questions and tasks support students’ analysis of knowledge and ideas. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 18, students listen to Why the Sky is Far Away: A Nigerian Folktale by Mary-Joan Gerson. Students answer the question, “What was life like at the time when the sky was very close to the earth?” The teacher prompts students to describe what they see in the illustration on pages 4–5 to answer the question. Teacher guidance states, “Push students to understand that this illustration shows how happy people are. They have tons of time to do the things they want to do.” 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 2, students listen to The Good Little Book by Kyo Maclear. Students use the text and illustrations to describe how the book brought joy to the boy’s life while responding to questions such as, “How does the boy feel when he is reading the Good Little Book? How do you know?”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 2, students finish the read-aloud, Explore North America by Bobbie Kalman. When responding to the Target Task, students use details from the text to write about two examples of different ecosystems in North America. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 7, students listen to Living Color by Steve Jenkins. Students draw upon details from the text to describe how different animals use their colors to survive. Questions include; “How do the monarch butterfly and the viceroy butterfly use their colors to survive? How does the deep-sea dragonfish use its color to survive? Pick two animals that are pink. Describe how they use their color to survive.” 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 21, students listen to The Water Walker by Joanne Robertson. Afterwards, students explain what message Nokomis and the Mother Earth Walkers were trying to spread and what we can learn from them using details from the text.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 15, after studying various pictures of Egyptian art, students discuss what they can learn about Ancient Egypt by studying pieces of art: “Look closely at the piece of art. Record anything that you notice. Record anything you wonder. Share with your team.” Students write about “one or two things that they learned from analyzing the art.”

Most sets of questions and tasks provide opportunities to analyze across multiple texts as well as within single texts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lessons 2–5, students read four different stories about Anansi the Spider by Eric A. Kimmel and answer questions about various characters, the characters’ actions, and the characters’ traits. Examples include “Why does Hippo change his mind about the melon?”; “Describe Little Bush Deer. How does she trick Anansi?”; “How do the neighbors feel about Anansi and his magic stick? Give two specific examples.”; and “Why does Anansi want to do the cooking? Is Anansi changing?”

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lessons 11–18, students read six stories about people who faced challenges learning to read. Examples of questions include “What clues does the author give that the children are determined to get to school?”; “What does Booker want more than anything else? What is stopping him from getting what he wants?”; “What evidence does the author include to show that Virgie is determined to go to school?”; and “What barriers have people faced when trying to learn to read? How do they overcome them? Give specific examples from the books you’ve read.”  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 20, students read Explore North America and Explore Antarctica by Bobbie Kalman and answer the Target Task question: “Your friend tells you that Antarctica and North America are very similar. Do you agree or disagree? Support your answer with two to three specific details.”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 9, students read National Geographic Readers: Pyramids by Laura Marsh. During their partner reading, students jot down facts that are new or different from those they already learned about Egypt and pyramids. Afterwards, the teacher leads students in a discussion comparing this text to Mummies and Pyramids: A Nonfiction Companion to Magic Tree House #3: Mummies in the Morning by Mary Pope Osborne. Discussion questions include: “Which text gave you more information? What text features did each author use? Why? Which text did you like better? Why?”

Indicator 2D
04/04

Culminating tasks require students to demonstrate their knowledge of a unit’s topic(s) through integrated literacy skills (e.g., a combination of reading, writing, speaking, listening).

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 2d.

Materials provide several culminating tasks that integrate reading, writing, speaking, and listening skills and allow students to demonstrate acquired knowledge of the unit topic. Units contain coherently sequenced questions and tasks that lead to the culminating tasks. Students gain knowledge from the unit to create artifacts of their learning, such as detailed illustrations, posters, opinion writing, and acting out different story versions. Teachers monitor student learning throughout the year using Writing Rubrics. The culminating tasks are used as formative assessments before the Unit Summative Assessment. 

Culminating tasks are evident and varied across the year and they are multifaceted, requiring students to demonstrate mastery of several different standards (reading, writing, speaking, listening) at the appropriate grade level, and comprehension and knowledge of a topic or topics through integrated skills (reading, writing, speaking, listening). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 14, students write their opinion about what makes a good friend using the texts from the unit. Students discuss two to three characteristics of a good friend using specific examples from the unit texts and engage in Shared Writing with the whole class. Afterward, students write their own text with detailed illustrations. 

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 22, after listening to Doña Flor: A Tall Tale About a Giant Woman with a Great Big Heart by Pat Mora, students orally retell to partners the events of the story and explain what they know about  Doña Flor. Next, the class discusses the story and what lesson the author is trying to teach. Students independently write about the lesson the author is trying to teach and how they can use the lesson in their own lives. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 18, after listening to six books about overcoming barriers, the teacher models a Think Aloud about barriers people in the books faced when learning to read and how they overcame the barriers. Students brainstorm and discuss additional barriers the characters faced using specific examples from the unit texts. Students independently write about one character, the barrier the character faced, and how the character moved through the barrier. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 11, after listening to four texts about camouflaging, students review all Anchor Charts and writing they have done and brainstorm whether they believe camouflage is the most effective way for animals to survive using reasons to support their opinion. Students independently write their opinions and reasons to support their opinions.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 20, students create a poster to educate the school community about the disability rights movement using specific facts learned from the texts in the unit. Students brainstorm with a partner and review facts about the disability movement as a class. Students use the Single Paragraph outline to create key ideas to include in their posters. Students create their own poster with two to three facts about the disability rights movement and share them with the class. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, after reading two texts about Ancient Egypt, students participate in a class discussion about the steps needed to make a mummy. Students use both texts to fill out a graphic organizer about each stage of making a mummy and explain the stages to a partner. Students write about one or two stages independently.

Indicator 2E
04/04

Materials include a cohesive, year-long plan for students to achieve grade-level writing proficiency by the end of the school year.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 2e.

Over the course of the year, students have eight narrative projects, instruction that focuses on opinion writing, with a combination of longer tasks and shorter writing assignments, and instruction that focus on informational writing, with a combination of longer and shorter tasks. The writing focus areas build over the course of the year as students learn different components of the standard and build proficiency in the genre. Instructional materials are aligned to research-based writing strategies, as noted in the Writing Teacher Tool and the enhanced Lesson Plans ensure that students receive explicit and sequenced instruction to aid in developing grade-level writing techniques.

Materials include writing instruction aligned to the standards for the grade level and supports students’ growth in writing skills over the course of the school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • Materials include 17 lessons on opinion writing, nine lessons on informative writing, and five lessons on narrative writing.  

  • In Literature Unit 2, students write their own Anansi narrative with a focus on organization. Additionally, students write an opinion statement with two to three reasons to support their opinion. The focus of the unit is on producing complete sentences, writing a narrative with a beginning, middle, and end and including details about what happened with each event.  

  • In Literature Unit 4, students work on narrative writing by writing their own version of The Three Little Pigs.  The focus of the unit is on writing complete sentences, including details that describe “who”, “what,” “where,” “when,”, and “why.” Students also work on writing narrative with a beginning, middle, and end and including details about wha happened with each event and using temporal words to signal event order.  

  • In Literature Unit 5, students write opinion pieces to “build a deeper understanding of unit content and texts.”  The focus of the unit is on stating an opinion, including two to three reasons to support the opinion and providing some sense of closure.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, the focus of writing instruction is on writing complete sentences, different types of sentences and using question words when writing questions.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, students begin to work on writing paragraphs,  The focus of instruction is on writing simplel and complex sentences and writing a single paragraph.  

Instructional materials include some well-designed lesson plans, models, and protocols for teachers to implement and monitor students’ writing development. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 24, teacher guidance includes the Objective, Target Task, and Sample Response. The teacher brainstorms with students, models Shared Writing, and students write independently Independent using sentence frames, Sentence-Level Feedback and Support (K–5th Grade), and Paragraph-Level Feedback and Support (K–5th Grade) to monitor progress. Day Two there is Group Practice, and Independent Practice using a pronoun chart, Editing Checklist (K–2), and the Grade 1 Writing Opinion Rubric for support and progress monitoring. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 6, teacher supports include the Brainstorm template, Editing Checklist (K–2), Narrative Writing Brainstorming Template (1st grade), Grade 1 Writing Rubrics (Narrative, Opinion, and Informational), Sentence-Level Feedback and Support, and the Narrative Writing Feedback and Support (K–5th Grade). 

  • In Literature Unit 5, lesson plans include Building Background Knowledge, Shared Writing, Independent Writing. Teachers have access to Sentence-Level Feedback and Support (K-5th grade) and the Grade 1 Writing Rubric (Narrative, Opinion, and Informational) to provide feedback and analyze student work. Students use the Editing Checklist (K–2). 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 10, the Objective, Target Task, and Sample Response guide the teacher when introducing tasks. The teacher models Shared Writing, and students write independently. Supports include Sentence-Level Feedback and Support (K–5th Grade) for progress monitoring. Editing Checklist (K–2) and the Grade 1 Writing Informational Rubric.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, lesson plans include an Opening, Shared Writing, Model Writing, and Independent Writing. Students use supports such as the Single Paragraph Outline, and the Editing Checklist (K–2). The teacher has access to materials, such as Paragraph-Level Feedback and Support (K-5th Grade) and Sentence-Level Feedback and Support (K-5th Grade), to monitor student progress and support student learning.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 17, Day One of the lesson includes the following components: Objective, Target Task, Sample Response, Group Brainstorming, Teacher Write Aloud, and Independent Practice. Day One content also includes a list of topics for students to write about. Day Two of the lesson includes the following components: Teaching Point, Teacher Write Aloud, Independent Writing, and a writing model. Supports for teacher use to monitor students’ writing and provide feedback include the Sentence-Level Feedback and Support (K–5th Grade), and the Paragraph-Level Feedback and Support (K–5th Grade). Day Three of the lesson includes the following components: Teaching Point, Review, Group Write Aloud, and Independent Writing. Materials also include a list of text features to discuss and the Informational Writing Feedback and Support (K–5th Grade) for teacher use when monitoring student work and providing feedback. Day Four of the lesson includes the Teaching Point and guidance on editing. Provided resources include the Editing Checklist (K–2) and the Grade 1 Writing Rubric(Informational) for progress monitoring and support. 

Indicator 2F
04/04

Materials include a progression of research skills that guide shared research and writing projects to develop students’ knowledge using multiple texts and source materials.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 2f.

Research tasks are embedded within each unit and include a progression of skills, building to mastery of grade level standards.  Students are encouraged to use specific examples in research projects.  Shared research projects are included to help develop students’ research skills. Materials support teachers in employing projects that develop students’ knowledge on a topic.

