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Report Overview
Summary of Alignment & Usability: MyPerspectives | ELA
ELA 6-8
The instructional materials for myPerspectives 6-8 meet the expectations of alignment, building knowledge, and usability. The materials include anchor texts that are well-crafted, content-rich, and rich in language and academic vocabulary. The tasks, questions, and assignments are connected to the texts students read and require students to collect textual evidence. Units are grouped around topics/themes to grow students’ knowledge over the course of the school year. Throughout the program, there are culminating tasks and research opportunities that require students to expand and show their knowledge and understanding of the topics/themes in each unit.
There is sufficient support provided for teachers to implement the program with fidelity. The materials provide comprehensive guidance, correlation information to the ELA standards, information for students and families to support learning, and a list of supplemental resources in order to support the teacher with instruction. The materials also include strategies, supports, and resources for diverse learners to work with grade-level content and to meet or exceed grade-level expectations.
6th Grade
View Full ReportEdReports 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)
Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.
Usability (Gateway 3)
7th Grade
View Full ReportEdReports 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)
Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.
Usability (Gateway 3)
8th Grade
View Full ReportEdReports 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)
Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.
Usability (Gateway 3)
ELA High School
The instructional materials for myPerspectives 9-12 meet the expectations of alignment, building knowledge, and usability. The materials include opportunities for students to read a wide variety of texts, including classics by well-known authors. The texts are well-crafted and content-rich and should build students’ overall vocabulary and knowledge base. Units are organized around cohesive topics/themes that build students’ ability to read and comprehend complex texts independently and proficiently. Throughout the program, there are culminating tasks and research opportunities that require students to expand and show their knowledge and understanding of the topics/themes in each unit.
There is sufficient support provided for teachers to implement the program with fidelity. The materials provide comprehensive guidance, correlation information to the ELA standards, information for students and families to support learning, and a list of supplemental resources in order to support the teacher with instruction. The materials also include strategies, supports, and resources for diverse learners to work with grade-level content and to meet or exceed grade-level expectations.
9th Grade
View Full ReportEdReports 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)
Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.
Usability (Gateway 3)
10th Grade
View Full ReportEdReports 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)
Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.
Usability (Gateway 3)
11th Grade
View Full ReportEdReports 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)
Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.
Usability (Gateway 3)
12th Grade
View Full ReportEdReports 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)
Materials must meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating reflects the overall series average.
Usability (Gateway 3)
Report for 6th Grade
Alignment Summary
The grade 6 myPerspectives materials meet the expectations for alignment. The materials include anchor texts that are well-crafted, content-rich, and rich in language and academic vocabulary. The tasks, questions, and assignments are connected to the texts students read and require students to collect textual evidence.
Throughout the program, students have varied opportunities to demonstrate knowledge about what they are reading and learning through speaking and listening tasks. Students also have many opportunities to practice their writing both in on-demand and process writing tasks. Students engage in informative or expository, argumentative, and narrative writing at the distribution required by the standards, however, well-designed explicit instruction guidance is inconsistent or lacking in some areas.
While the materials provide a comprehensive year-long plan for students to interact with and acquire academic vocabulary in a systematic way, the explicit instruction of some grammar and usage standards is inconsistent or, in some cases, lacking.
The materials are grouped around topics/themes to grow students’ knowledge over the course of the school year. There are high-quality questions and tasks that are sequenced in a way that is appropriate for the grade level and require students to use textual evidence. Throughout the program, there are culminating tasks and research opportunities that require students to expand and show their knowledge and understanding of the topics/themes in each unit.
The pacing for the five units in the program is generally reasonable, and the suggested implementation schedule can be reasonably completed in one school year.
