2024
i-Ready Classroom Mathematics

2nd Grade - Gateway 3

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Cover for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics
Note on review tool versions

See the series overview page to confirm the review tool version used to create this report.

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Gateway Ratings Summary

Usability

Gateway 3 - Meets Expectations
100%
Criterion 3.1: Teacher Supports
9 / 9
Criterion 3.2: Assessment
10 / 10
Criterion 3.3: Student Supports
8 / 8
Criterion 3.4: Intentional Design
Narrative Only

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, 2024 Grade 2 meet expectations for Usability. The materials meet expectations for Criterion 1, Teacher Supports; Criterion 2, Assessment; Criterion 3, Student Supports.

Criterion 3.1: Teacher Supports

9 / 9

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, 2024 Grade 2 meet expectations for Teacher Supports. The materials: provide teacher guidance with useful annotations and suggestions for enacting the student and ancillary materials; contain adult-level explanations and examples of the more complex grade-level concepts and concepts beyond the current grade so that teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject; include standards correlation information that explains the role of the standards in the context of the overall series; provide explanations of the instructional approaches of the program and identification of the research-based strategies; and provide a comprehensive list of supplies needed to support instructional activities. 

Narrative Only
Narrative Only
Narrative Only

Indicator 3a

2 / 2

Materials provide teacher guidance with useful annotations and suggestions for how to enact the student materials and ancillary materials, with specific attention to engaging students in order to guide their mathematical development.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing teacher guidance with useful annotations and suggestions for how to enact the student materials and ancillary materials, with specific attention to engaging students in order to guide their mathematical development. 

Materials provide comprehensive guidance that will assist teachers in presenting the student and ancillary materials. Examples include:

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Preparing for a Unit of Instruction, “Before delivering each unit of instruction, make sure to peruse the unit-level resources in your Teacher’s Guide. Learn about the unit goals by reading the Unit Opener, take note of the vocabulary and language supports, and study the mathematics in the unit by watching the Unit Flow and Progression Video or reading the Math Background pages.” 

    • Program Overview provides the teacher with information on program components and description about i-Ready classroom Mathematics implementation. 

    • Plan is broken down into Unit, Lesson, and Session. 

    • Teach gives information on practice, and differentiation. 

    • Assess includes support for the diagnostic, reports, and data. 

    • Leadership informs the teacher on getting started, building routines, fostering discussions, making connections, and top leader actions. 

  • Program Implementation includes numerous supports such as digital math tools, videos, discourse cards, vocabulary, language routines, graphic organizers, games, correlations with standards and practices, etc.

  • Each unit has a Beginning of Unit document that provides the teacher with extensive information on Unit Flow and Progression, Unit Resources, Unit Opener, Unit Prepare For, Unit Overview, Lesson Progression, Prerequisites Report Overview, Professional Development, Understanding Content Across Grades, Language Expectations, Math Background, Cumulative Practice, Yearly Pacing for Prerequisites, and Unit Lesson Support. Examples include:

    • Unit Opener, Self Check, “Take a few minutes to have each student independently read through the list of skills. Ask students to consider each skill and check the box if it is a skill they think they already have. Remind students that these skills are likely to all be new to them and that over time, they will be able to check off more and more skills.”

    • Prerequisites Report Overview, “Diagnostic data generates the Prerequisites report, which helps you identify students’ prerequisite learning needs and provides guidance on how to best integrate prerequisite instruction into your grade-level scope and sequence for the year.” These are specific to current students and classes providing valuable data about entry points for students. Note: Diagnostic assessments are an optional additional purchase.

    • Under the Prepare column, there is a Unit and Lesson Support document that provides multiple On-the-Spot Teaching Tips for each unit. These tips provide information on what to reinforce from prior learning promoting scaffolding to current content.

Materials include sufficient and useful annotations and suggestions that are presented within the context of the specific learning objectives. Throughout each lesson planning information, there is narrative information to assist the teacher in presenting student materials throughout all phases of the unit and lessons. Examples include:

  • Program Implementation, Teaching & Learning Resources, Discourse Cards, provides instruction on how to use the Math Discourse Cards. “These questions and sentence starters provide a way to engage all students in meaningful mathematical conversations. These cards will help students initiate, deepen, and extend conversations with partners, small groups, or the whole class. Each card has two questions or sentence starters on it-one on the front and one on the back. With each question, be sure to have students explain their reasoning for their response.”

  • Unit 3, Lesson 15, Mental Addition and Subtraction, Explore, Session 1, Teacher Edition, Connect It, Problem 3, “What would be the next number in the skip-counting backward by hundreds pattern above? How do you know?” The Teacher Edition provides guidance for the teacher in the Exit Ticket, “Look for understanding of subtracting 1 from the hundred digit for each skip-counting backward by hundreds. Student responses should include references to the last written number in the pattern as 200, and connect it to the hundreds digit decreasing from 2 to 1. Common Misconception: If students do not identify 100 as the next number or are unclear in their explanations, then have them underline the hundreds digits in each of the numbers of the completed pattern, 700 through 200, to identify the pattern of the hundreds digit decreasing by 1 with each 100 that is skip-counted.”

  • Unit 4, Lesson 23, Estimate and Measure Length, Develop, Session 2, Teacher Edition, Apply It, students answer questions about estimates and measurements of objects. The Teacher Edition provides guidance for the teacher, “For all problems, encourage students to record how they found their estimate or measurement for the length of each object.”

  • Unit 5, Beginning of Unit, Prepare, Unit and Lesson Support, teachers are provided with guidance in using the manipulatives with students. This includes guidance in reviewing the  academic vocabulary associated with partitioning. “Students may benefit from a brief review of the terms halves, half, fourths, and fourth as they relate partitioning shapes into equal parts. Show examples of a shape partitioned into equal parts in more than one way to help students think more flexibly. Emphasize that the parts must be equal in size by showing an example of a shape divided into two parts that are not equal in size.”

  • Unit 5, Lesson 29, Understand Partitioning Shapes into Halves, Thirds, and Fourths, Develop, Session 2, Teacher Edition, Develop, Model It, teachers are prompted to support partner discussion. “As students complete the problems, have them identify that they are being asked to model equal parts of a rectangle. Then have students turn and talk to answer the question: Is there more than one way to correctly divide each shape?” Common Misconception: “If students do not make equal parts, then ask students to restate what equal parts means and how they could check whether the parts are equal when they divide the shape.”

Indicator 3b

2 / 2

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 i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for  containing adult-level explanations and examples of the more complex grade-level concepts and concepts beyond the current course so that teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject. 

The Beginning of Unit section for every unit provides an abundance of information for teachers, including sections to support teachers with adult-level understanding of the content:

  • Math Background includes Unit Themes, Prior Knowledge, and Future Learning. In the Math Background, as well as throughout the teacher materials, there are insights on the concepts taught, Common Misconceptions, and Error Alerts to watch for when students are incorrectly applying skills. 

  • Lesson Progression links each lesson within the current unit to a prior and future lesson so teachers know what students need to know to be successful with the current work as well as what the current work is preparing students for. This is important for a teacher’s complete understanding of how to scaffold and bridge the current content. For example, Unit 2, Lesson 9, Lesson Overview, Teacher Edition, Solve Word Problems withTwo-Digit Numbers - Full Lesson, Learning Progression:

    • “In Grade 1 students solve simple one-step problems involving addition and subtraction within 20. They represent problems with objects, drawings, and equations that use a symbol to replace the unknown.”  