Research projects are sequenced across a school year to include a progression of research skills that build to mastery of the grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 10, after learning about different ways people get books, the teacher prepares students to write about their ideas for getting books to people in their community.  Students turn and talk about different ways they read about to get books to people and create a class list. The teacher models selecting one idea and writing about the idea by first explaining that students need to be clear when writing so readers can picture what they are reading.  The teacher models this by adding specific details that describe “who,” “what,” “where,” “when,” “how,” or “why.” Students begin writing about what they would do to get books to people in their community.  

  • In Science and Social Studies, Unit 1, Lesson 7, after reading Explore South America by Bobbie Kalman, the teacher models creating a postcard describing what you saw and where you went if you visited South America.  

  • In Science and Social Studies, Unit 3, Lesson 22, after reading Duke Ellington: The Piano Prince and His Orchestra by Andrea Davis Pinkey, When Marian Sang: The True Recital by Marian Anderson by Pam Munoz Ryan, Piano Starts Here by, Rock & Roll Highway by, When Angels Sing: The Story of Rock Legend Carlos Santana by Michael Mahin, When the Beat Was Born: DJ Kool Herc and the Creation of Hip Hop by Laban Carrick Hill, and Trombone Shorty by Troy Andrews, the teacher models writing about which musician is their favorite and why. The teacher reviews how to use specific reasons to get others to agree with your opinion.  

  • In Science and Social Studies, Unit 5, Lesson 17, the teacher models brainstorming a single paragraph outline about the Nile River by thinking aloud to decide which details to include. Students then decide what details to include about their topic by rereading and looking over charts from the lessons. Students then write their topic sentence.  

Materials support teachers in employing projects that develop students’ knowledge on a topic. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 22, additional supports are suggested including assigning specific students to research and having multiple students research the same animal. Opportunities for enrichment include having students research their animals on the Internet and suggest National Geographic Kids as a good source for students to use to “find information about a wide range of animals.” Materials provide a “Creature Feature Template” graphic organizer to help students describe what their creature will look like. Potential brainstorm topics, and model sentences using adjectives are included. The materials suggest providing students with sentence frames or having students write adjectives in different colors, if needed. For students struggling to write complete sentences, materials include a Sentence Level Feedback and Support document to help the teacher provide students with feedback. Progress monitoring supports include an Informational Writing Feedback and Support guidance document, an editing checklist, and a Grade 1 Writing Rubrics.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 17, additional support suggestions include grouping students who may struggle more with writing together, having them write about the same topic, or allowing students to create their brainstorm together or work with students in a small group. Additional suggestions include providing students with access to the sections of the text that teach the facts they need, having students skim those sections of texts prior to writing, or having students use class anchor charts as a way to remember facts from earlier in the unit. A potential teacher think aloud is included for the teacher to use when modeling how to take a brainstorm topic and turn it into a paragraph.  Language supports include a Sentence Level Feedback and Support document  and a Paragraph Level Feedback and Support document to provide students with feedback. Progress monitoring supports include an editing checklist and Grade 1 Writing Rubrics.  

Materials include shared research projects to help develop students’ research skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 2, after reading five stories about Anansi the Spider, students write an opinion on whether Anansi is a good friend. Students explain what Anansi does that makes him a good or bad friend. 

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 17, after reading Little Red Riding Hood by Paul Galdone, Little Red Riding Hood by Jerry Pinkney, Little Roja Riding Hood by Susan Middleton Elya, Lon Po Po by Ed Young, Ninja Red Riding Hood by Corey Rosen Schwartz, What Really Happened to Little Red Riding Hood: The Wolf’s Story by Toby Forward,, students work with a partner to create a claim about wolves and pick two to three facts to support their answers. Once students are ready, they engage in a class discussion about whether wolves deserve their evil stereotype in literature. After the discussion, students independently write their responses.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 20, after reading two books about frogs and lizards, students compare and contrast frogs and lizards. Students generalize their findings of how frogs and lizards are the same and different in comparison to other animals. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 5, students explain how the world would be different if the women they investigated through various texts read in Lessons 1–4 did not fight for women’s rights. Students engage in a class discussion about how the three women they have gathered information on supported women’s rights. The teacher and students complete a Shared Writing piece that entails developing a topic sentence on how the world would be different if Elizabeth Cady Stanton had not stood up for women’s rights, creating a topic sentence with two to three details, and writing a conclusion statement. Students work in pairs and use the Single Paragraph Outline to write a paragraph about a woman leader.  

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 17, students participate in a Shared Writing activity in which they write a class book about Ancient Egypt. After reading several texts on Ancient Egypt, students select a specific topic related to Ancient Egypt to find details about, write paragraphs, add text features, and revise and edit their writing. All student writing is assembled into a class book.  

Criterion 2.2: Coherence

06/08

Materials promote mastery of grade-level standards by the end of the year.

Instruction, tasks, and assessment questions are aligned to grade-level standards. Materials employ teacher modeling during instruction, and students often respond to and complete standards-aligned questions and task. Students have opportunities in each lesson to use a partner Turn and Talk and  engage in open whole group discussions that involve the diverse views of all students. The materials provide ample questions for teachers to ask students and students to answer. Many standards are repeated throughout multiple units across the year. Assessments leverage knowledge from the unit. Instructional materials provide 123 days of Literature lesson plans and 131 days of Science and Social Studies lesson plans. The sample schedule requires up to three hours daily to implement all the recommended components. Lessons are structured as suggested frameworks to support the core and supporting English Language Arts standards selected by the curriculum authors. The Building Deeper Meaning section in the lesson suggests allotting 25 minutes to introduce the lesson, model expectations, discuss content, and write about the Target Task. Materials do not include a foundational skills component.

Indicator 2G
04/04

Materials spend the majority of instructional time on content that falls within grade-level aligned instruction, practice, and assessments.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria of Indicator 2g.

Instruction, tasks, and assessment questions are aligned to grade-level standards. Materials employ teacher modeling during instruction. Students often respond to and complete standards-aligned questions and task. Students have opportunities in each lesson to use a partner Turn and Talk and engage in open whole group discussions that involve the diverse views of all students. The materials provide ample questions for teachers to ask students and students to answer. Many standards are repeated throughout multiple units across the year. Assessments leverage knowledge from the unit. 

Over the course of each unit, instruction is aligned to grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 12, students retell Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson. Teacher guidance notes, “Because they are going to read this book twice, they are just going to focus on retelling key story events when they read the story today. That means they need to notice and think about what happens in the beginning, middle, and end.” The teacher asks questions about what is happening while reading the text. 

  •  In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 9, students retell Little Red Riding Hood by Paul Galdone. The teacher asks questions about the key events while reading the story. The teacher prompts students to use prepositions that tell where and when, a reference to learning from Lesson 8, to help them retell the story. The teacher provides sequence words, “first, in the beginning, next, then, last,” to assist students with their retelling. Teacher guidance states, “If students are struggling to retell, give them copies of the illustrations in the book. Have them use the illustrations to guide their retells.”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 4, to prepare students for a read-aloud of What Color Is Camouflage? by Carolyn B. Otto, materials provide guidance aligned to RI.1.7. Teacher guidance includes,“In this text, we get just as much information from the illustrations as we do from the text. Therefore, we need to make sure that we ‘read’ the illustrations. We will practice this together as we read the book, but let us start by looking at the illustration on the cover. What do you notice when you look at this illustration? What do you wonder?” Additional Supports suggest, “If needed, model how to notice something from an illustration on pp. 4–5. Students should notice specific things that are connected to the information that they are reading.”

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 2, students answer questions about key details and participate in collaborative discussions, which aligns two  supporting standards, RI.1.1 and SL.1.1. 

Over the course of each unit, the majority of questions and tasks are aligned to grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 1, students “retell what happened in A Story, A Story: An African Tale by Gail E. Haley. Students share details from the beginning, middle, and end of the story.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 5, while listening to a read aloud of DK FindOut! Ancient Egypt by Dr. Angela McDonald, students answer questions aligned to RI.1.3: Describe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or pieces of information in a text. Questions include, but are not limited to; “How was the way animals were viewed similar to or different from the way animals are viewed now?”; “How is the food ancient Egyptians ate similar to or different from the food we eat now?”; “What did poor people in ancient Egypt eat? Give two or three examples.”; and “What did rich people in ancient Egypt eat? Give two to three examples.” 

Over the course of each unit, assessment questions are aligned to grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Content Assessment, during Part One - Vocabulary, students respond to questions and prompts for the words discouraged, eager, and content; however, the assessment does not include a passage or poem for students to read. As a result, students do not identify words and phrases in stories or poems, as required in RL.1.4. The five questions in this section do align to the other standards listed, L.1.5d and L.1.6. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Content Assessment, during the Content Knowledge portion of the assessment, students respond to a writing prompt: “People face many barriers when trying to learn how to read. Describe one barrier you learned about in the unit.” The assessment item lists RL.1.2, RL.1.3, RL.1.7, L.1.1, L.1.2, L.1.6, and W.1.1 as standards assessed. 

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, Content Assessment, during Part Two - Writing about Reading, students recall key details to respond to a writing prompt: “Pick one movement you learned about. Explain why the movement was important. In your answer include: What the movement was fighting for; Details about 1–2 people who helped fight as part of the movement.” The assessment item lists RI.1.1, RI.1.2, RI.1.3, RI.1.8, L.1.1, L.1.2, and W.1.2 as standards assessed. 

By the end of the academic year,  standards are repeatedly addressed within and across units to ensure students master the full intent of the standard. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 1, students retell the key events of the beginning, middle, and end of a story. In Literature Unit 2, students retell the key events of the beginning, middle, and end of a folktale. In Literature Unit 3, students identify the lesson the author is trying to teach. In Literature Unit 4, students retell different versions of the Three Little Pigs and Little Red Riding Hood to compare and contrast them. This content aligns to RL.1.2.

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, after listening to Duke Ellington: The Piano Prince and His Orchestra by Andrea Davis Pinkey, students identify reasons an author gives to support the idea that Duke Ellington is a genius. In Science and Social Studies Unit 4, after listening to the read aloud Elizabeth Leads the Way: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Right to Vote by Tanya Lee Stone, students identify the reasons an author gives to support the idea that “Elizabeth wasn’t interested in easy.” In Science and Social studies Unit 5, students identify reasons why the Egyptian civilization started near the Nile River after listening to a reading of Mummies and Pyramids: A Nonfiction Companion to Magic Tree House #3: Mummies in the Morning by Mary Pope Osborne. This content aligns to RI.1.8.