6th Grade
Alignment (Gateway 1 & 2)
Usability (Gateway 3)
Overview of Gateway 1
Text Quality and Complexity and Alignment to the Standards with Tasks and Questions Grounded in Evidence
Anchor texts are well-crafted, content-rich, and rich in language and academic vocabulary; texts reflect the distribution of text types and genres required by the standards. Over the course of the school year, materials include 19 informational texts and 16 literary texts resulting in a 54/46 balance, which should support achieving the 55/45 balance of informational and literary texts across the school day that is required by the standards. Throughout the program, there are opportunities for students to read a variety of texts at various levels of complexity throughout each unit and throughout the school year.
The materials have the appropriate level of complexity according to quantitative and qualitative analysis, as well as the relationship to their associated student task. The tasks, questions, and assignments are connected to the texts students read and require students to collect textual evidence.
The program provides varied protocols to support students’ speaking and listening skills across the year’s scope of instructional materials. There are multiple opportunities for students to demonstrate knowledge about what they are reading and learning through speaking and listening tasks.
Throughout the program, there are various on-demand and process writing opportunities. There is a year-long writing program consisting of a 29/38/33 balance of argumentative, informative or explanatory, and narrative writing activities, which closely reflects the 35/35/30 distribution required by the standards. While the materials provide a comprehensive year-long plan for students to interact with and acquire academic vocabulary in a systematic way, the explicit instruction of some grammar and usage standards is inconsistent or, in some cases, lacking.
Gateway 1
v1.5
Criterion 1.1: Text Quality and Complexity
Texts are worthy of students’ time and attention: texts are of quality and are rigorous, meeting the text complexity criteria for each grade. Materials support students’ advancing toward independent reading.
Anchor texts are well-crafted, content-rich, and rich in language and academic vocabulary. Texts reflect the distribution of text types and genres required by the standards, including, but not limited to, poetry, science fiction stories, argumentative essays, and historical accounts. Over the course of the school year, materials include 19 informational texts and 16 literary texts resulting in a 54/46 balance, which should support achieving the 55/45 balance of informational and literary texts across the school day that is required by the standards.
The materials have the appropriate level of complexity according to quantitative and qualitative analysis, as well as the relationship to their associated student task. While the materials provide an accurate text complexity analysis and rationale for the anchor and series of texts, the explicit analysis of the complexity of the associated reader and task is not provided.
Throughout the program, there are opportunities for students to read a variety of texts at various levels of complexity throughout each unit and throughout the school year. Each unit consists of complex texts that, when paired with literacy activities, promote literacy skills and reading independence over time. Students read 35 texts during Whole-Class and Small-Group learning. Students are provided with Independent reading tasks centered around the topics and themes provided for each unit. Students read a variety of text types and genres, such as, but not limited to, historical fiction, poetry, memoirs, myths, and essays.
Indicator 1A
Anchor texts are of high quality, worthy of careful reading, and consider a range of student interests.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria of Indicator 1a.
Anchor texts are well-crafted and content rich. The texts are rich in language and academic vocabulary. The combination of classic fiction, dramas, memoirs, comics, and public documents offer rich diversity which should appeal to a variety of student interests.
Anchor texts are of high-quality and consider a range of student interests, are well-crafted, content rich, and engage students at their grade level. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid by Alma Luz Villanueva. This poem, written from the perspective of a female narrator who identifies with more “boy-like” characteristics, offers students a chance for rich discussion about social norms and defining identity. Themes found in the text offer insight about the speaker’s feelings regarding identity and societal norms.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read "Teens and Technology Share a Future" by Stefan Etienne and discover the pros associated with modern technology. Students read a blog post article, a different style of writing for this grade level, that challenges them to consider the author’s point of view on the benefits of modern technology. Students interpret challenging technical domain-specific vocabulary such as “operating systems” and “input methods” in order to comprehend the text.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read a drama, The Phantom Tollbooth, Act I & II by Susan Nanus. The drama is based on the novel The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster. Students interact with multiple points of view and shifts in time throughout this text.
Indicator 1B
Materials reflect the distribution of text types and genres required by the standards at each grade level.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria of Indicator 1b.