    • “In this Grade 2, students are expected to master solving one- and two-step problems with the unknown in all positions. They model problems using physical objects and diagrams and write equations using a symbol to represent the unknown. In this lesson students interpret and solve one- and two-step word problems involving two-digit numbers. They utilize concepts of fact families by representing a problem using more than one equation. They build fluency with representing and solving word problems using models such as number bonds, bar models, open number lines, and equations.”

    • “In Grade 3 students apply problem-solving strategies to problems involving multiplication and division.  At this level and beyond, students recognize mathematics as a tool for solving problems that arise within the context of a lesson and in daily life.”

  • Understanding Content Across Grades provides explanations of instructional practices as well as information about necessary prior knowledge and concepts beyond the current course for teachers to improve their own knowledge of the subject. For example, Unit 4, Beginning of Unit, Understanding Content Across Grades related to Lesson 23, Estimate and Measure Length:

    • Prior Knowledge: “Insights on: Measuring Length. Children build on the idea of comparing the length of one object to another when they compare the length of an object to an iterated unit of measure. As children align physical units of measure such as connecting cubes or paper clips to an object, they will count the number of units to determine the object’s length…”

    • Current Lesson, “Insights on: Estimating Lengths. Students explore benchmark objects that can be used to approximate measurements; for example, a quarter is about 1 inch across and a crayon is about 1 centimeter across. They use these benchmarks to estimate lengths of an object. Be sure students get many opportunities to estimate lengths of things around them, as this helps develop excellent measurement sense.

    • Future Learning, “Insights on: Representing Fractions. Looking back, students have only used fraction names. In this grade, they will represent fractions symbolically with numerators and denominators. To support conceptual understanding, in third grade the denominators are limited to 2, 3, 4, 6, and 8. Students should have many opportunities to represent fractions with area models by partitioning shapes and with linear models such as number lines or fraction strips. In area models, parts do not have to be the same shape, but they must be the same area.”

  • Each lesson includes a Reteach section with several pages called “Tools for Instruction” that provide explicit teacher guidance related to the current work and to prerequisite skills. These pages include adult explanations, step-by-step guidance for teaching, and check for understanding. For example, Unit 5, Lesson 31, Adding Using Arrays:

    • “Students have previously added using several strategies including making a ten, counting on, and number lines. Students have also learned to skip-count by different numbers. Now, students will use arrays to model repeated addition. Repeated addition can sometimes be difficult for students who struggle with skip-counting. Arrays can be used to provide a visual model to support this skill. This activity will provide a foundation for multiplication and division in future grades.”

    • “Step by Step: 1) Practice skip-counting. Have the students practice skip-counting by twos, threes, and fours up to 24 and by fives up to 25. If the student struggles, provide a hundreds chart and have the student shade in numbers to skip-count. 2) Count tiles in an array using skip-counting. (followed by four prompts) 3) Model an array using an addition equation. (followed by two prompts)”

    • “Check for Understanding: Have the student create an array with 8 rows of 3 tiles. Then have the student write an addition equation to find the total number of tiles. (3+3+3+3+3+3+3+3=24) For the student who struggles, use the table below to help pinpoint where extra help may be needed: “If you observe… the student may… Then try…”

Indicator 3c

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for including standards correlation information that explains the role of the standards in the context of the overall series.

In Program Implementation, correlation information is present for the mathematics standards addressed throughout the grade level using multiple perspectives. For example: 

  • The Correlations document for Content Focus in the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) describes lesson correlation to the CCSSM through multiple lenses. The document identifies the major and supporting areas of focus within the CCSSM, and corresponding lessons that address those standards. Additionally, a table is provided that correlates each lesson with the standards addressed, designating standards as “Focus”, “Developing”, or “Applied” within each lesson. 

  • The Correlations Document also identifies the Standards of Mathematical Practice that are included in each lesson; one table is organized by MP, another is organized by lesson. 

  • The Unit Review Correlation identifies the associated standard and lesson to each problem within the Unit Review, along with their Depth of Knowledge level. 

  • Digital Resource Correlations, Comprehension Check Correlations, and Cumulative Practice Correlations identify the lesson and a statement of the part of the standard it aligns to. 

  • The WIDA PRIME V2 correlates the WIDA Standards Framework to examples in the material with descriptions of how they connect. 

  • The English Language Arts Correlations provides a table that offers evidence of how the Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts are supported in every lesson and unit of the i-Ready Classroom Mathematics material.

In Beginning of Unit for each unit, there are numerous documents provided that contain explanations of the role of the specific grade-level mathematics in the context of the series. For example: 

  • The Lesson Progression provides a flow chart delineating how each standard in the current lesson builds upon the previous grade levels and connects to future grade levels. This is developed in detail with examples in the Understanding Content Across Grades document. 

  • There is a Unit Flow and Progression video for teachers that provides background about the content covered in the unit. 

  • The Unit and Lesson Support document provides descriptions of the standards addressed in each unit with connections to prerequisites and teaching tips about prior knowledge. For example, Unit 4, Beginning of Unit, Unit and Lesson Support, the opening narrative provides the content of the unit, “In this unit, students build on what they know about measuring length to measure using standard units. They compare units of measurement such as inches, feet, yards, centimeters, and meters to develop an understanding of the relative size of those units. Students also explore benchmark objects that can be used to estimate the lengths of objects using standard units. They extend their knowledge of measurement as iterating units as they represent whole numbers as lengths on number lines and represent addition and subtraction problems on number lines. They also measure lengths and make line plots to display measurement data.” The document continues with Instructional Support identifying specific lessons from prior grades to develop understanding such as Unit 4, Lesson 20 - 24, “These lessons build on students’ understanding of comparing lengths of objects and using nonstandard units to measure length from Grade 1, Unit 5.”

  • In every teacher's Lesson Overview, the Learning Progression identifies how the standard is addressed in earlier grades, in the current lesson, next lesson, and in the next grade level. For example, Unit 2, Lesson 7, Overview, Learning Progression, “In Grade 1, students subtract within 20, recognizing when decomposing a number leads to a ten and utilizing addition to solve subtraction problems. Students subtract multiples of ten within 100 and mentally find 10 more or less than a given number. In this lesson, students subtract a two-digit number from another two-digit number by counting back to a ten and by decomposing a ten. Students interpret picture models, number models, and open number lines to understand subtraction of two-digit numbers. They also estimate differences by using quick drawings or open number lines to identify easier numbers that are close to the original numbers. In Grade 3, students fluently add and subtract numbers within 1,000. They apply concepts of place value to division and recognize the role of subtraction in division with a remainder as well as in the division of multi-digit numbers.”

Indicator 3d

Narrative Only

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 reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 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.