Indicator 2H
02/04

Materials regularly and systematically balance time and resources required for following the suggested implementation, as well as information for alternative implementations that maintain alignment and intent of the standards.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria of Indicator 2h.

Instructional materials provide123 days of Literature lesson plans and 131 days of Science and Social Studies lesson plans. The sample schedule requires up to three hours  daily to implement all the recommended components. Lessons are structured as suggested frameworks to support the core and supporting English Language Arts standards selected by the curriculum authors. The Building Deeper Meaning section in the lesson suggests allotting 25 minutes to introduce the lesson, model expectations, discuss content, and write about the Target Task. Materials do not include a foundational skills component. The implementation schedule allots 60 minutes for Literature instruction, 60 minutes for Science and Social Studies instruction, and 15–30 minutes for independent reading. Scheduling an additional 30–45-minute block for foundational skills instruction may not be feasible. 

Suggested implementation schedules and alternative implementation schedules align to core learning and objectives. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • A daily reading lesson consists of Building Background and Engagement (5 minutes) during which the teacher introduces the book and/or topic; Engaging with the Text (30 minutes) during which the teacher reads the text and asks discussion questions; and Building Deeper Meaning (25 minutes) during which the teacher explains the lesson and Target Task. During the Building Deeper Meaning component of the lesson, students respond to the Target Task, often during a  discussion and through writing. 

  • Writing and reading instruction occur during the Literature and Science and Social Studies blocks. Time for writing varies depending on the demands of the task. 

Suggested implementation schedules cannot be reasonably completed in the time allotted. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • The Pacing Guide states, “Our Grade 1 curriculum does not include a comprehensive foundational skills block. To ensure students master all grade-level standards, you will need to implement a highly-rated structured phonics program alongside these units.” 

  • The Pacing Guide includes a sample schedule that allots a 60-minute block for Literature instruction, a 60-minute block for Science and Social Studies instruction, a 15–30 minute block for Independent Reading, and a 30–45-minute block for Foundational Skills. Given the time demands allotted for the Literature and Independent Reading blocks, an additional 60-minute block for science and social studies instruction, as well as a 30–45-minute block for foundational skills instruction, implementation is not feasible, particularly if there are separate science and social studies curricula for the teacher to enact.

  • The Pacing Guide states, “Our 1st Grade Literature units span 117 days [Note: This is actually listed as 123 days on the chart.]and our 1st Grade Science and Social Studies units span 131 days. We intentionally did not account for all 180 school days to allow teachers to fit in additional review or extension, teacher-created assessments, and school-based events. Each unit includes a specific number of lessons, including writing and discussion lessons, and a day for assessment.” 

  • Materials include five Literature Units with 112 lessons taught over 123 days and five Science and Social Studies Units with 112 lessons taught over 131 days. Literature units include approximately 60 days, while Science and Social Studies units include approximately 50 days for other school or classroom needs.

Optional materials and tasks do not distract from core learning. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found.

Optional materials and tasks are meaningful and enhance core instruction. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found.

Overview of Gateway 3

Usability

Materials include guidance to assist teachers in presenting the student and ancillary materials, providing sufficient and useful annotations and suggestions within the context of specific learning objectives. While the materials include this general teacher guidance, they only provide limited adult-level explanations and examples of the more complex grade-level concepts that the teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject; however, they do not contain adult-level explanations and examples of concepts beyond the current course. The Teacher Tools includes explanations of the instructional approaches for the program, including references to the research behind them and bibliographic credits connected to the research. The materials include correlation information for the ELA standards addressed throughout the grade level in both regular content and assessments. There are various types of assessments in the program, including unit content assessments, formative and summative assessments. While an answer key is provided for all assessments, there is insufficient guidance for interpreting student performance beyond the answer key. The materials do not offer accommodations for the assessments. Materials include general support throughout the program for all students; however, the materials do not share specifically which supports would benefit or target specific special populations. In addition, there are opportunities provided for grouping students. Still, the groupings do not vary in type and take place at the same part of each lesson, as the variation of the structure in lessons is limited. The program does not include digital technology or interactive tools for students to interact with. Although the teacher materials are presented in a digital manner, student materials are printed materials. Because the materials for students are printed, teacher guidance on incorporating technology is limited.

Criterion 3.1: Teacher Supports

08/09

The program includes opportunities for teachers to effectively plan and utilize materials with integrity and to further develop their own understanding of the content.

Materials include guidance to assist teachers in presenting the student and ancillary materials, providing sufficient and useful annotations and suggestions within the context of specific learning objectives. While the materials include this general teacher guidance, they only provide limited adult-level explanations and examples of the more complex grade-level concepts that the teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject; however, they do not contain adult-level explanations and examples of concepts beyond the current course. The Teacher Tools includes explanations of the instructional approaches for the program, including references to the research behind them and bibliographic credits connected to the research. The materials also include correlation information for the ELA standards addressed throughout the grade level. The Unit Prep section contains a list of the standards covered in each unit and in each lesson for teacher use. Materials and lessons provide a list of texts needed for the unit. In every unit folder, the materials provide student handouts for all instructional activities. The materials do not include provisions for informing parents, students, or caregivers about the ELA program.

Indicator 3A
02/02

Materials provide teacher guidance with useful annotations and suggestions for how to enact the student materials and ancillary materials to support students' literacy development.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria for Indicator 3a. 

The materials include guidance to assist teachers in presenting the student and ancillary materials, providing sufficient and useful annotations and suggestions within the context of specific learning objectives. In each unit, links in the Enhanced Lesson Plan allow teachers to download student materials for use in the lessons. These materials include a vocabulary package and the option to download the Key Questions and Target Tasks  into student handouts. The Enhanced Lesson Plan also includes specific ways for how to incorporate materials within the lesson plan, including explanations for use; directions for how to frame and utilize supports; and reminders, sentence stems, and key places to stop in texts while reading aloud. Each lesson contains one or more Objectives for students to meet and a list of core and supporting Common Core Standards covered in the lesson.

Materials provide comprehensive guidance that will assist teachers in presenting the student and ancillary materials. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Materials include a Unit Summary with a list of Core Materials and Supporting Materials, as well as a text selection rationale. A Unit Launch is included in each unit to help the teacher understand the unit. It includes five steps including, Introduction, Understanding the Text, Unit Essential Content, Key Reading Standards, and Key Writing Standards.

  • The lessons offer guidance for teachers to support all students by Building Background and Engagement, and guidance is also available consistently around Engaging with the Text and the Building Deeper Meaning sections across the grade level. An example of additional support is when the materials offer sentence stems, language support, and additional supports such as additional practicing, as well as opportunities for enrichment.

  • Each Unit Summary includes a comprehensive list of the vocabulary for the unit Teachers also have access to the vocabulary package that includes a glossary with student-friendly definitions, word cards for display in the classroom, and a vocabulary worksheet for students. Each lesson also includes Google Slides that contain the lesson’s vocabulary word and an image that corresponds. 

  • Each Unit Summary includes a comprehensive list of the vocabulary for the unit Teachers also have access to the vocabulary package that includes a glossary with student-friendly definitions, word cards for display in the classroom, and a vocabulary worksheet for students. Each lesson also includes Google Slides that contain the lesson’s vocabulary word and an image that corresponds. 

  • Additional questions to ask students are often provided in the Building Deeper Meaning section to help students go deeper with the text such as determining the lesson of the story. 

  • In the Unit Launch, Understanding the Text, the goal is to “build [teachers] understanding of how students might experience the unit text(s) based on these interconnected aspects of text complexity.” For example, Unit 4 Literature includes subsections such as What Makes the Text Complex and Your Students and These Texts. Each section provides prompting questions for the teacher to reflect on in order to help their students access the complexity of each text in the unit. 

Materials include sufficient and useful annotations and suggestions that are presented within the context of the specific learning objectives. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 9, the Building Background and Engagement section includes information for the teacher on the text and the background knowledge needed such as, “Explain that today they are going to keep learning about Africa... If needed review any of the bolded words students may need in this section of the text”. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 16, the materials include places while reading the text that the teacher may want to stop and explain the meaning of words such as Passover, Four Questions Hebrew, Charoset, and matzah. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 19, while listening to Emmanuel’s Dream: The True Story of Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah by Laurie Ann Thompson, the materials include places for the teacher to stop and show pictures to support understanding such as a picture of Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah and a map of his route. 

  • In Literaure Unit 5, Lesson 6, the Building Deeper Meaning section includes sentence stems to support students in responding to the Target Task question, “How did Jose bring joy to the kids in his neighborhood?”

Indicator 3B
01/02

Materials contain adult-level explanations and examples of the more complex grade-level/course-level concepts and concepts beyond the current course so that teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3b. 

The materials contain limited adult-level explanations and examples of the more complex grade-level concepts that the teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject; however, they do not contain adult-level explanations and examples of concepts beyond the current course. Each unit provides a Unit Prep section that includes some additional contextual background, but it does not provide support in teaching grade-level concepts within the lesson plans. Explanations are included in the Teacher Tools of different aspects of the curriculum and teaching techniques or different strategies related to knowledge demands of each unit, but they are not lesson- or text-specific. The explanations of the concepts are specific to the approaches taken by the materials and do not provide any additional opportunity for teachers to expand their understanding of a concept.

Materials contain limited adult-level explanations and examples of more complex grade/course-level concepts so that teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Tools, there are multiple sections that present specific information on how to prepare the unit, internalize a unit, and understand the different components of an ELA lesson. 

    • In Teacher Tools, Writing, there are specific full-length explanations of Learning to Write and Writing to Learn. 

    • In the Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners, there are explanations of Intellectually Preparing a Unit, Intellectually Preparing a Lesson, Scaffolds for English Learners, Engineering Texts, Oral Language Protocols, and Using Graphic Organizers as Scaffolds. 

    • In Teacher Tools, Progress Monitoring and Assessment, there are explanations of Categories to Progress Monitor, Types of Assessment for Progress Monitoring including Formative Assessments and Summative Assessments. 

    • In the Vocabulary section of the Teacher Tools, there is an explanation of how the vocabulary is built into the units and an explanation of how students build vocabulary through interacting with Tier II and Tier III words. There is then an in-depth explanation of how to teach the words within the text. There are no specific examples or modeling provided. There is further instruction for teachers in how to teach vocabulary through both an implicit and explicit approach with guidelines and strategies but no specific examples or modeling.

    • In the Teacher Tools, Providing Access to Complex Texts section, there are detailed explanations of what makes a text complex and how to provide access and support for more complex texts being used by students. 

    • In the Teacher Tools, Routines for Active Reading section, there is an explanation of what active reading is and then more in-depth explanations of various forms of active reading, including Interactive Read Aloud, Shared Reading, Partner Reading, Small Group Reading, and Independent Reading. 