Materials reflect the distribution of text types and genres required by the standards including, but not limited to, poetry, science fiction stories, argumentative essays, and historical accounts. Over the course of the school year, materials include 19 informational texts and 16 literary texts resulting in a 54/46 balance, which should support achieving the 55/45 balance of informational and literary texts across the school day that is required by the standards.
Materials reflect the distribution of text types/genres required by the grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read an excerpt from Brown Girl Dreaming by award-winning author Jacqueline Woodson. In this text, the author relates her childhood experiences through poetry. Students learn what life was like in the 1960s as Woodson and her family moved from Greenville, South Carolina to Brooklyn, New York..
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “A Blessing” by James Wright. In this poem, two humans encounter two ponies in a pasture. The text will lead to discussions about the careful use of words to relay feelings both in the written and spoken word.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read The Phantom Tollbooth, Act I & II by Susan Nanus. Students read this drama based on the book Phantom Tollbooth. This humorous selection is in play format and contains dialogue, stage directions and descriptions of sets.
Materials reflect a balance of informational and literary texts that support the 55/45 balance required by the standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, students read seven core texts. In this unit, 43% of the texts are informational and 57% of the texts are literary.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, students read seven core texts. In this unit, 43% of the texts are informational and 57% of the texts are literary
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, students read eight core texts. In this unit, 75% of the texts are informational and 25% of the texts are literary.
In Unit 4, Imagination, students read six core texts. In this unit, 17% of the texts are informational and 83% of the texts are literary.
In Unit 5, Exploration, students read seven core texts. In this unit, 86% of the texts are informational and 14% of the texts are literary.
Throughout the year, students read 35 texts, 19 or 54% of which are informational texts and 16 or 46% of which are literary texts.
Indicator 1C
Core/Anchor texts have the appropriate level of complexity for the grade according to documented quantitative analysis, qualitative analysis, and relationship to their associated student task. Documentation should also include a rationale for educational purpose and placement in the grade level.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1c.
The materials have the appropriate level of complexity according to quantitative analysis and qualitative analysis, as well as the relationship to their associated student task. While the materials provide an accurate text complexity analysis and rationale for the anchor and series of texts, the explicit analysis of the complexity of the associated reader and task is not provided. In the Teacher’s Edition Planning section for each unit, a Text Complexity Rubric offers a quantitative and qualitative analysis for each text in the unit. Quantitative measures include a Lexile score and word count for each text. The qualitative analysis measures the following: knowledge demands, structure, language conventionality and clarity, and levels of meaning and purpose. The texts have a Lexile range from 670L to 1410L, and have been rated from slightly complex to exceedingly complex. For those texts that fall below grade level, they are rated moderately complex due to the relationship between the qualitative measures and the associated student task. Prior to the Text Complexity Rubric, each text includes a Summary, Insight, Connection to Essential Question, and Connection to Performance Tasks. The Planning pages provide suggestions for different ways teachers can help students connect to the text and associated tasks.
Anchor/core texts have the appropriate level of complexity for the grade according to quantitative and qualitative analysis and their relationship to their associated student task. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read Hachiko, The True Story of a Loyal Dog by Pamela S. Turner, which has an overall level of complexity of Moderate. The Lexile level is 690 which is Below level. The qualitative measure is Moderately Complex, and the approximate Reader and Task level is Meets. For the task, students write an explanatory essay. The story explores several themes and contains references or allusions to other texts or cultural elements. The sentence structure and vocabulary is complex.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll, which has an overall level of complexity of Complex. The Lexile level of this text is 1080, which is on grade level. The complex vocabulary and sentence structure may require close reading and teacher-directed analysis. The qualitative measure is Moderately Complex, and the approximate Reader and Task level is Meets. For the task, students are asked to write and perform a fictional narrative.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierly, which has an overall level of complexity of Complex. The Lexile level of this text is 1130, which is on grade level. The qualitative measure is Moderately Complex, and the approximate Reader and Task level is Meets. For the task, students write an argumentative essay. The sentence structure is complex and there are references to other texts, outside ideas, or theories.