In each lesson, Family Letter describes the learning in the unit and ways to encourage family involvement in the lessons. The family letter is provided in the following languages: Spanish, Arabic, Korean, Mandarin, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Tagalog, and Vietnamese. For example:

  • Unit 2, Lesson 10, Solve Word Problems Involving Money, Family Letter, “This week your child is learning about finding the value of money and solving word problems involving coins and bills. Your child will learn that a penny has a value of 1, a nickel has a value of 5¢, a dime has a value of 10¢, and a quarter has a value of 25¢...Invite your child to share what they know about money by doing the following activity together.” This is followed by a counting money activity to practice at home with family.

i-Ready homepage, there is a link to i-Ready Success Central where many resources are located. One of these is Building a Community of Learners, Team Up with Families, which provides resources for engaging parents and caregivers as members of the teaching and learning team. For example:

  • i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Family Guide, includes ideas on how to support and inspire students’ success in mathematics including videos, games, digital math tools, and sample problems.

  • Introduce i-Ready Classroom Mathematics to Families and Caregivers PowerPoint is a presentation that describes the elements of the program and what a class looks like when the program is implemented.

  • i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Family Center main page has information about i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, tips to support students at home, FAQs, a link to download the Math Discourse Cards for home, and information on the Try-Discuss-Connect Routine.

  • i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Family Center menu provides downloadable guides on how to encourage student success related to assessing at home, supportive phrases, and understanding diagnostic data.

  • Help, Find Resources takes you to i-Ready Success Central. Engage Your Community, Connect with Families has documents to enhance communication with families such as the “Data Chats Guide” and a link to the PowerPoint presentation that helps families understand the i-Ready program. There is also a link to the Family Center.

Indicator 3e

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing explanations of the instructional approaches of the program and identification of the research-based strategies.

There are thorough explanations of the instructional approaches of the program. These are easily found under Program Implementation and in Classroom Central. For example:

  • Program Implementation, “Try-Discuss-Connect Routine Resources”, is embedded throughout the program. “i-Ready Classroom Mathematics empowers all students to own their learning through a discourse-based instructional routine. Lessons are divided into Explore, Develop, and Refine sessions and are taught over the course of a week. In Explore and Develop sessions teachers facilitate mathematical discourse through a Try-Discuss-Connect instructional routine.” In i-Ready Classroom Central, videos model the six steps of the Try-Discuss-Connect routine as well as an Exit Ticket.

  • Program Implementation, User Guide, Protocols for Engagement, describes multiple protocols and identifies the traits each protocol validates to help all students “feel accepted and included. Protocols provide structure for activities so that all students have a chance to think, talk, and participate equally in classroom activities. Each protocol incorporates modes of communication common to one or more cultures and leverages those behaviors for a particular instructional purpose.” For example, “Stand and Share: Students stand when they have something to share with the class. Validates: spontaneity, movement, subjectively, connectedness.” Protocols can be found in the Lesson Overview section of the Teacher Guide.

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Building Community, Promote Collaborative Learning, has resources such as using Lesson 0 to introduce the Try-Discuss-Connect Routine and language routines, questions to support discourse, videos about sharing math ideas, ideas for promoting mathematical practices, and creating a positive mindset. 

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, has a link in the upper right under the search box called Explore all Resources that has all of the additional resources organized in a list of links by category that provide abundant information, including a section called Program Overview.

Materials include relevant research sources. In Program Implementation, Supporting Research, “i-Ready Classroom Mathematics is built on research from a variety of federal initiatives, national mathematics organizations, and experts in mathematics.” A table describes 16 concepts that are embedded in the program with examples of how and where each is used, an excerpt from the research that supports it, as well as an extensive reference list. Examples include: 

  • “The Concrete-Representational-Abstract (CRA) Model is a three-part instructional model that enhances students’ mathematical learning.” This model is built into all i-Ready Classroom Mathematics lessons in the Try It, Discuss It, Connect It, and Hands-On Activities. “Using and connecting representations leads students to deeper understanding. Different representations, including concrete models, pictures, words, and numbers, should be introduced, discussed, and connected to support students in explaining their thinking and reasoning.” (Clements and Sarama, 2014)

  • “Collaborative learning (partner or small group) encourages students to present and defend their ideas, make sense of and critique the ideas of others, and refine and amend their approaches.” Lessons provide multiple opportunities for collaborative learning during Discuss It and Pair/Share. “Research tells us that when students work collaboratively, which also gives them opportunities to see and understand mathematics connections, equitable outcomes result.” (Boaler, 2016)

  • “An instructional framework supports students in achieving mathematical proficiency and rigor within a collaborative structure to develop greater understanding of how to reason mathematically.” The Try-Discuss-Connect instructional framework is foundational in this program. “Instructional routines are situated in the learning opportunity itself, providing students with a predictable frame for engaging with the content…” (Kelemanik, Lucenta, & Creighton, 2016)

  • Program Implementation, User Guide, Routines that Empower Students identifies 9 research-based language routines. Each routine includes the purpose, the process, and which part of the Try-Discuss-Connect Routine it can be used with. For example, Say It Another Way is used with Try It, “Why: This routine helps students paraphrase a word problem or text so they know if they have understood it. It provides an opportunity to self-correct or to ask for clarification and ensures that the class hears the problem or story more than once and in more than one way.”

Indicator 3f

1 / 1

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing a comprehensive list of supplies needed to support instructional activities. 

The Lesson Overview for the teacher provides a Materials required column for each lesson on the Pacing Guide; additional materials are listed in the Differentiation column. Any materials that need to be printed are also provided in the Overview, such as grid paper or double number lines. For example:

  • Unit 1, Lesson 3, Session 3, “Materials tab: Math Toolkit bar models, counters, 10-frames, Presentation Slides. Differentiation Tab: for each student: 20 counters, 1 small paper plate, 1 large paper plate.”

Under Program Implementation, a Manipulatives List provides a document identifying manipulatives needed for each lesson K-8. For example: 

  • Manipulative List, Unit 4, Lesson 24, identifies centimeter ruler - 1 per student, set of centimeter tiles - 1 per student, inch/centimeter ruler or yardstick and meter stick - 1 per student, and inch ruler - 1 per student. 

Program Implementation also includes digital math tools, discourse cards and cubes, activity sheets, data sets, and graphic organizers.

Indicator 3g

Narrative Only

This is not an assessed indicator in Mathematics.

Indicator 3h

Narrative Only

This is not an assessed indicator in Mathematics.

Criterion 3.2: Assessment

10 / 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 reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, 2024 Grade 2 meet expectations for Assessment. The materials identify the content standards and mathematical practices assessed in formal assessments. The materials provide multiple opportunities to determine students' learning and sufficient guidance to teachers for interpreting student performance, and suggestions for following-up with students. The materials include opportunities for students to demonstrate the full intent of grade-level standards and mathematical practices across the series. 

Narrative Only

Indicator 3i

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for having assessment information included in the materials to indicate which standards are assessed.

In the Teacher Toolbox, each lesson includes Assess which provides Lesson Quizzes & Unit Assessments. Lesson Quizzes, Teacher Guide lists information correlated to each problem: tested skills, content standards, mathematical practice standards, DOK levels, error alerts, problem notes, Short Response Scoring Rubric with points and corresponding expectations, and worked-out problems. For example:

  • Unit 2, Lesson 10, Lesson Quiz, Problem 1, “DOK 2, 2.MD.C.8, SMP 7.”