  • In the Unit Launch section of the curriculum, the teacher is provided with an opportunity to internalize the essential questions of the unit. The teacher is provided with opportunities to explore the questions as well as sample answers to the questions. In the section “Considering Who and Where You Are,” the teacher is given an opportunity to reflect on biases or gaps in knowledge that might impact the teaching of the unit. 

Materials contain limited adult-level explanations and examples of concepts beyond the current course so that teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Unit 3, Love Makes a Family, Unit Summary, Notes for Teachers, the teacher is provided with additional resources to build background and engagement on the topic of diverse family structures. The following notes are included:, “As you prepare for this unit, consider the composition of your classroom and the different kinds of families represented in it. Make sure to think about the following things before teaching the unit: 

    • It is important that all students are able to learn about families that are similar to theirs as a way of validating and exploring their own identities. However, not all family experiences are highlighted over the course of the unit. Prior to teaching the unit, identify if any of your students have family types that are not represented and make a plan for how to bring their experiences into the unit. 

    • It is not the job of students to teach other students about a particular type of family. For example, if you have one student in your class with same-gender parents, be mindful of not putting that student on the spot and requiring them to teach others.

    • Talking about family and home life may be triggering to some students. In some cases you may know in advance if a student has a tricky home life, and you should take steps to ensure that you use trauma-informed practices to make the student feel safe.  In other cases, you may not know. Therefore, it is important that you create an environment that is a safe place for students.”

Indicator 3C
02/02

Materials include standards correlation information that explains the role of the standards in the context of the overall series.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria for Indicator 3c. 

The materials include correlation information for the ELA standards addressed throughout the grade level. The Unit Prep section contains a list of the standards covered in each unit and in each lesson. In addition, the materials include a Standards Map for 1st Grade English Language Arts which identifies each core and supporting standard in each Literature and Science and Social Studies unit. 

Correlation information is present for the ELA standards addressed throughout the grade level/series. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • For each unit, the Lesson Map table includes a list of addressed standards. At the beginning of each unit in the Unit Prep, there is also a section titled Common Core Standards, where the core and supporting standards are listed. 

  • The end of each lesson in every unit includes a list of Common Core Standards and Supporting Standards, which are defined as “Standards that are practiced daily but are not priority standards for the unit.” All are hyperlinked to a pop-up window with the full text of the standard. For example, in Science/Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 15, materials list Common Core Standards L.1.1j, RI.1.3, RI.1.6, RI.1.7, and SL.1. as the core standards and L.1.1 and L.1.2 as the supporting standards

Explanations of the role of the specific grade-level/course-level ELA standards are present in the context of the series. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • The Unit Launch section of the curriculum includes an explanation for the key reading standards. The teacher works through unpacking the key understandings, which are linked to specific standards, by answering questions concerning the understanding and how it will help the student with the texts and tasks in the unit. Questions include: “What concrete information will students need to know in order to access this key understanding? How will this key understanding help students understand the texts and tasks of the unit?”. Once the teacher enters a response, they can compare their response to the publisher’s answer. In the next step, “Working Toward Mastery” the teacher reflects on the skills and knowledge that students must develop to successfully answer the target tasks. Each step in this internalization of the unit has publisher exemplar responses to help deepen understanding.

  • The Unit Launch for each unit includes a section entitled Unit Essential Content. Guidance notes, “The goal of this section is for you to review and fully understand the key content knowledge of a unit prior to teaching. Doing this work prior to teaching the unit will help you endure that students internalize the key content knowledge by the end of the unit.”

  • In the Key Reading Standards section, guidance notes a “few core reading standards” have been selected and “broken down into Key Understandings. The Key Understandings are what students need to know and understand about the core standards in order to build meaning. These Key Understandings should never be taught in isolation; they are meant to be used to deepen understanding of the texts and content.”  

  • The Unit Prep identifies writing focus areas, speaking and listening focus areas, and reading focus areas when appropriate. At times, materials tag specific standards to the areas. 

Indicator 3D
Read

Materials provide strategies for informing all stakeholders, including students, parents, or caregivers about the program and suggestions for how they can help support student progress and achievement.

The materials do not include provisions for informing parents, students, or caregivers about the ELA program. Materials provide limited information to guide teachers relating to the content covered in each unit or lesson. Materials do not include information on how parents or caregivers can help students succeed in the program. 

Materials contain strategies for informing students, parents, or caregivers about the ELA program. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • No evidence found

Materials contain suggestions for how parents or caregivers can help support student progress and achievement. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found

Indicator 3E
02/02

Materials provide explanations of the instructional approaches of the program and identification of the research-based strategies.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria for Indicator 3e. 

The materials explain the instructional approaches of the program and include an annotated bibliography that references the research-based strategies. The Teacher Tools includes explanations of the instructional approaches for the program, including references to the research behind them and bibliographic credits connected to the research. Materials provide a concise explanation of each ELA component and explain how the program is designed to teach the components to accomplish the stated goals.

Materials explain the instructional approaches of the program. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Tools, materials provide an explanation of how the materials approach each ELA component:

    • In Writing, Approach to Language and Grammar, the explanation states: “Language and writing instruction are embedded within all Fishtank ELA units from K-12. Language instruction is a powerful tool to help students understand the decisions authors make and how they impact the effect their writing has on readers. Learning grammar and mechanics is about studying the intentional decisions authors make, noticing the power of different punctuation, sentence structures, and craft choices, and then trying out those strategies in their own writing. When learning different grammatical structures students zoom in on sentences to notice the connection between mechanics, craft, style, and meaning. Language instruction isn’t separate from reading instruction, because the connection between language and the author’s craft is integral. Because language instruction is so deeply connected to reading instruction, it should not be taught in isolation. And as far back as 1936, the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) found that formal teaching of grammar and mechanics had little effect on students’ writing and even had deleterious effects on student writing when it displaced writing time. Instead, language instruction should be organically embedded into all aspects of reading and writing so that students can authentically grapple with and understand how different structures impact meaning.”

    • In Reading Structures and Routines, Interactive Read Aloud, the explanation states: “We use the word interactive because kids should be doing some of the heavy comprehension work during the reading aloud, the teacher shouldn’t be doing all the work.”

    • In Reading Structures and Routines, the explanation states that the goal of the curriculum is to build independent and strategic learners. The approach is explained as providing students with multiple opportunities to interact with a wide variety of texts independently with the goal of having students read the core texts independently with little support. 

    • In Vocabulary, the explanation states: “Vocabulary development is intentionally built within all Fishtank ELA units. 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. Throughout the unit, students have multiple opportunities to engage with words orally or in writing. Depending on the word, vocabulary words are taught both directly or indirectly. Fishtank ELA does not rely on a single vocabulary instructional method, rather instruction happens strategically within units so that students learn vocabulary indirectly and unconsciously through daily reading, writing, listening, and speaking routines.”

    • In Writing, the explanation states: “Fishtank ELA includes opportunities for students to both learn to write and write to learn. Students will be immersed in reading, writing, discourse, and idea generation cycles in each unit. There is no separate writing block and no separate writing curriculum; all writing instruction is embedded directly into lessons and units. Through embedded on-demand and process-writing assignments, students build powerful, evidence-based arguments and develop their voice in a variety of genres. Because students need solid knowledge and understanding of a subject matter to write, all Fishtank ELA writing assignments are connected to a core text, or ask students to write about content knowledge from the unit, ensuring that all students have equal access to the assignment.”

  • In the Fishtank guiding principles, materials provide the following information: “In Literature units from Kindergarten through 8th grade, students read texts that explore themes applicable to their lives while also building knowledge of historical events and time periods. Most of the literature units focus on developing identity, diversity, justice, and activism, which are key components of Learning for Justice’s Social Justice Standards. The content of all of our K–8 units, both Literature and Science & Social Studies, aim to provide students with windows and mirrors to ensure students see their own identities, experiences, and motivations in texts (mirrors), alongside texts that allow students to gain insight and build empathy for the identities, experiences, and motivations of others (windows) (Style,1996). And, wherever possible our units aim to engage students in discussions of current events. We also frequently update our units to incorporate articles and discussion topics that reflect current issues in the world around them.”

  • The Fishtank guiding principles also include the following reference: “Rather than organizing lessons around specific skills (e.g. how to find the main idea) and teaching these skills in isolation, we organize our curriculum around carefully-selected texts that will engage students and facilitate deep thinking and strategy development. The text, and the demands of the text, drive the focus of a particular unit or lesson. Text-dependent questions in each lesson are sequenced in order to build a deeper understanding of the key ideas and themes presented by the text. Units across the curriculum require students to read a combination of longer texts to build stamina and engage in discussions about the full text, as well as close readings of specific passages or excerpts. Text-dependent questions and close readings push students to pay close attention to the author's craft and text structure, word choice, and challenging vocabulary and syntax (Coleman and Pimentel, 2012). All grade-level Common Core Standards are carefully woven into the units and lessons, introduced and reinforced through text-dependent questions and close reading moments, and work in service of deep understanding of the text.”

Materials include and reference research-based strategies. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Tools, Writing, bibliographic references to multiple sources used in the development of their program include: 

    • Reading Reconsidered: a practical guide to rigorous literacy instruction by Doug Lemov 

    • Writing Next: Effective Strategies to Improve Writing of Adolescents in Middle and High Schools: A Report to Carnegie Corporation of New York by Steve Graham and Dolores Perin

    • Writing for Understanding: Using Backwards design to help all students write effectively by J. Hawkins, E. Ginty, K. LeClaire Kurzman, D. Leddy, and J. Miller

    • The Writing Revolution: A Guide to Advancing Thinking Through Writing in All Subjects and Grades by Judith C. Hochman and Natalie Wexler  

  • In Teacher Tools, Academic Discourse, bibliographic references to multiple research sources in the development of their program include: 

    • Culturally Responsive Teaching and The Brain: Prompting Authentic Engagement and Rigor Among Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students by Z. Hammond

    • Reading Reconsidered: a practical guide to rigorous literacy instruction by Doug Lemov

    • Academic Conversations: Classroom Talk that Fosters Critical Thinking and Content Understandings, by J. Zwiers and M. Crawford

    • Common Core Standards in Diverse Classrooms: Essential Practices for Developing Academic Language and Disciplinary Literacy by J. Zwiers, S. O’Hara, and R. Pritchard

  • In Teacher Tools, Text Selection, bibliographic references to multiple research sources used in the development of the program include:

    • “Toward a Theory of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy,” by Gloria Ladson-Billings

    • Why Knowledge Matters by E.D. Hirsch, Jr. 