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; however, there is no complexity analysis for the associated task. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Each unit contains a “Reading Support” section located in the Teacher’s Edition for the unit that provides the quantitative and qualitative score, with a description and teaching guidance for supporting students. Materials do not provide analysis information for the
Although there is not an explicit rationale clearly stated for each text, there is an explicitly stated connection to the unit topic, essential question, and performance task for each text.
The accuracy of the provided quantitative measures was verified using MetaMetrics or determined using the Lexile Text Analyzer on The Lexile Framework for Reading site. The accuracy of the provided qualitative measures was verified using literary and informational text rubrics.
Indicator 1D
Series of texts should be at a variety of complexity levels appropriate for the grade band to support students’ literacy growth over the course of the school year.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1d.
The materials support the development of students’ literacy over the course of the school year. The materials provide an opportunity for students to read a variety of texts at various levels of complexity throughout each unit and throughout the school year. The overall quantitative complexity measures across the year range from 670L to 1410L, and the qualitative measures are Slightly Complex to Exceedingly Complex. Each unit consists of complex texts that, when paired with literacy activities, promote literacy skills and reading independence over time. Through appropriate scaffolds and support materials located in the Teacher’s Edition, the program supports the literacy growth of all students. Teachers are provided with resources to build background knowledge, guide language demands, and help students identify the meaning of each text.
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:
The quantitative and qualitative complexity of texts in each unit is as follows:
Unit 1, 740L to 1410L, Slightly Complex to Very Complex
Unit 2, 690L to 1050L, Slightly Complex to Very Complex
Unit 3, 750L to 1180L, Slightly Complex to Moderately Complex
Unit 4, 670L to 1080L, Moderately Complex to Very Complex
Unit 5, 710L to 1130L, Moderately Complex to Exceedingly Complex
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read the poem “I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid” by Alma Luz Villanueva (NP). Students make meaning from the text by completing a first read, a close read, an analysis of the text, and an analysis of the craft and structure. During the first read, the Teacher’s Edition reminds the teacher to have students perform each of the four steps of the first read: Notice, Annotate, Connect, and Respond. Students engage in noticing words and phrases that relate to the poem’s main characters or key events. The teacher encourages students to write the noticings in the margins of the text. The teacher guides students to feel the tension by analyzing the unconventional format and use of words in the poem. For example, the teacher prompts students to consider what “a thin, stubborn weed” suggests. After determining the meaning, students closely read the way the speaker of the poem compares herself to a weed. Finally, in the Analyzing Craft and Structure section, students connect the details that relate to the speaker’s thoughts and feelings, appearance, and actions to determine the theme of the poem. The student text states that the “poet does not state this theme directly. Instead, she suggests them through the thoughts, feelings, and actions of the speaker.” The poet also suggests the theme through the way she organized the lines of the poem to emphasize certain words and phrases. The teacher provides support as students analyze the craft and structure of the poem and how those elements allow them to arrive at a possible theme. In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Fun They Had” by Isaac Asimov (750L). Although the quantitative measures are below grade level and the overall complexity is Moderately Complex. Given the overall complexity, students are challenged with this reading. After reading, they make meaning from the text by analyzing the craft and structure of science-fiction writing. The student text states that “most science fiction includes these types of elements:
Scientific ideas
Imaginary beings, such as futuristic robots or aliens from distant planets
Settings that are different from Earth or from Earth right now—These may be non-Earthly places, such as spaceships, other planets, or alternate universes. Or, they may be Earth, but in the future.
Plots that reflect issues in society today, such as the impact of technology or even political ideas—Science-fiction writers often place familiar issues into unfamiliar settings in order to explore their complexities and understand them better.”