Assess, End of Unit, Unit Assessments, Teacher Guide, Forms A and B are provided and include the content item with a solution. Form A includes Problem Notes, worked-out problems, DOK levels, content standards, Scoring Guide, Scoring Rubrics, and Responding to Student Needs. Form B appears to parallel all of the correlations provided for Form A, though it is not labeled. It is noted in the Scoring Guide, “For the problems in the Unit 4 Unit Assessments (Forms A and B), the table shows: depth of knowledge (DOK) level, points for scoring, standard addressed, and lesson assessed by each problem.” For example:

  • Unit 4, End of Unit, Assess, Unit Assessment, Form A, Problem Notes, Problem 5, “DOK 1, 2.MD.A.1.”

  • Unit 7, End of Unit, Assess, Unit Assessment, Form A, Problem Notes, Problem 12, “DOK 2, 2.G.A.2.”

Digital Comprehension Checks “...can be given as an alternative to the print Unit Assessment. For this comprehension check, the table below provides the Depth of Knowledge (DOK), standard assessed, and the corresponding lesson assessed by each problem.” While the Comprehension Checks identify the content standards, they do not identify the mathematical practices. For example:

  • Unit 1, End of Unit, Assess, Comprehension Check Correlation Guide, Problem 6, “DOK 2, 2.MD.D.10.”

Indicator 3j

4 / 4

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 i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for including an assessment system that 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 assessment system provides opportunities to determine students’ learning that include teacher support for interpreting student performance in the Problem Notes and Rubrics provided, though the rubrics are generic rather than specific to the lesson. Examples include:

  • Problem Notes for each problem in the Lesson Quizzes and Form A of the Unit Assessment provide guidance on steps to solve the problem and what students may have done incorrectly. For example:

    • Unit 1, Lesson 4, Assess, Lesson Quiz, Problem 1, “C; Students can solve the problem by comparing the number of dolls and chairs. A is incorrect because there are 3 more books than lamps. B is incorrect because there are 3 more books than chairs. D  is incorrect because there are more books than any other thing.”

    • Unit 2, End of Unit, Assess, Unit Assessment, Form A, Problem 5, “See possible solutions on student page. Students’ responses may include any combination of bills totaling $75.” 

  • Lesson Quizzes contain a Fill-in-the-Blank/Multiple Select/Choice Matrix Scoring Rubric and a Short Response Scoring Rubric. The Fill-in-the-Blank Scoring Rubric states: 2 points if, “Response contains the following: correct answer(s).” 1 point if, “Response contains the following: “One answer is correct.” 0 points if, “Response contains the following: Incorrect answers that do not demonstrate the correct mathematical procedures and/or thinking.” The Multiple Select/Choice Matrix Scoring Rubric states: “2 Points All answers are correct, 1 Point 1 incorrect answer, and 0 Points 2 or more incorrect answers.” The Short Response Scoring Rubric states: 2 points if the “Response contains the following: Correct computation,  solutions, and/or calculations; Well-organized work demonstrating thorough understanding of math concepts and/or procedures.” 1 point for “Response contains the following: mostly correct solution(s); Shows partial or good understanding of math concepts and/or procedures.” 0 points if the “Response contains the following: Incorrect solution(s);  No attempt at finding a solution; No effort to demonstrate an understanding of the math concepts and/or procedures.”

  • Unit Assessments contain the Extended Response Scoring Rubric (if there is an extended response question included in the assessment), Short Response Scoring Rubric, and a rubric for Fill-in-the-Blank/Multiple Select/Choice Matrix. For example, the Extended Response Scoring Rubric, a response should earn 4 points if, “Response has the correct computation,  solutions, and/or calculations; Well-organized work demonstrating thorough understanding of math concepts.” This same expectation scores a 2 on the Short Response Scoring Rubric. The Fill-in-the-Blank/Multiple Select/Choice Matrix Scoring Rubric is the same as the Lesson Quizzes.

The Lesson Quizzes and Unit Assessments provide sufficient guidance to teachers to follow-up with students, although there is no follow-up guidance for the Comprehension Checks. The follow up suggestions reference previous work rather than new material. For example:

  • Unit 1, End of Unit, Assess, Unit Assessment, Form A, provides a section called Responding to Student Needs. This section directs teachers back to the relevant lessons for review and where teachers can access the Review, Reinforce, and Extend options. “For students who answer problems incorrectly on the Unit Assessment, choose from the following resources on the Teacher Toolbox for additional support. Reteach Tools for Instruction, Addition/Subtraction Fact Families (Lesson 2), Draw and Use Bar Graphs and Picture Graphs (Lesson 4), Solve Two-Step Addition and Subtraction Word Problems (Lesson 5). For students who exceed proficiency on the Unit Assessment, choose from the following activities on the Teacher Toolbox. Extend Enrichment Activities Mystery Number (Lesson 2), Graph It (Lesson 2), Silver Coins (Lesson 5).”

  • Unit 2, Lesson 11, Assess, Lesson Quiz provides three types of differentiation for possible follow up depending on student performance: Reteach, Reinforce, and Extend. Implementation Guide, Program Overview, Differentiation, “Reteach: Tools for Instruction are mini-lessons for reteaching lesson concepts. Reinforce: learning games offer fun, challenging, and personalized practice and help students develop a growth mindset. Extend: Enrichment Activities challenge students with higher-order thinking tasks.”

Indicator 3k

4 / 4

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing assessments that include opportunities for students to demonstrate the full intent of grade-level standards and practices across the series. 

There are formative and summative assessments provided as PDFs as well as comparable assessments provided online. Lesson Quizzes and Unit Assessments provided include a variety of item types for students to demonstrate grade-level expectations. For example:

  • Fill-in-the-blank

  • Multiple select

  • Matching

  • Graphing

  • Constructed response (short and extended responses)

  • Technology-enhanced items (e.g., drag and drop, drop-down menus, matching) 

Throughout the lessons, there are opportunities to demonstrate critical thinking, develop arguments, or apply learning in a performance task, though these are not typically on the assessments.

Indicator 3l

Narrative Only

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 provide assessments which offer accommodations that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills without changing the content of the assessment.

There is support in place for online assessments such as the Diagnostics and Comprehension Checks that make the material more accessible to all students. However, there is no specific support provided for assessments that are not online such as Lesson Quizzes and Unit Assessments. 

  • I-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Plan & Teach, Differentiate, Support All Learners, Accessibility and Accommodations, Create Create Accessible Experiences With Your Program,  Accessibility and Accommodations Update, “To make i-Ready Classroom Mathematics accessible to the widest population of students, we offer a range of accessibility supports that may also meet the requirements of a number of student accommodations.” The table provided lists the Universal Supports, Designated Supports, and Accommodations that are both embedded and not embedded in the program. For example, embedded supports include audio support and text-to-speech, closed captioning, calculator, zoom in/out, highlighting, and more. Available non-embedded supports include Native language translation of directions, noise buffer, alternate response options, scribe, and more. 