    • Cultivating Genius: An Equity Framework and Historically Responsive Literary, Gholdy Muhammad, and “Curriculum as Window and Mirror” by Emily Style 

  • In Teacher Tools, Reading Structures and Routines: Close Reading, bibliographic references to multiple research sources used in the development of the program include:

    • Notice & Note: Strategies for Close Reading by K. Beers and R.E. Probst

    • Text-Dependent Questions, Grades K-5: Pathways to Close and Critical Reading by D. Fischer and N. Frey

    • Close Reading: Lessons for Analyzing Texts--and Life by C. Lehman and K. Roberts 

  • In Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners: Scaffolds for English Learners, bibliographic references to multiple research sources used in the development of the program include “Essential Actions: A Handbook for Implementing WIDA’s Framework for English Language Development Standards” by Margo Gottlieb

  • In Teacher Tools, Vocabulary, bibliographic references to multiple research sources used in the development of the program include Bringing Words to Life: Robust Vocabulary Instruction by Isabel Beck and Common Core Appendix A.

  • In Teacher Tools, the explanations of the Match Fishtank approach to writing, vocabulary development, and language and grammar instruction are followed by “resources referenced in the development of” each section.

  • Additional reference sections include Qualitative Complexity of Fiction Texts, Providing Supports for Text Complexity, How Texts are Selected in the Teacher Tools, Academic Discourse, Close Reading, and Foundational Skills.

  • The Foundational Skills section and its subsections entitled Teaching Reading Fluency and Assessing Reading Fluency, as well as the subsections of Academic Discourse entitled Types of Academic Discourse and Tiers of Academic Discourse, the Subsections of Supporting English Learners entitled Scaffolds for English Learners and Oral Language Protocols, and the subsection of Progress Monitoring and Assessment entitled Formative Assessments include embedded footnotes with references.

Indicator 3F
01/01

Materials provide a comprehensive list of supplies needed to support instructional activities.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria for Indicator 3f. 

The materials and lessons provide a list of texts needed for the unit. In every unit folder, the materials provide student handouts for all instructional activities.

Materials provide a comprehensive list of supplies needed to support instructional activities. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Each unit plan contains a list of the texts being read throughout the unit with hyperlinks to the texts (either for reading or for purchase). 

  • Each lesson folder contains all the handouts students will need for the lesson. 

    • For example, for Unit 1, lesson 1, the lesson folder contains separate student handouts for the key questions and target task.

Indicator 3G
Read

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Indicator 3H
Read

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Criterion 3.2: Assessment

08/10

The program includes a system of assessments identifying how materials provide tools, guidance, and support for teachers to collect, interpret, and act on data about student progress towards the standards.

The materials include Content Assessments that cover the standard and practices for the grade level. Each section of the assessment lists the standards addressed, and each assessment includes a teacher answer key which lists the standards each assessment question addresses. The materials provide an answer key for each assessment in the program with the corresponding assessed standards. While an answer key is provided, there is insufficient guidance for interpreting student performance beyond the answer key provided. In addition, the materials do not offer accommodations for the assessments. 

Indicator 3I
02/02

Assessment information is included in the materials to indicate which standards are assessed.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria for Indicator 3i. 

The materials include Content Assessments that cover the standard and practices for the grade level. Each section of the assessment lists the standards addressed, and each assessment includes a teacher answer key which lists the standards each assessment question addresses. 

Materials consistently identify the standards and practices assessed for formal assessments. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Each unit contains an assessment that addresses the content covered during the unit. Each section of the assessment, such as Vocabulary or Writing about Reading, identifies the standards assessed. The answer key document includes a table that contains an answer key and the standards that each assessment question addresses.

Indicator 3J
02/04

Assessment system provides multiple opportunities throughout the grade, course, and/or series to determine students' learning and sufficient guidance to teachers for interpreting student performance and suggestions for follow-up.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3j. 

The materials include limited opportunities to determine students’ learning and insufficient guidance for interpreting student performance beyond the answer key that is provided. Most support occurs through a handout that contains protocols and probing questions for students.  

Assessment system provides multiple opportunities to determine students' learning and some guidance to teachers for interpreting student performance. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Each unit contains one formal assessment that covers the content from the unit. 

  • In the Teacher Tools, the Progress Monitoring and Assessments section includes a data analysis protocol. Materials provide probing questions for teachers to use to assist in discussing the assessment. Categories covered in this protocol include Unit Preparation, Lesson Preparation, Lesson Execution, and Progress Monitoring.

  • In the Teacher Tools, the Summative Assessments section contains the Data Meeting Protocol Guide, which includes a step-by-step process on how to conduct a Data Meeting. The guide has two parts. Part 1 explains how to use  data to identify strengths and growth areas; Part 2 explains how to use data to reflect and plan next steps.

Assessment system provides multiple opportunities to determine students' learning and limited suggestions to teachers for following-up with students. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In the Teacher Tools, Progress Monitoring and Assessment, the Formative Assessments section provides information regarding the use of formative assessments to progress monitor the different components of ELA instruction. This section includes: 

    • the use of Key Questions to check for understanding;

    • Target Tasks to monitor reading comprehension, content knowledge, writing or oral language development;

    • Exit Tickets to quickly check student understanding; and

    • writing assignments to monitor writing, content knowledge and vocabulary, or reading comprehension.

Indicator 3K
04/04

Assessments include opportunities for students to demonstrate the full intent of grade-level/course-level standards and shifts across the series.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 meet the criteria for Indicator 3k.

The materials include assessments that measure the expectations of the standards regarding rigor and depth. Each unit contains both a Content Assessment that “pushes students to synthesize unit content knowledge, vocabulary, and/or the unit essential questions in writing” and a Cold Read Assessment, which also assesses unit standards. Teachers can give one or both of the assessments. In addition, students write daily about the text they read or listen to. Materials provide a rubric to assess formal writing. The rubric addresses the grade-level standards aligned to the formal writing task, including standards that address language, conventions, and elaboration.

Assessments include opportunities for students to demonstrate the full intent of grade-level/course-level standards and shifts across the series. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, the Content Assessment covers various standards in multiple tasks. Students begin by picking three of the vocabulary words and drawing a picture or using the words in a sentence. Then students respond to the question, “How can you be a good friend?” which can be answered using multiple texts from the unit. The Cold Read Assessment asks questions about a text they have never seen before such as, “Why does the girl feel proud at the end of the story?” 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 17, after four days of direct instruction on writing an informational report about a specific animal, the teacher assesses student writing using the Grade 1 Writing Rubric.

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 6, the Content Assessment covers various standards in multiple tasks. First, students respond to multiple choice and short answer questions that incorporate vocabulary from the unit such as, “Why was the soil near the Nile River fertile?” Then students answer the question, “How did ancient Egyptians beliefs and values shape their civilization? Give two examples?” Students use what they learned from the unit to answer the question. 

Examples of formative assessments include:

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 6, students write about whether the pig’s side of the story from The 3 Little Pigs is just after listening to The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs! by Jon Scieszka.

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 7, students “explain why Diego Rivera’s art is important” after listening to Diego Rivera: His World and Ours by Duncan Tonatiuh.  

Examples of summative assessments include:

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 24, students complete the end-of-unit Content Assessment (RL.1.2, RL.1.3, RL.1.7, W.1.1, L.1.1, L.1.2, L.1.6).

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 25, students complete the end-of-unit Content Assessment (RI.1.1, RI.1.2, RI.1.3, RI.1.4, RI.1.8, L.1.1, L.1.2,L.1.6, W.1.2).

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 18, students complete the Cold Read Assessment (RL.1.2, RL.1.3, RL.1.6, RL.1.9). 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, 18, students complete the Cold Read Assessment (RI.1.3, RI.1.5, RI.1.6, RI.1.8, RI.1.9).

Indicator 3L
Read

Assessments offer accommodations that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills without changing the content of the assessment.

The materials do not offer accommodations for the assessments. The assessments are not designed so students can demonstrate their knowledge and skills without changing the content of the assessment. To make the tests more accessible, such as text-to-speech or increasing the font size, teachers must download and edit the assessments. 

Materials do not offer accommodations that ensure all students can access the assessment (e.g., text-to-speech, increased font size) without changing the content of the assessment. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Assessments are digital and housed on the website. Although assessments could be altered before printing, it would involve reformatting the answers.

Materials include guidance for teachers on the use of provided accommodations. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found

Criterion 3.3: Student Supports

03/06

The program includes materials designed for each child’s regular and active participation in grade-level/grade-band/series content.

Materials include general supports throughout the program for all students; however, the materials do not share specifically which supports would benefit or target specific special populations. While the materials include suggestions on how materials can be scaffolded for multi-lingual learners or for students who read, write, and/or speak in a language other than English, these suggestions are general and leave the implementation and development of these scaffolds to the teacher. The materials do include some opportunities for students to engage with literacy content and concepts at greater depth for students who read, write, speak, and/or listen above grade level; however, many of these opportunities require students to complete more assignments than their classmates. Throughout the program, there is limited variation in structure. Students have many opportunities during lessons to express their understanding and respond to literature, but the opportunities are not varied. In addition, there are opportunities provided for grouping students, but the groupings do not vary in type and take place at the same part of each lesson. The materials include characters from different genders, races, ethnicities, and with other physical characteristics in the texts. 

Indicator 3M
01/02

Materials provide strategies and supports for students in special populations to work with grade-level content and to meet or exceed grade-level standards that will support their regular and active participation in learning English language arts and literacy.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3m. 

The materials include general supports throughout the program for all students; however, the materials do not share specifically which supports would benefit or target specific special populations. Lesson plans contain Supporting All Students boxes, which include Additional Supports, Language Supports, Building Background Knowledge and Accessing Prior Knowledge, and Opportunities for Enrichment strategies designed to help students meet or exceed grade-level standards when working with grade-level content; however, teachers will need to determine which supports to utilize, specifically for special populations.

Materials provide some strategies, supports, and resources for students in special populations to support their regular and active participation in grade-level literacy work. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 11, materials include several Supporting All Students sections for the teacher to help the students answer questions. When hovering over the question mark, guidance suggests that the support can be “used to help Multi-Lingual Learners and students with learning differences access the demands of the text or the task. See Supporting All Students with Fishtank ELA for more guidance.” Materials do not provide additional guidance. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 6, the objective is to “explain how Jose brought joy to the kids in the neighborhood.” To help students meet this objective, the lesson materials include sentence stems such as, “Jose brought joy to the kids in the neighborhood because...”,  in the Supporting All Students, Language Supports Section. The materials indicate that these can be used for “Multi-Lingual Learners and students with learning differences.”