The Teacher’s Edition mentions that “students may confuse science-fiction writing with fantasy writing. They explain “that science fiction makes predictions based on current scientific knowledge whereas fantasy is usually not based on scientifically viable ideas.” In this activity, students use a chart that has them locate examples of the story that show this story is indeed a science-fiction text. Then they use their examples to find the details that support a possible theme: “Nothing, not even great technology, can replace human interaction.” Students then analyze the details to consider why this text might be a warning about the future.” In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read “To the Top of Everest,” a blog post by Samantha Larson (1040L). The text is presented in chronological order, so it is easier to follow; however, the complexity is introduced when the writing is in the form of a diary. This format increases the complexity and level of analysis students conduct in order to make meaning from the text. After reading, they make meaning from the text by analyzing the craft and structure to find the central idea or the” important point that is supported by other details and examples in the text.” The student text points out that authors that use the format of a diary entry, friendly letters, or blogs are providing their life experiences and may not even have a central idea in mind. This author presents overarching statements that can help students determine a central idea by grouping details that express the need for preparation and training, the effort required to climb Everest, and thoughts and feelings during the event.” As students analyze examples of different types of details in the text and place them in a chart, they eventually select a central idea that emerges in the text. Eventually, students use these details and ideas to make a judgment about the author, “Do you think Larson possesses the qualities of an explorer? Why or why not?” As the units progress, the tasks connected to identifying a theme and central idea increase in complexity.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read from My Life with the Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall (860L). Students cite textual evidence to support the analysis of what the text says explicitly, as well as draw inferences from the text. With teacher guidance, students complete a first read, a close read, and an analysis of the text, which meets grade-level expectations. An example of a question that requires this level of analysis is: “What do David Greybeard’s visits to Dr. Goodall’s camp show about the chimpanzees’ changing response to her presence?” In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Teens and Technology Share a Future” by Stefan Etienne (1100L). They cite textual evidence to support the analysis of what the text says explicitly, as well as draw inferences from the text. With teacher guidance, students complete a first read, a close read, and an analysis of the text by answering the Essential Question: “How is modern technology helpful and harmful to society? What have you learned about the ways that technology can help or harm society from reading this blog post?” In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley (1130L). They cite textual evidence to support the analysis of what the text says explicitly, as well as draw inferences from the text. With teacher guidance, students complete a first read, a close read, and an analysis of the text. An example of a question that requires this level of analysis is: “How does Brierley emphasize the importance of his search method and process throughout the excerpt?” Students analyze the details of Brierley’s search to determine what kind of personality he has. As the units progress, the tasks connected to making inferences and using evidence from the text increase in complexity.
As texts become more complex, appropriate scaffolds and/or materials are provided in the Teacher Edition (e.g., spending more time on texts, more questions, repeated readings, skill lessons). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Survival, Small-Group Learning, Launch Text, students read “Reading Buddies” by Melissa Diaz (890L), which is slightly below the Lexile stretch band; however, the easier reading level allows students to have a common starting point to address the unit’s topic and for the teacher to assign the short story for homework. The Teacher’s Edition states that “students will need little or no support to understand it.” The text serves as a model for informative/explanatory writing for students to refer to as they practice developing writing samples. The Overall Complexity of this text, in addition to the tasks that develop student skills, is Moderately Complex. For example, one of the activities that the Teacher’s Edition supports is the building of a Word Network. As students fill out the words that connect to “Animal/Human Relationships,” the Teacher’s Edition states “that people may have a personal association with some words. A word that one student thinks is related to animal/human relationships might not be a word another student would pick.” Students build the word network, a unique tool, throughout the unit. They can use the Word Network to improve their word choice and style during the Performance-Based Assessments.