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Assess & Use Data, Learn The Basics, Comprehension Checks, Create & Assign Comprehension Checks – Guide, “Comprehension Checks Digital Comprehension Checks allow you to assess student learning at the pace of your core mathematics instruction. Assign precreated Comprehension Check forms or create your own to gauge student understanding after teaching an i-Ready Classroom Mathematics lesson or unit. Test forms are customizable. Questions can be removed or added from other tests to meet specific goals. Comprehension Checks can be assigned to the whole class or individual students. Note: Comprehension Checks are comparable but not identical to the print Lesson Quizzes and Unit Assessments found on the Teacher Toolbox. Comprehension Checks cover the same content, standards, and complexity as the corresponding print assessments. Educators should use either print quizzes or digital Comprehension Checks, but not both.”

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Plan & Teach, Differentiate, Support All Learners, Create Accessible Experiences with Your Program, Accessible Versions of Student Print Materials – FAQ, “How do I access accessible versions of student resources found only on Teacher Toolbox? In 2020, NIMAC released a notice of interpretation (NOI) regarding digital files. This NOI includes information about the types of digital files NIMAC accepts and specifies that they must be student facing and printable/non-interactive documents (composed of just text and static images). For the national edition of the i-Ready Classroom Mathematics ©2024 update in English, all student-facing ancillaries that lend themselves to the NIMAS format have been submitted to NIMAC for the procurement of accessible versions. More information can be found in this NIMAS FAQ.”

Criterion 3.3: Student Supports

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, 2024 Grade 2 meet expectations for Student Supports. The materials provide: strategies and supports for students in special populations and for students who read, write, and/or speak in a language other than English to support their regular and active participation in learning grade-level mathematics; multiple extensions and/or opportunities for students to engage with grade-level mathematics at higher levels of complexity; and manipulatives, both virtual and physical, that are accurate representations of the mathematical objects they represent and, when appropriate, are connected to written methods.

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Indicator 3m

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Materials provide strategies and supports for students in special populations to support their regular and active participation in learning grade-level/series mathematics.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing strategies and supports for students in special populations to support their regular and active participation in learning grade-level mathematics.

Materials regularly provide strategies, supports, and resources for students in special populations to help them access grade-level mathematics. i-Ready Success Central provides many suggestions and examples for how to accommodate and support special populations. Lessons have sections called Group & Differentiate to help special populations. Lesson quizzes have suggestions for reteaching. Examples of supports for special populations include:

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Plan & Teach, Differentiate, provides information to support the teacher in planning for all special populations. Personalized Instruction provides resources for students who have taken the Diagnostic and will have access to online learning and instructional paths tailored to their individual needs to reinforce prerequisite skills and build grade-level skills. Support Small Group Instruction, “Every student can excel in mathematics with the right supports. Check out the resources below to help you plan for, organize, and facilitate small groups so you can meet the various needs of your students.” Support All Learners, “Every student can excel in mathematics with the right supports. Use the resources on this page to find ideas and strategies for adapting your instruction to meet the unique needs and learning styles of all students.” There are several links to documents to support teachers. For example:

    • Supporting Students' Needs – Reference Sheet, provides information regarding “Optional built-in supports embedded in i-Ready Classroom Mathematics that educators can choose from to best meet the needs of their students. These resources can be used to: Scaffold instruction by breaking learning experiences into smaller parts to help students reach higher levels of comprehension and skills acquisition with temporary supports along the way Differentiate instruction to meet individual students’ needs by modifying content, altering the delivery method, and/or providing alternate learning tasks.”

    • Tools for Accessible Instruction – Reference Sheet “Highlights i-Ready Classroom Mathematics supplemental tools and examples of student supports that can be used throughout a lesson and session. Examples of student supports may have some overlap with a student’s IEP/504 plan but should not supersede or contradict it, and they may be useful for students regardless of whether or not they have an IEP/504 plan in place.” For example, during Try It, a suggested support is, “Offer multiple means of representation, engagement, and action and expression such as: highlight important numbers, words, and phrases; Invite volunteers to act out the problem for the class; Offer options for how students express their ideas.” During Discuss It, “Use hand signals to agree, disagree, or share an idea.”

  • In Refine, the last session of each lesson, the teacher’s edition provides suggestions to Group & Differentiate, “Identify groupings for differentiation based on the Start and problems 1-3. A recommended sequence of activities for each group is suggested below. Use the resources on the next page to differentiate and close the lesson.” Resources are suggested for groups Approaching Proficiency, Meeting Proficiency, and Extending Beyond Proficiency. 

  • At the end of the Lesson Quiz in the Teacher’s edition, there is a section for differentiation that provides suggestions for Reteach (Tools for Instruction), Reinforce (Math Center Activity), and Extend (Enrichment Activity). Program Implementation, Program Overview, Differentiation, Reteach, “Tools for instruction are mini-lessons for reteaching lesson concepts.” Reinforce, “Learning Games offer fun, challenging, and personalized practice and help students develop a growth mindset.” Extend, “Enrichment Activities Challenge students with higher-order thinking tasks.”

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Materials provide extensions and/or opportunities for students to engage with grade-level/course-level mathematics at higher levels of complexity.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing extensions and/or opportunities for students to engage with grade-level mathematics at higher levels of complexity. 

Materials do not require advanced students to do more assignments than their classmates. Instead, students have opportunities to think differently about learning with alternative questioning, or extension activities. Specific recommendations are routinely highlighted as Teacher Notes within parts of each lesson, as noted in the following examples:

  • Each lesson has an Extend: Enrichment Activities column that provides an additional challenge task. For example, Unit 3, Lesson 12, Extend, Who Is Correct?, students are provided with a challenge situation. “Kim and Jim each make a statement about how many tens are in 352. Kim says 352 has 5 tens in it. Jim says 352 has 35 tens in it. 1. In what way is Kim correct? Use pictures to help explain. 2. In what way is Jim correct? Use pictures to help explain. How many tens are in 110? Make your own statement about how many tens are in 110. How can you use pictures to explain?”

  • Refine sessions at the end of each lesson provide recommendations for students that demonstrate understanding “Extending Beyond Proficiency” to engage in problems for reinforcement and a challenge. The number of problems is the same as the work for students who are considered to be “Meeting Proficiency”. Additional Enrichment Activities can be found online in the Small Group Differentiation Extend section. In addition, Refine sessions include at least 1 problem identified as DOK 3 where students utilize strategic thinking. 

  • In Explore and Develop sessions in each lesson, the materials contain Differentiation: Extend Deepen Understanding or Challenge for the lesson’s key concepts through the use of discourse with students. For example, Unit 5, Lesson 28, Session 2, Teacher Guide, Differentiation: Extend - Deepen Understanding, “Display a square and a rectangle. Ask A square can also be called a rectangle. Why?...Ask Why are squares and rectangles also called quadrilaterals?...Display a square, trapezoid, and rectangle. Ask What is one name that you can use for all of these shapes? Explain.”

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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 reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 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. 

Students engage with problem-solving in a variety of ways within a consistent lesson structure. Lesson types have three structures: “i-Ready Classroom Mathematics has three different types of lessons to address the unique approaches of the standards and to support a balance of conceptual understanding, application, and procedural fluency.” Examples:

  • The Teacher’s Guide provides a lesson structure and instructional routine for the lessons by implementing the Try It-Discuss It-Connect It Routine. Unit 1, Lesson 0, Understanding the Try-Discuss-Connect Instructional Routine, “i-Ready Classroom Mathematics empowers all students to own their learning through a discourse-based instructional routine. Lessons are divided into Explore, Develop, and Refine sessions and are taught over the course of a week. In Explore and Develop sessions teachers facilitate mathematical discourse through a Try-Discuss-Connect instructional routine. ” This routine provides teachers with a way to deliver instruction that encourages students to take ownership of their learning through mathematical discourse and problem-solving.