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 14, materials include two places for the teacher to stop and build background knowledge; however, these supports are not tailored to a specific population of students. In addition, the lesson has two Language Supports to teach the words dignity and humiliation, but the guidance within the question mark icon specifies that “These supports can be used to help Multi-Lingual Learners and students with learning differences access the language demands of the text and the task.” The supports do not provide additional guidance for teachers to make decisions. 

Indicator 3N
01/02

Materials regularly provide extensions to engage with literacy content and concepts at greater depth for students who read, write, speak, and/or listen above grade level.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3n. 

The materials include many opportunities for students to engage with literacy content and concepts at greater depth for students who read, write, speak, and/or listen above grade level; however, there are limited opportunities for students to engage with literacy concepts beyond the core materials. The number of lessons that contain an “Opportunities for Enrichment” section is limited. Some of the lessons provide specific scaffolds intended to enhance lessons by providing additional depth, though many add activities for students, such as reading an extra text or portion of a text or completing an additional assignment for the text. 

Materials provide some opportunities for advanced students to investigate the grade-level content at a higher level of complexity. Materials include instances of advanced students doing more assignments than their classmates. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, four of sixteen lessons contain specific supports for enrichment that could be used for advanced students.

  • In Literature Unit 2, the unit includes one enrichment opportunity across 25 lessons:

    • In Lesson 16, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students return to writing they have done earlier in the unit. Have students look at the sentences they wrote and decide if they are complete or incomplete. If they are incomplete, challenge students to edit them and make them complete.”

  • In Literature Unit 4, lessons contain specific supports for enrichment that could be used for advanced students. For example:

    • In Lesson 1, enrichment opportunities include: “Provide students additional context on the author. Paul Galdone (1907–1986) illustrated hundreds of children’s books. When he was in high school, his family immigrated from Budapest, Hungary, to New Jersey. He did not know how to speak English and struggled with English classes at school. During this time, he found that he loved drawing and used drawing as his inspiration. Even though he illustrated hundreds of books, redoing classic old tales, like The Three Little Pigs, was one of his favorite things to do.”

    • In Lesson 2, enrichment opportunities include: “If time allows, lead students in a discussion comparing and contrasting The Three Little Pigs and The Three Little Tamales. The key thing to notice is that in The Three Little Pigs the wolf ate each of the first two pigs, but in The Three Little Tamales, all the tamales escape and do not get eaten.”

    • In Lesson 3, enrichment opportunities include: “Understanding the Tohono O’odham Nation is not necessary for understanding the story, but if you wish to learn more visit the Tohono O’odham Nation Cultural Center & Museum website.” and “To learn more about tumbleweeds have students watch "Why do Tumbleweeds Tumble" by Deep Look (YouTube).”

    • In Lesson 6, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students pretend that they are newspaper reporters. Have students write what they think is the ‘true’ version of the three little pigs.”

    • In Lesson 7, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students debate which text they think best illustrates the moral of the story.” and “Use the following STEAM lesson plan to have students design their own houses: "STEAM Lesson Plan: Three Little Pigs Design Challenge"  by Inventionland Institute.”

    • In Lesson 8, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students partner up with students in another class to share their stories.”

    • In Lesson 13, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students add an illustration to their writing. Students should mimic the illustrators style.”

    • In Lesson 14, enrichment opportunities include: “If time allows, have students compare and contrast Ninja Red Riding Hood with The Three Ninja Pigs. Ask students: What was the same about both books? What was different?”

    • In Lesson 15, enrichment opportunities include: “Prompt students to think about what the wolf could have done differently. Ask students: Did he do the right thing by leaving grandma? Does this make you trust him or not trust him?”

    • In Lesson 16, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students debate which text they think best illustrates the moral of the story.”

    • In Lesson 17, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students rewrite sections of The Three Little Pigs or Little Red Riding Hood with the wolf as a good character, not as an evil threatening character.”

  • In Science/Social Studies, Unit 1, three of twenty-three lessons contain specific supports for enrichment that could be used for advanced students.

  • In Science/Social Studies, Unit 2, the unit includes eleven enrichment opportunities across twenty-four lessons:

    • In Lesson 3, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students write their own suggestions for types of sentences to write like the practice sets and the Target Task question. Or have students write all four types of sentences without clue words.”

    • In Lesson 4, enrichment opportunities include: “Challenge students to use two different sentence types in their writing.”

    • In Lesson 5, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students use the internet to find more information about the animal they wrote about. Encourage students to write two to three additional sentences based on the new information they learned.”

    • In Lesson 6 and 7, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students try using ‘if’ and ‘when’ in their statements.” and “Have students use the internet to find more information about the animal they wrote about. Encourage students to write two to three additional sentences based on the new information they learned.”

    • In Lesson 8, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students try out writing multiple endings to their stories.”

    • In Lesson 10, enrichment opportunities include: “If time allows, read students the “Did You Know?” section from the back of the book.” and “Have students use the internet or books from the classroom library to find out additional information about the red-eyed tree frog. Have students add the information they learned to their writing.”

    • In Lesson 11, enrichment opportunities include: “If students finish early, have them add illustrations to their writing to show how different animals protect themselves. Encourage them to draw illustrations like the one Steve Jenkins includes. In one box, they should do a preview of the animal and a potential threat, and then in the second box, they can show the animal protecting itself.”

    • In Lesson 12, enrichment opportunities include: “Challenge students to use the conjunctions ‘when,’ ‘if,’ or ‘so’ in their writing.

    • In Lesson 17, enrichment opportunities include: “Have students research their animal on the internet. National Geographic Kids is a good place to find information about a wide range of animals.”

    • In Lesson 21, enrichment opportunities include: “Push students to make connections between what they read in this section and what they have learned earlier in the unit.

    • Why would frogs have different colors?”

Indicator 3O
Read

Materials provide varied approaches to learning tasks over time and variety in how students are expected to demonstrate their learning with opportunities for students to monitor their learning.

The materials provide minimal variety in how students demonstrate understanding. Students have many opportunities during lessons to express their understanding and respond to literature, and opportunities include whole group discussion, writing, and partner work. Students often have multiple opportunities to engage their learning within the same lesson. The materials include few opportunities for multi-modal learning, with the majority of the lessons involving listening to a text, discussing a text, and writing in response to the text. Materials provide opportunities for students to self-assess their writing and participation in discussions, but materials lack opportunities for students to monitor their learning over time. 

Materials provide multi-modal opportunities for students to question, investigate, sense-make, and problem-solve using a limited variety of formats and methods. Examples include but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 7, one of the Enrichment Opportunities for students encourages students to design their own house after reading several different versions of “The Three Little Pigs.” The materials include a “STEAM Lesson Plan: Three Little Pigs Design Challenge.” 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 1, Lesson 8, the teacher models writing a sentence about Africa after listening to Explore Africa by Bobbie Kalman. Then the teacher models thinking about what additional questions they have after reading the sentence aloud. The teacher then models including more specific information. Then, the students discuss why the second sentence is better. Students then return to their seats and receive two more sentences about Africa. Students add additional information to both sentences either orally or in writing. Lastly, students share their descriptive sentences about Africa with partners.

Students have some opportunities to share their thinking, to demonstrate changes in their thinking over time, and to apply their understanding in new contexts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 7, students engage in a discussion with a partner about what the main character Unhei learned from The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi. Then, students engage in a whole-class discussion about what they can learn from Unhei about what it means to be a good friend. 

  • In Literature Unit 2, Lesson 4, students listen to Anansi and the Magic Stick by Eric A. Kimmel. Students work with a partner to describe Anansi. Lesson guidance encourages the teacher to “challenge students to go beyond what they already know about Anansi from the first two stories.” Then students write one to two sentences describing Anansi. 

Materials leverage the use of included formats and methods over time to deepen student understanding and ability to explain and apply literacy ideas. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 3, Lesson 29, students take an assessment. The Content Assessment writing prompt states, “Your friend says that all families are the same. How would you respond? Give multiple reasons from the unit.” In order to successfully answer this question, students need to use several of the texts from the unit. 

  • In Literature Unit 5, Lesson 5, teachers have the opportunity to show the video “A Chattanooga Icon: The Life of Mary Walker” from WRCB Chattanooga on YouTube to help build background knowledge of Mary Walker prior to reading the text. 

Materials provide for ongoing review, practice, self-reflection, and feedback. Materials provide multiple strategies, such as oral and/or written feedback, peer or teacher feedback, and self-reflection. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:  

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 23, students engage in a three-day opinion writing lesson, where they write which musician is their favorite and why. On the second day, after students spend time drafting, the teacher picks one or two pieces of writing to look at together as a class. The class discusses what they notice the student did well and where they could improve. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 17, students engage in a discussion about the essential question of the unit. At the end of the discussion, lesson guidance encourages students to use the Academic Discourse Rubric to self-assess their participation. Then the teacher compares the student’s self-assessment with their own notes from the Discussion Recording Form. 

Materials rarely provide a clear path for students to monitor and move their own learning. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 4, Lesson 27, students choose one piece of writing from the unit to edit and publish. The materials include an Editing Checklist that students can use to “assess their own writing.” To use the checklist, the student and/or teacher identifies the focus areas and checks off “still learning,” “sometimes,” or “almost always” to assess each area. 

Indicator 3P
Read

Materials provide opportunities for teachers to use a variety of grouping strategies.

While materials provide opportunities for grouping students, the groupings do not vary in type and groupings take place in the same part of each lesson. Students do not have multiple opportunities to work in varied groups or different types of groupings. Materials do not provide specific guidance that explains how teachers should form groups or how teachers should incorporate protocols when grouping students. Materials also miss opportunities to provide suggestions for additional times when groupings could be used.

Materials provide grouping strategies for students. Materials provide limited types of interaction among students. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 1, Lesson 14, students think about what it means to be a good friend, then use the Turn and Talk protocol to share their ideas with a partner.  After the partners discuss, the class has a whole-group discussion on the characteristics of good friends.

  • In Literature Unit 4, Lesson 16, students discuss the moral of the story in a small group. The instructions indicate for students to discuss first using the Small Group Protocol, then discuss as a whole-group.

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 4, students discuss the Target Task question with a partner and then write about two ways animals use camouflage to survive.

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 2, Lesson 16, students Turn and Talk with a partner about what behaviors parents, siblings, and babies engage in to help them survive. After students discuss with a partner, the class has a whole-group discussion on the survival behaviors.

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 5, Lesson 11, students use a small group or partner protocol to discuss if they would or would not want to live in ancient Egypt and why. After the partner or small-group discussion, students discuss as a whole-group. 