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “The Black Hole of Technology” by Leena Khan (980L), which is in the middle of the Lexile stretch band. If a student does not understand the first two paragraphs of the text, the Teacher’s Edition provides a scaffold for strategic support. The Overall Complexity of this text, in addition to the tasks that develop student skills, is Complex, so specific scaffolds are added to the Teacher’s Edition to provide strategic support for learners. The Teacher’s Edition states that students should “have a partner conduct a think-aloud to explain the thought process as he or she works through the NOTICE, ANNOTATE, CONNECT, and RESPOND steps. For example, in paragraph 2, students might notice that the author describes “how her friends are on their smartphones as they sit together.” The student providing the think-aloud may refer to their annotation of the sentence that states, “I glanced around at my friends, and they all quickly checked Instagram in the hopes that they hadn’t missed Miley’s latest update.” They return to the paragraph to see what this sentence reveals about the author’s perspectives on phones.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley (1130L), which is near the top of the Lexile stretch band. About halfway through the memoir, the Teacher’s Edition provides directions for students to conduct a one-page WriteNow exercise. Students review a paragraph from the text and recall the author’s description of the way his girlfriend encouraged him to search for his family in India. Students then use details and description to explain about a time when someone encouraged them to do something that was important to them.” The teacher provides some examples that are in the text or can come up with ideas to share on their own. Then, students return to paragraph 23 and analyze the descriptive words and the phrasing of the details. They use these ideas as a model to help them begin their own writing sample.
Indicator 1E
Materials provide opportunities for students to engage in a range and volume of reading to support their reading at grade level by the end of the school year, including accountability structures for independent reading.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1e.
The materials clearly identify opportunities for students to engage in reading a wide variety of text types and genres. Students read 35 texts during Whole-Class and Small-Group learning. Students are provided with Independent reading tasks that are centered around the topics and themes provided for each unit. Students read a variety of text types and genres such as, but not limited to, historical fiction, poetry, memoirs, myths, and essays. Students are provided with graphic organizers, note-catchers, and evidence logs to support their independent reading. The Teacher’s Edition provides sufficient guidance to foster independence in reading, including, but not limited to, prompts and scaffolds such as a reading plan. Guidance is also provided to help teachers support students with independent reading choices such as, but not limited to, guiding questions and text complexity charts.
Instructional materials clearly identify opportunities and supports for students to engage in reading a variety of text types and genres. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read the fiction text Calvin and Hobbes comic strips: "Ghosts," “Do You Like Her?," and "Xing" by Bill Watterson. Students read a graphic media selection relating to childhood experiences and engage in reading cartoons that use ironic humor and refer to historic figures such as John Calvin and Thomas Hobbes.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read The Phantom Tollbooth, Act I & II by Susan Nanus. This drama is an adventure story about a boy who finds a mysterious package that leads him on an adventure.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read an excerpt from Tales From the Odyssey by Mary Pope Osborne. Students gain knowledge of myths and background knowledge of Odysseus so that they can effectively access and comprehend the text.
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 the Teacher’s Edition, Table of Contents and Frontmatter, and the Teacher’s Edition for each unit, the time for students to engage with texts during the Unit Introduction, Whole-Class learning, Small-Group learning, and Independent Learning is similar. There is one day for the Launch Text during the Unit Introduction, 14 days for the Whole Class Learning, 12 days for Small-Group Learning, and two days for Independent Learning. In the Teacher’s Edition, a text box in the margin notes, “Each day in this pacing calendar represents a 40–50 minute class period. Teachers using block scheduling may combine days to reflect their class schedule.” These opportunities to engage with multiple texts and a volume of reading are consistent across the school year.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read two texts over 12 classes or six blocks. In Small-Group Learning, students read four texts over 11 regular classes or five blocks. Students end the unit by reading one independent choice text over two classes or one block before the final performance task. The Teacher’s Edition provides a pacing guide for each unit and suggests ideas for supporting the needs of various students in the wrap-around materials.