  • Beginning of Unit, Unit Opener, provides a single page self-check list of student-friendly skills for students to check off skills they know before each unit and after each lesson. Each unit concludes with a Self-Reflection, Vocabulary Review, and Unit Review.

  • The Teacher's Guide suggests appropriate places for students to think independently before sharing in small or large groups. Discuss It provides opportunities for students to work in a small group before whole-class discussion. Discussion prompts help students explain their understanding such as “Why did you choose the model or strategy you used?” or “How did your model help you make sense of the problem?” 

  • End of Unit includes a Self Reflection. Students work in pairs to think about what they learned. Unit 1, End of Unit, Self Reflection, “Two important things I learned are…, Something I know well is…, I could use more practice with…”

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 provide opportunities for teachers to use a variety of grouping strategies.

The materials provide opportunities for teachers to use a variety of grouping strategies. Teacher suggestions include guidance for a variety of groupings, including whole group, small group, pairs, or individual. Examples include:

  • The Teacher’s Guide includes a “Prepare For” section of each lesson which includes guidance for the teacher on how and when to use grouping strategies. For example: Unit 4, Lesson 22, Session 1, Teacher Guide, Prepare for Measuring with Different Units, “Ask students to share aloud via think-pair-share how they knew the correct answer. What was the clue? If centimeters was missing, would they have been able to answer the question? Reinforce the importance of looking for and including the unit of length in every problem they answer to ensure that they answer it correctly.”

  • Some lessons in the Refine Session have instructions for Group & Differentiate. “Identify grouping for differentiation based on the Start and problems 1-3. A recommended sequence of activities for each group is suggested below. Use the resources on the next page to differentiate and close the lesson.” 

  • Program Implementation, Try-Discuss-Connect Routine Resources, Grouping Strategies for Success states, “All students, including English language learners, benefit from participating in a variety of instructional groupings. Successful grouping strategies take into account the activity’s purpose as well as students’ content and language strengths and personal backgrounds.” The document provides a list of factors and guidelines to consider when grouping students. 

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Plan & Teach, Differentiate, Support Small Group Instruction provides documents related to grouping students: Plan for Small Group Instruction, Facilitate Small Group Instruction – Guide and Plan for Small Groups – Teacher Tool share numerous ideas to set up rotations for teacher-led small groups, and a template to support planning for small groups.

Indicator 3q

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing strategies and support for students who read, write, and/or speak in a language other than English to regularly participate in learning grade-level mathematics. 

Guidance is consistently provided for teachers to support students who read, write, and/or speak in a language other than English, providing scaffolds for them to meet or exceed grade-level standards. For example: 

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Plan & Teach, Differentiate, Support All Learners, Supports for English Learners – Reference Sheet, explains where to find and how to use all of the supports built into the Teacher Guide for every lesson to “address the strengths and needs of ELs” such as, Build Your Vocabulary, Connect Language Development to Mathematics, Language Objectives, Connect to Community and Cultural Responsiveness, and Connect to Language Development.

  • Program Implementation, Program Overview, Integrate Language and Mathematics, shows where teachers can access tips for targeted support using Language Routines in the Teacher Guide for every lesson.

  • Program Implementation, Program Overview, Language Development and Discourse Support provides “support at the word/phrase, sentence, and discourse levels so that all students can engage in rigorous mathematics and communicate effectively.”

  • Program Implementation, User Guide, Resources for Language Development describes nine features that are embedded in the teacher materials to “build academic language of all students, especially English learners. These supports help students learn how to communicate effectively across the language domains.”

  • Program Implementation, User Guide, Routines that Empower Students, provides nine language routines. “While these routines support English learners, they are designed to be used by all students as they access mathematical concepts and their growing mathematical understanding.” Three routines, in particular, are differentiated for English Learners: Act it Out, Co-Constructed Word Banks, and Stronger and Clearer Each Time. 

  • Program Implementation, User Guide, Support for Academic Discourse describes “a variety of ways to support students in communicating with academic and math-specific vocabulary and language.”

  • Program Implementation, Discourse Cards, provide sentence starters and questions to help students engage in conversations with their partners, small groups or the whole class such as “Did anyone get a different answer?; What would you add to what was said?”

  • All classroom materials are available in Spanish.

  • Program Implementation, Multilingual Glossary is available in Arabic, Chinese, Haitian Creole, Portuguese, Russian, Tagalog, Urdu, and Vietnamese. There is a Bilingual glossary in the student textbook that includes mathematics vocabulary in English and Spanish.

  • Beginning of Unit, Connect Language Development to Mathematics, Language Expectations for Differentiation is a chart that “shows examples of what English Learners at different levels of English language proficiency can do in connection with one of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) addressed in this unit. As you plan for this unit, use these examples of language expectations to help you differentiate instruction to meet the needs of English Learners.”

  • Beginning of Unit, Build Academic Vocabulary includes a chart of academic words for the units paired with their Spanish cognates. There are three routines provided in Professional Development to support vocabulary development: Math Vocabulary, Academic Vocabulary, and Cognate Support. 

  • Each lesson in Lesson Overview, Teacher Guide’s Full Lesson, includes Language Objectives, Connect to Culture, and Connect to Language. 

  • Session 1 of every lesson uses graphic organizers to help students access prior knowledge and vocabulary they will develop in the lesson. Support for Academic language is used during the “Try-Discuss-Connect Language” routines in each lesson. 

  • All sessions throughout the lesson embed support including references back to previously listed items.

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 provide a balance of images or information about people, representing various demographic and physical characteristics.

The materials represent a balance of people, settings, and ethnic traditions. In addition, every Lesson Overview, Teacher Guide Full Lesson has a “Connect to Culture” page that provides background knowledge connected to lesson problems “to leverage the diverse backgrounds and experiences of all students.” Examples include but are not limited to:

  • Unit 1, Lesson 6 includes the names Kelvin, Nasha, Pala, Maria, Enrico, Noe, Ms. Ling, Gaspar, Matt, Anana, Danny, Tessa, Diaz family, Jamila, Cyrus, Valeria, Iman, Ramla, Savanna, Ade, Joy, Mrs. Gordon, Ronan, Pablo, Alex, and Britta as people within the problems of the lesson. 

  • Unit 3, Lesson 18, Session 3, Try It, provides a shadow puppet play as the context for the problem. “A theater has 500 tickets for a shadow puppet play. After the first week, there are 278 tickets left. How many tickets did the theater sell during the first week?” The accompanying photographs include shadow puppets. Teacher Edition, Lesson Overview, Connect to Culture, Session 3, p. 450a, further explains shadow puppets as an important art form in China, India, Indonesia, and Turkey, and provides opportunities for students to share their connections and experiences.

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 provide guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon student home language to facilitate learning. 