Materials provide some guidance for the teacher on grouping students in a variety of grouping formats. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Support, ELA, Academic Discourse, Monitoring and Supporting Academic Discourse, the Providing Support During Discourse section provides some guidance for the teacher “to ensure that all students are able to effectively participate in academic discourse, provide the whole-class, small-groups, or individual students with the following supports—Strategically group students. If your class has a large number of English learners, group students who speak the same home language together. Allow them to complete the assignment in either English or in their own home language.”

  • In Teacher Support, ELA, Academic Discourse, the Preparing for Academic Discourse section poses this question for teachers to consider: “What vocabulary do students need to know and understand? Do I need to plan for Turn and Talks or small-group work to help students process the content?”

  • In the Teacher Support, ELA, Academic Discourse, the Types of Academic Discourse section includes information regarding the types of academic discourse provided in Fishtank ELA lessons: whole-class discussions, small-group discourse, and partner discourse. “The type of discourse students participate in will depend on the task and the goals of the lesson. There are many situations where all three types, or a combination of them, would be appropriate to use; however, each one brings some of its own unique values or benefits. When intellectually preparing to teach a lesson, you should think about where in the lesson you can include opportunities for different types of academic discourse.”

    • Materials provide protocols for Whole Class Discussion to help set students up for success. For example, the Protocol for Fishbowl includes the following guidance: “The inner circle discusses a question while the outer circle observes. Note: This seminar structure is most effective if students in the outer circle are given a specific task—often to observe an assigned member of the inner circle and track that person’s arguments and general participation in order to give feedback. Otherwise, it can be challenging to keep students in the outer circle engaged. Rotate so that each group of students engages in discussion and observation.”

    • Materials provide protocols for Small Group Discussion to help set students up for success. For example, the protocol for Numbered Heads Together includes the following guidance: “Numbered Heads Together holds all members of a group accountable for participating and clarifying understanding of a particular question or topic. Numbered Heads Together can be used with any discussion prompt, however, questions with multiple answers or nuanced answers lead to a more engaging discussion.”

    • Materials provide protocols for Partner Conversation and “provide all students with a scaffolded and structured opportunity to formulate and share ideas. Partner conversations are low-risk and allow all students a chance to participate in the lesson at the same time.”

  • While materials provide this guidance in Teacher Support, the lesson plans do not adequately reference this guidance.

Indicator 3Q
01/02

Materials provide strategies and supports for students who read, write, and/or speak in a language other than English to meet or exceed grade-level standards to regularly participate in learning English language arts and literacy.

The materials reviewed for Grade 1 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3q. 

The materials provide some language supports for students who read, write, and/or speak in a language other than English; however, materials miss opportunities to label specific protocols for these learners. The included language supports provide support with meaning, context, and understanding. These supports are also helpful to students who speak, write, and/or speak languages other than English with accessing the text or responding to the text. Materials provide additional supports in Teacher Tools that provide general guidance in preparing lessons for multilingual learners; however, they are not lesson specific, are broad in application, and would require teachers to prepare materials for specific lessons within the curriculum.

Materials provide some strategies and supports for students who read, write, and/or speak in a language other than English to meet or exceed grade-level standards through regular and active participation in grade-level literacy work. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Supporting All Students, the materials provide a question mark next to Language Support, which indicates the following: “These supports can be used to help Multi-Lingual Learners and students with learning differences access the language demands of the text and the task. See the Supporting English Learners Teacher Tool for additional guidance.”

  • In Literature Unit 1, materials do not include lessons that specifically provide support for multilingual learners.

  • In Literature Unit 4, materials do not include lessons that specifically provide support for multilingual learners. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, materials do not include lessons that specifically provide support for multilingual learners. 

  • In Teacher Tools, materials include multiple folders providing guidance for teaching multilingual learners. They include guidance on providing scaffolds that are divided into areas of light support and heavier support. Suggestions include providing illustrations, images, photos, providing videos, films, or audio to support a lesson, using real-life or physical objects, text clues, various graphic scaffolds, and interactive scaffolds, including pairing and working with the student’s home language, and increasing supplemental texts and noticing cognates. These are explained and provided as general guidelines and are not lesson specific. 

  • In Teacher Tools, materials provide suggestions on preparing lessons with multilingual learners in mind, including unpacking the units and texts with a look to analyzing language demands, knowing the language and content goals of the unit, planning for assessment and mastery, and taking ownership of teaching the unit with multilingual learners in mind. 

  • In Teacher Tools, materials include a document on Engineering the Text that provides guidance on how to physically alter a text to make it more accessible to multilingual learners, including adding questions, proving genre tips, defining vocabulary, explaining key background knowledge, adding illustrations and headings, and including stop and jot questions. 

  • In Teacher Tools, materials include a document on using oral language supports with multilingual learners. These include the use of various groupings to assist with comprehension and expressing ideas. 

  • In Teacher Tools, materials provide teachers with general scaffolds for multilingual learners. These include: 

    • In the Sensory scaffolds, materials include a list of scaffolds for Light EL Support and Heavier EL support. For example, in illustrations, images, and photos light supports suggested are: “Add illustrations to literature texts that do not include illustrations. Illustrations could be used to break up long sections of text or to clarify tricky plot events.” Heavier supports include: “Strategically engineer the text to include illustrations that align with specific features of text complexity. Multiple illustrations could be added to make the text easier to digest. (For example, when reading the Brer Rabbit folktales about the well, include an illustration of a well.)

    • In Interactive Scaffolds, materials include a list of scaffolds for Pairs, Small Groups, Discussion, Cooperative Structures, and Home Language. For example, in Home Language, materials state: “For lighter EL support: Have students use translanguaging by using some words and phrases from their home language when discussing or writing about content. For heavier EL support: Have students have entire conversations in their home language or have students write answers in their home language. Provide additional instruction on a particular concept or idea in students’ home language. Provide students with texts and problems written in their home language. Have students write an answer in their home language. Then have students transfer their answers to English.”

    • In Additional Supports, materials provide the teacher with suggestions for “Supplemental Text” support and “Noticing Cognates.” In the “Noticing Cognates” support, materials provide the following: “For lighter EL support: Teach students strategies for identifying cognates and have students self-identify and interpret examples of cognates in texts and tasks. For heavier EL support: Before reading a text, find examples of cognates and have students break them down. Focus on the meaning and intonation of the words. Teach students Greek and Latin roots that are cognates in English and Spanish. Have students create cognate reference guides.”

  • In Oral Language Protocols, materials provide the teacher with protocols for the following: Turn and Talk, Think-Pair Share, Write-Pair Share, Timed-Pair-Share, Think-Pair-Share Revised, Partner A Partner B. An example of the “Think-Pair-Share Revised protocol states: “Students are given a chance to refine their thinking and ideas based on their partner’s ideas and discussion. The 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 Engineering Texts, materials provide the teacher with a three-step guide to support planning. The explanation includes, “When you engineer a text, you add text supports to ensure all students have access. This does not mean changing the text or lowering the rigor of the task. An engineered text anticipates possible student misconceptions, gives vocabulary cues, provides additional background knowledge, scaffolds questions, and creates opportunities for discussion.”

  • In Graphic Organizer, for multilingual learner support, materials provide the teacher with “suggestions on how to adjust the organizers to provide light or heavy EL support.” Some examples include: 

    • Adjusting graphic organizers to provide light EL support: 

      • Provide blank templates for students to use when reading a text, brainstorming, or solving problems. 

    • Adjusting graphic organizers to provide heavy EL support: 

      • Provide students with partially filled-out graphic organizers. 

      • Provide guidance on where in the text, resources, or problem students can find a particular answer. (For example, if students are looking to describe a character, provide specific paragraph numbers where students can find key evidence.) 

      • Have students work in partners using an oral language protocol. 

      • If applicable, allow students to complete the graphic organizer in their home language. 

Indicator 3R
Read

Materials provide a balance of images or information about people, representing various demographic and physical characteristics.

The materials include characters from different genders, races, ethnicities, and with other physical characteristics in the texts. The publishers state in the overview that they “seek to create curricular materials that center students, reflect multiple perspectives and experiences, and empower students to think critically about the world they live in.” The texts hold true to that standard as they contain characters from across a broad spectrum of society.

Materials and assessments depict different individuals of different genders, races, ethnicities, and other physical characteristics. Depictions of demographics or physical characteristics are portrayed positively across the series. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • In Literature Unit 3, students read stories that highlight a wide range of families and experiences, helping students to connect with cultures and experiences they may not have direct contact with within their communities. 

  • In Literature Unit 3, students read Nana Akua Goes to School by Tricia Elam Walker. This story shares the experience of a student who brings her West African grandmother, whose face has traditional tribal markings, to meet her peers. The story highlights the cultural experience of Nan Akua who shares with the students the traditional African symbols that make her special.  

  • In Literature Unit 5, students read The Story of Ruby Bridges by Robert Coles. This text tells the story of Ruby Bridges and the desegregation of schools in New Orleans. The story focuses on the experience of Ruby, a black student, who attended first grade with all white students and demonstrated courage, faith, and hope throughout this true story. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, “Students read and learn about a diverse assortment of artists, musicians, and dancers.”

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 3, students read Duke Ellington: The Piano Prince and his Orchestra by Andrea Pinkney. This story shares the biography of a prominent twentieth-century African American in the arts.

Materials and assessments balance positive portrayals of demographics or physical characteristics. Materials avoid stereotypes or language that might be offensive to a particular group. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 3, students read Marisol McDonal Doesn’t Match by Monica Brown. This story tells about a character whose physical characteristics and the things she likes do not follow the logical order of things that go together. The tale celebrates the differences of Marisol, a biracial child with Peruvian-Scottish-American heritage, making her unique.

  • In Literature Unit 3, students read The Proudest Blue: A Story of Hijab and Family by Ibtihaj Muhammad. This story features bright illustrations and tells about the first day school and one’s first day of hijab. The author is an Olympic medalist and social justice activist. This story provides a story of new experiences, the bond between siblings, and being proud of who you are.

  • In Science/Social Studies, Unit 3, students read Piano Starts Here: The Young Art Tatum by Robert Andrew Parker. This story tells of the musician Art Tatum, a musician with a vision disability.  

Materials provide representations that show students that they can succeed in the subject, going beyond just showing photos of diverse students not engaged in work related to the context of the learning. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Literature Unit 5, students read Virgie Goes to School with Us Boys by Elizabeth Fitzgerald Howard. This story tells the story of boys who attended school in the South following the Civil War, but girls were not allowed to attend. In this story, students learn about the freedom to learn, and how one family sent a sister to school with her brother. The illustrations show black boys and girls in the Reconstruction-era South.  