Encouragement for teachers to draw upon student home language in order to facilitate learning is provided primarily for Spanish-speaking students. For example:

  • The materials contain a cognate support routine in Unit 1, Beginning of Unit, Build Your Vocabulary, Cognate Support, students are introduced to Latin cognates. The “Cognate Support Routine” provides instructions for teachers:

  1. “Ask students if any of the academic words look or sound similar to a word in their first language. Have students circle those words in their book.

  2. Check to see if the words they have circled are cognates.

  3. Explain to students that words in two languages that share the same or similar meaning, spelling, and pronunciation are called cognates.

  4. Write the cognates and have students copy them in their book next to the academic words.

  5. Say each of the cognates aloud or ask a native-speaker volunteer to model pronunciation and have students repeat.”

  • Each Lesson Overview has a Connect to Language Development chart. Each session in each lesson has a Connect to Language Development chart. Unit 1, Lesson 1, Lesson Overview, Connect to Language Development, “For English learners, use the Differentiation chart to plan and prepare for activities in every session.”

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Teach & Plan, Differentiate, Support All Learners, Supports for English Learners-Reference Sheet, “Throughout i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, a variety of supports help students develop their ability to understand and use the specialized academic language of mathematics. While English Learners will benefit from language supports intended for all learners, the program also includes specific supports that address the strengths and needs of ELs.” Unit-Level Language Supports are Build Your Vocabulary and Connect Language Development to Mathematics. Build Your Vocabulary is located in the Teacher’s Edition “at the beginning of every unit. Use this page at the beginning of every unit to help students connect words they already know to words they will use in the unit and throughout their mathematics learning experience…” Connect Language Development to Mathematics is found in the Teacher’s Edition at the beginning of every unit. “The Language Expectations chart at the beginning of every unit provides teachers with examples of what English Learners at different levels of language proficiency can typically do…” 

  • Each lesson includes Family Letters which, “provide background information and include an activity.” They are designed to inform families of their student’s learning and create an opportunity for family involvement. Letters available include English, Spanish, Arabic, Korean, Mandarin, Portuguese, Russian, Tagalog, and Vietnamese. 

  • Program Implementation, Multilingual Glossary is available in Arabic, Chinese, Haitian Creole, Portuguese, Russian, Tagalog, Urdu, and Vietnamese. There is a Bilingual glossary in the student textbook that includes mathematics vocabulary in English and Spanish.

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 provide guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon student cultural and social backgrounds to facilitate learning.

Every Lesson Overview, Teacher Guide Full Lesson has Connect to Culture, “Use these activities to connect with and leverage the diverse backgrounds and experiences of all students. Engage students in sharing what they know about contexts before you add the information given here.” Examples include but are not limited to:

  • Unit 3, Lesson 19, Teacher Edition, Overview, Connect to Culture, Session 2, “Dreamcatchers are a tradition of some Native American people. They likely originated from the Anishinaabe (Ah NISH in NAW bay) people. Dreamcatchers are made by weaving a web on a wooden hoop and may include beads and feathers. Traditionally, dreamcatchers are hung above sleeping areas and are believed to stop bad dreams while allowing good dreams to pass through. Encourage students to share other arts and crafts that are parts of their culture.” This is background information for Try It, “Aki makes dream catchers with her parents. They use 16 blue beads and 41 brown beads. They also use 22 purple beads and 39 white beads. How many beads do Aki and her parents use in all?” 

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Materials provide supports for different reading levels to ensure accessibility for students.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 provide supports for different reading levels to ensure accessibility for students. 

The materials include strategies to engage students in reading and accessing grade-level mathematics. There are multiple entry points that present a variety of representations to help struggling readers to access and engage in grade-level mathematics. For example:

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Differentiate, Support Every Learner, Reference Sheet: Supplemental Tools for Accessible Mathematics Instruction, Accessibility and Accommodations with i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, Accessibility and Accommodations Update, students can access Text-to-Speech on the Student Bookshelf digital version of the textbook. Other available universal supports that could be helpful are color contrast, highlighting and note-taking capability, and use of visual mathematical models.

  • Program Implementation, User Guide, Routines that Empower Students provides multiple routines that support reading comprehension, especially Three Reads and Say It Another Way. These routines are embedded in lessons. For example:

    • Unit 2, Lesson 7, Subtract Two-Digit Numbers, Session 3, Teacher Edition, Try It, engages students in the Three Reads routine to make sense of the problem. “Before students work on Try It, use Three Reads to help them make sense of the problem. After the third read, have students turn and talk with a partner to identify the important quantities in the problem?” 

  • To support vocabulary development, teachers should implement the “Academic Vocabulary” routine described in the Professional Learning to provide explicit instruction and active engagement. Another suggestion to support students to move from informal to more formal academic language is by using the “Collect and Display” routine. For example:

    • Unit 3, Lesson 18, Session 3, Teacher Edition, Develop Academic Language, “Why? Reinforce understanding of the multiple meaning word left. How? Explain that the word left has more than one meaning. It can refer to a side or a direction. Hold up your left hand. Say: This is my left hand. Encourage students to hold up their left hand. Then explain that the left can also refer to the number of something that remains when a quantity has been taken away. Provide the problem 5-2. Ask students how much is left when 2 is subtracted from 5. Confirm that 3 is left.”

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Differentiate, Support Every Learner, Reference Sheet - Supplemental Tools for Accessible Mathematics Instruction, “This resource highlights i-Ready Classroom Mathematics supplemental tools and examples of student supports that can be used throughout a lesson and session.” Examples of Student Supports include: Highlight important numbers, words, and phrases; Invite volunteers to act out the problem for the class; Offer options for how students express their ideas; Provide graphic organizer for students to record thinking. 

  • End of Unit, Vocabulary Review provides an opportunity for students to check their understanding of the terms in the unit.

  • End of Unit, Literacy Connection - Passage from Ready Reading as well as Literacy Connection Problems is provided. Students complete math problems directly connected to the reading passage. There is no support accessing the text included in the iReady Mathematics Program. This provides additional practice, though there is no explicit reading support provided for comprehension of the passage.

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Manipulatives, both virtual and physical, are accurate representations of the mathematical objects they represent and, when appropriate, are connected to written methods.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 meet expectations for providing manipulatives, both virtual and physical, that are accurate representations of the mathematical objects they represent and, when appropriate, are connected to written methods.

Students have access to both virtual and physical manipulatives throughout the program. For example:

  • Program Implementation, Digital Tools, are available for students. These tools include Counters and Connecting Cubes, Base-Ten Blocks, Number Line, Multiplication Models, Perimeter and Area, and Fraction Models. Also in Program Implementation, support videos are available for each of the digital tools, explaining how they may be used and their functions. 

  • Program Implementation, Manipulative List, Manipulative Kit, includes Base-Ten Flats, Base-Ten Rods, Base-Ten Units, Blank Cubes, Linking Cubes, Two-Color Counters, Tape Measure, Ruler. 

  • Program Implementation, Manipulative List by Lesson has specific manipulatives listed for each lesson. For example, Unit 2, Lesson 8: Set of base-ten blocks; connecting cubes. There is also a Manipulative Suggestions for At-Home Use document that provides ideas for using items commonly found at home or easily created that could be used in place of the actual manipulative (e.g. Linking Cubes could be replaced with Lego bricks). 