  • In Literature Unit 5, students read The Oldest Student: How Mary Walker Learned to Read by Rita Lorraine Hubbard. This true story celebrates Mary Walker’s accomplishment of learning to read at age 116! This inspirational story of perseverance and dedication will help students to see that age is not a barrier to learning or success. 

  • In Science/Social Studies Unit 4, students read She Was the First!: The Trailblazing Life of Shirley Chisholm by Katheryn Russell-Brown. This biography tells the story of an educator, activist, and politician who used her voice and leadership to stand up for educational change and the rights of women and minorities.

Indicator 3S
Read

Materials provide guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon student home language to facilitate learning.

The Teacher Tools provide some suggestions that scaffolds can be provided for students in their home language and that student conversations can be held in their home language. These suggestions are very general and leave the implementation and development of the specific scaffolds to the teacher. Materials include suggestions that teachers should consider students’ backgrounds when preparing a lesson, but materials do not provide specifics on how this should be done. The lesson plans include some scaffolds for multilingual learners but do not specifically address ways to use the home language to support learners that are lesson-specific. The Teacher Support section includes general guidance for supporting multilingual learners that relates to leveraging students’ home language through the use of translanguaging strategies.

Materials provide limited suggestions and strategies to use the home language to support students in learning ELA.  Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Tools, Scaffolds for English Learners, materials include a suggestion that when possible, teachers should show video adaptations of text in either English or the student’s native language. 

  • In Teacher Tools, Scaffolds for English Learners, when discussing creating graphs and charts to aid students in comprehending the text, materials include a provision to create the aids in the student’s home language. 

  • In Teacher Tools, Scaffolds for English Learners, Interactive Scaffolds, materials include provisions for incorporating the use of the student’s home language in discussions. Levels of support for students vary from translating phrases or words to allowing students to have complete conversations in their home language. 

  • In Teacher Tools, the Planning for English Learners section provides teachers with a step-by-step guide of questions to intellectually prepare the unit. In Step One, the teacher unpacks the unit texts and tasks. Directions state, “Teachers should analyze the text, materials, vocabulary, unit focus areas, and lessons to determine the language demands of the unit. Questions include: What makes the text and tasks linguistically complex? What key vocabulary do students need to know and understand to engage with discipline-specific knowledge? What key language use(s) are targeted in the unit? How are students developing their understanding and production of all the key uses of language? (recount, explain, argue, discuss)” In Step Two, the teacher sets a vision for mastery. Directions state, “​​Teachers should articulate the language and content goals of the unit. What are the driving language demands of the unit? What language should you see and hear from students as they engage in meaning-making? Based on the language demands of the unit, what are the overall language goals for the unit? What are the content goals for the unit? What should students know and understand about reading, writing, and language? What should students know and understand about the themes/subjects of the unit?” In Step Three, teachers plan for assessment and mastery. In Step Four, teachers take ownership. 

  • In Teacher Tools, English Learners, the Engineering Texts support provides teachers with a sample text. The example includes the following statements: “Let’s look at a before and after from a 5th-grade assignment from Science and Social Studies Unit 4: Exploring Mars, Lesson 19. In this lesson, students are reading a NASA press release for the first time. Here’s the original text, without text engineering, a press release from NASA: Mars Rovers Advance Understanding of the Red Planet As you can see, the text is complex for many reasons: Students may not be familiar with what a press release is, and the formal language used in a press release. Students may not have a strong grasp on knowledge from the unit so far, making it hard for them to understand key ideas from the press release. Students may not have a strong understanding of domain-specific vocabulary. Now, take a look at our Engineered Text Sample. This sample includes our meta-analysis of the purpose of each addition.”

  • In Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners, Leveraging Students’ Home Language, the materials include general guidance to use translanguaging strategies. Students can annotate and take notes in their home language and research in their home language.

Materials present multilingualism as an asset in reading, and students are explicitly encouraged to develop home language literacy and to use their home language strategically for learning how to negotiate texts in the target language. Teacher materials include guidance on how to garner information that will aid in learning, including the family’s preferred language of communication, schooling experiences in other languages, literacy abilities in other languages, and previous exposure to academic or everyday English. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found

Indicator 3T
Read

Materials provide guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon student cultural and social backgrounds to facilitate learning.

The materials include a support section in Teacher Tools that provides teachers with suggestions and methods for preparing lessons for multilingual learners. Materials provide multiple suggestions on how the lessons can be scaffolded for multilingual learners. These suggestions are general in nature and are not lesson-specific, leaving any scaffolding for lessons to be developed by the teacher. The Teacher Tool for Planning for English Learners provides further guidance that tells teachers to consider any connection between a lesson and students’ cultural backgrounds but the resource does not provide any specific guidance on how this should be done. Teachers must investigate and implement strategies on their own. Individual lessons include very limited scaffolding for multilingual learners, and none include connections to linguistics, culture, or conventions used in learning ELA. Suggested scaffolds include audio or visual representations of the text when available.

Materials make limited connections to the linguistic, cultural, and conventions used in learning ELA. Materials make limited connections to the linguistic and cultural diversity to facilitate learning. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In the Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners, Scaffolds for English Learners, the Additional Scaffolds section includes guidance on noticing cognates. Supports range from identifying and interpreting examples of cognates, teaching Greek and Latin roots, and creating cognate reference guides.  

Materials include limited teacher guidance on how to engage culturally diverse students in the learning of ELA. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In the Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners, during Step Four: Take Ownership of Planning for English Learners, guidance advises teachers to plan how they will consider students’ backgrounds when teaching a text. Suggestions include considering if connections can be made to students’ cultural traditions and considering what sociocultural context is relevant to the unit. 

  • In the Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners, Planning for English Learners, Intellectually Preparing a Lesson, Step Two includes planning for how students’ backgrounds will connect to the lesson, including planning for any language demands that will need to be met.  

Materials include limited equity guidance and opportunities. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In the Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners, Planning for English Learners, Intellectually Preparing a Lesson, Step Two states, “Ensure accessibility: What supports will students with higher language proficiency need to access and understand the content? What scaffolds (sensory, graphic, or interactive) are needed?” The guidance also asks educators to consider medium and lower language proficiency needs.

Materials include limited opportunities for students to feel “acknowledged,” such as tasks based on customs of other cultures; sections provided in multiple languages such as the glossary, digital materials, family letters, etc. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Teacher Tools, Supporting English Learners, Leveraging Students’ Home Language, materials provide limited guidance on incorporating students’ holistic and cultural identities into the classroom, including learning about students’ linguistic and cultural backgrounds, inviting family or community members into the classroom, choosing materials that authentically represent students’ language and culture, and using intellectual preparation to plan for including students’ cultural identifies.

Materials include prompts where students are encouraged to share how they (or their parents) do things at home or use information to create personal problems, etc. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found

Indicator 3U
Read

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Indicator 3V
Read

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Criterion 3.4: Intentional Design

Read

The program includes a visual design that is engaging and references or integrates digital technology, when applicable, with guidance for teachers.

Materials do not include digital technology or interactive tools for students to interact with. Although the teacher materials are presented in a digital manner, student materials are printed materials. Because the materials for students are printed, teacher guidance on incorporating technology is limited. Materials are provided in one format with a visual design that supports learning. The design is not distracting or chaotic, and it neither adds to nor distracts from the subject matter.

Indicator 3W
Read

Materials integrate technology such as interactive tools, virtual manipulatives/objects, and/or dynamic software in ways that engage students in the grade-level/series standards, when applicable.

The materials include minimal digital technology or interactive tools for students to interact with. Although the teacher materials are presented in a digital manner, student materials are printed materials. Teachers can access “ready-made slides and handouts which [they] can edit, download, print, or send to Google Classroom.” Materials do not include specific provisions for students to use digital technology in research or composing writing assignments, with the exception of a few opportunities during enrichment. Materials do not include interactive tools, virtual manipulatives/objects, and/or dynamic software in ways that engage students in the grade-level standards. The digital platform is intended for teacher use.

Digital technology and interactive tools, such as data collection tools, simulations, and/or modeling tools are not available to students. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found

Digital tools minimally support student engagement in ELA. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In Science and Social Studies Unit 3, Lesson 26, an Opportunity for Enrichment suggests that students can “use the internet to find additional information about Misty Copeland”. 

Digital materials can be customized for local use (i.e., student and/or community interests). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found

Indicator 3X
Read

Materials include or reference digital technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other, when applicable.

The materials do not include digital technology. The materials do not include any specific opportunities or guidelines for students and/or teachers to collaborate with each other. Materials do not provide opportunities for students to complete activities digitally. Materials do not provide specific guidance requiring students to collaborate digitally with peers or teachers.

Materials include or reference digital technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other, when applicable. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found

Indicator 3Y
Read

The visual design (whether in print or digital) supports students in engaging thoughtfully with the subject, and is neither distracting nor chaotic.

Student materials include images for vocabulary words. The assessments and text-based student materials are easily read, and the structure is easily accessible to students. Materials are provided in one format with a visual design that supports learning. The design is not distracting or chaotic, and it neither adds to nor distracts from the subject matter. Materials include PDF documents that are organized in an accessible way. Materials provide graphic organizers when needed to help students with organization. The use of typography, layout, and space is visually appealing, though there is little variance in color and no engaging images.

Images, graphics, and models support student learning and engagement without being visually distracting. Images, graphics, and models clearly communicate information or support student understanding of topics, texts, or concepts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Each unit contains a vocabulary package, which includes word cards and a student glossary. These two documents contain pictures that showcase an image of each vocabulary word. These images are not distracting and they support students’ learning. 

Teacher and student materials are consistent in layout and structure across lessons/modules/units. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • The vocabulary pages and Target Task that can be created for students are consistent and maintain the same layout. The information is easily identifiable and supports student understanding of the materials. 

  • Throughout the curriculum, the teacher directions are consistent. The format of each lesson plan is the same.

Organizational features (Table of Contents, glossary, index, internal references, table headers, captions, etc.) in the materials are clear, accurate, and error-free. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Student materials do not include organizational features. 

  • Each unit includes a lesson map. The layout is consistent across the curriculum.

Indicator 3Z
Read

Materials provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning, when applicable.

The materials do not include embedded technology. Although teacher materials are digital, the use of technology is limited, and teacher guidance on incorporating technology is limited. Materials do not provide specific lessons that incorporate teaching students how to use technology properly. Although materials include some general suggestions, such as instructing teachers that they should tell students to be certain that the resources they use are reliable, materials do not provide specifics on how to accomplish that task. Rather, teachers would have to develop guidelines and protocols for the use of technology independently. 

Materials provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning, when applicable. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • No evidence found