  • Program Implementation, Activity Sheet Resources, K-5 Activity Sheet Resources includes a 172-page document full of visual models such as number lines, graphs, grid paper, graphic organizers, etc. 

Program Implementation, Try-Discuss-Connect Routine Resources, Understanding the Try-Discuss-Connect Instructional Routine, the foundational Try-Discuss-Connect routine is designed to “encourage proficiency and rigor within a collaborative structure.” A primary purpose is to “expose students to a number of representations and approaches” to help them make connections, develop mathematical language and thinking, and improve written and oral communication skills. This routine helps students transition from manipulatives to written methods. For example: 

  • In the Try It activity, “students have access to a variety of tools and manipulatives to use to represent the problem situation.” During the Discuss It activity, “Students present and explain their solution methods and listen to and critique the reasoning of others, models and representations.” During the Connect It activity, “Students write their answers to Connect It questions independently (or in pairs to support language production, as needed) to solidify understanding and make further connections.” 

  • “Tip: If students are struggling with writing responses…. have multiple students share answers orally while writing key words or phrases on the board. Have students use these key words and phrases to write their own response to the question in their worktexts.”

  • “Tip: Encourage students to represent and solve problems in more than one way to build flexibility in their thinking.”

The Try-Discuss-Connect routine also integrates the Concrete-Representational-Abstract (CRA) model, for example:

  • Try It, “Students may use concrete, representational, or abstract strategies to solve the problem, based on their understanding of the problem or mathematical concept.”

  • Discuss It, “Students who use more concrete approaches begin to make connections to representational or abstract approaches as they engage in partner discussions.”

  • Connect It, “Through the Connect It questions, students connect concrete and representational approaches to more abstract understanding as they formalize their connections.”

Criterion 3.4: Intentional Design

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics, 2024  Grade 2 integrate technology such as interactive tools, virtual manipulatives/objects, and/or dynamic mathematics software in ways that engage students in the grade-level standards; include or reference digital technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other; have a visual design that supports students in engaging thoughtfully with the subject that is neither distracting nor chaotic; and provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning. 

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Indicator 3w

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

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 integrate technology such as interactive tools, virtual manipulatives/objects, and/or dynamic mathematics software in ways that engage students in the grade-level/series standards, when applicable.

All aspects of the materials can be accessed digitally. Some components are only digital such as the Interactive Tutorials, Digital Math Tools Powered by Desmos, Learning Games, and Comprehension Checks. Adaptive diagnostic assessments, lesson quizzes, unit assessments, and assignable comprehension checks are all available online for students to complete. The digital materials do not allow for customizing or editing existing lessons for local use except for Comprehension Checks. 

Beginning of Unit, Unit Resources, states “Engage students with digital resources that provide interactive instruction, practice, assessment, and differentiation” and includes a list of the digital resources available in the student digital experience. These tools include:

  • Student Bookshelf (eBook)

  • Interactive tutorials

  • Digital Math Tools powered by Desmos

  • PowerPoint slides

  • Video Library for Develop Sessions in each lesson

  • Learning games

  • Interactive Practice

  • Diagnostic assessment

  • Lesson and Unit Comprehension Checks

  • Prerequisites Report

Program Implementation, Digital Resource Correlations, provides three correlation documents for digital resources: Interactive Practice Lesson Correlations, Prerequisite Interactive Tutorial Lesson Correlations, and i-Ready Lesson Correlations which show the lesson and content aligned to the practice. Comprehension Check Correlations aligns each assessment question to a lesson and standard.

Indicator 3x

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Materials include or reference digital technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other, when applicable.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 include or reference digital technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other, when applicable.

i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Professional Growth, In-Person Learning, Collaborative Learning Extensions, Connect Research to Practice- CLE Leader Tool, Connecting Whitepaper Ideas to Everyday Instruction, “This Collaborative Learning Extension (CLE) includes all necessary resources to facilitate a collaborative meeting with colleagues that focuses on discussing key ideas from a selected whitepaper and incorporating them into instruction. These whitepapers describe research and insights about productive actions and beliefs integrated in the i-Ready Classroom Mathematics program. The plan described can be used with professional learning communities, grade-level teams, or any other group of educators interested in refining their instruction.” There are links to six whitepapers about enhancing teaching and learning and a protocol for teachers to follow. In addition, there are eight other CLE topics with protocols for teacher collaboration around implementing the i-Ready Classroom.

Indicator 3y

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The visual design (whether in print or digital) supports students in engaging thoughtfully with the subject, and is neither distracting nor chaotic.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 2 have a visual design (whether in print or digital) that supports students in engaging thoughtfully with the subject, and is neither distracting nor chaotic.

Lesson routines are consistent in grades 2-5. Each lesson follows the same pattern of “Try It, Discuss It, and Connect It.” Session Slides begin with Learning Targets and a Start slide. The sections of each session are labeled at the top, including “Try It”, “Model It”, “Discuss It”, or “Connect It”. The session slides conclude with a Close: Exit Ticket, Real-World Connection, and Vocabulary. 

“Math in Action” sections include one student’s solution as an exemplar of a possible strategy, use of good problem solving, and a complete solution. The exemplar is written in first person language explaining each step taken to solve the problem, including completed work and relevant images. Notice That boxes provide important information about that student’s solution. A Problem Solving Checklist textbox can be used by students when writing their own solutions based on the model. 

There is white space so pages do not feel overwhelming and there is room to show work. Important notes, instructions, or models are highlighted by being in a box and/or having a colored background. There are often additional questions presented in the sidebar that prompt thinking such as “How can you check that your answer is correct?” or “How could a table help you find the number of each?” Each lesson includes several pictures that match the problem they’re near. Sometimes pictures contain information, but generally they simply add interest to the page.

Indicator 3z

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Materials provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning, when applicable.

The materials reviewed for i-Ready Classroom Mathematics Grade 3 provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning, when applicable.

Program Implementation, Program Resources, states “The Teacher Digital Experience provides complete access to all grade-level resources.” There is an extensive chart listing all the components of the program, which are all available online. For example:

  • i-Ready Homepage, Success Central, Get Started, Program Overview, Teacher Digital Experience, provides six videos about implementing various digital components such as the teacher dashboard or interactive practice. Also provided is Explore the Student Digital Experience which includes a walkthrough and five videos.

  • Beginning of Unit, Unit Resources, includes the digital tools available in the student and teacher digital experience, “Engage students with digital resources that provide interactive instruction, practice, assessment, and differentiation.” There are digital tools included for: In-Class Instruction and Practice, Independent Practice for School or Home, Assessments and Reports, and Differentiation.

  • Program Implementation, Digital Resource Correlations, provides “Prerequisite Interactive Tutorial Lesson Correlations” for each lesson that includes an interactive tutorial. “Interactive Tutorials can be shown before an Explore session to build background knowledge on a topic. The chart below shows which Interactive Tutorial can serve as a prerequisite to each lesson, along with which objectives that Interactive Tutorial covers.” 

  • Program Implementation, Digital Math Tools - Support Videos, for students or teachers to watch to learn how to use the Digital Math Tools.