There is sufficient teacher guidance to foster independence for all readers (e.g., independent reading procedures, proposed schedule, tracking system for independent reading). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Teacher’s Edition Table of Contents and Frontmatter state that for Independent Learning: “Students self-select a text to explore an aspect of the unit topic and share their learning with the class.” Each unit includes options for students to choose a text to read independently via the Interactive Student Edition, and the activity takes place over two days. Independent Learning strategies are available in the Teacher’s Edition, including a video. Students can use the “Create a schedule” strategy to track completion and “Assess whether you need to adapt your plan to meet all your goals and deadlines.”
In each unit, Independent Learning reading selections are listed at the end of the unit. The section provides guidance for students to pick an independent text. In the “Look Back” section, students review the texts already read in the unit for topics of interest, the “Look Ahead” section includes titles to see which is of interest, and the “Look Inside” section allows students to scan the selection they choose to be sure it meets their needs. Students plan their reading using a graphic organizer. They practice using the First Read strategies and Close Read guides during reading so that they are prepared to share their learning with the class.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Independent Learning, students can choose to read one of three news articles or a poetry collection. If students select the poetry collection, they will read “All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace” by Richard Brautigan and “Sonnet, without Salmon” by Sherman Alexie. Resources such as text questions, audio summaries, and a selection test are available. The materials include a connection to the Essential Question, “How is modern technology helpful and harmful to society?”
Criterion 1.2: Tasks and Questions
Materials provide opportunities for rich and rigorous evidence-based discussions and writing about texts to build strong literacy skills.
The materials include tasks, questions, and assignments that connect to the texts students read and require students to collect textual evidence.
The program provides varied protocols to support students’ speaking and listening skills across the year’s scope of instructional materials. Students engage in discussion throughout each unit through classroom discussions, small group discussions, and culminating discussions. There are multiple opportunities for students to demonstrate knowledge about what they are reading and learning through speaking and listening tasks.
The materials include various on-demand and process writing opportunities. On-demand writing tasks are offered throughout the year, connecting to the Introduction, Whole-Class Learning, Small Group Learning, and Independent Learning sections. They include a mix of summaries, quick writes, and responses to texts. Process writing tasks include various types of essays using single or multiple texts as sources and following standard writing procedures from prewriting/planning to revising and/or editing. There is a year-long writing program consisting of a 29/38/33 balance of argumentative, informative or explanatory, and narrative writing activities, which closely reflects the 35/35/30 distribution required by the standards. Throughout the year, the students receive instruction and opportunities to write in each mode. There are frequent opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice, and apply writing while using evidence.
While the materials provide a comprehensive year-long plan for students to interact with and acquire academic vocabulary in a systematic way, the explicit instruction of some grammar and usage standards is inconsistent or, in some cases, lacking.
Indicator 1F
Most questions, tasks, and assignments are text-specific and/or text-dependent, requiring students to engage with the text directly (drawing on textual evidence to support both what is explicit as well as valid inferences from the text).
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1f.
The tasks, questions, and assignments connect to the text students read and require students to collect textual evidence. Every unit includes a section for a Model Annotation and an Evidence Log. There are sections to help students conduct an analysis of a text, a close reading of the text, and an analysis of the language used in the text. Students provide textual evidence to support their responses to questions for every story in every unit. There are multiple opportunities for teachers to model annotating the text and for students to practice this skill in a small group setting. During independent learning, students complete tasks that require text-based evidence for completion. At the end of each unit, students use their Evidence Log to complete a Performance-Based Assessment based on the Essential Question for the unit.
Text-specific and text-dependent questions and tasks support students in making meaning of the core understandings of the texts being studied. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read the text "Declaration of the Rights of the Child" by the United Nations and complete an Analyze Craft and Structure activity. For example, students choose three paragraphs from paragraphs three through 11 in the text and cite the paragraph, rights listed in that paragraph, and identify and explain if the right was clear or confusing.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Group Learning, Anchor Text, students complete a first read of an excerpt from a memoir, My Life With the Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall. While reading, the teacher guides the students when annotating, noticing, and connecting to important parts of the text. After reading, the students complete a Comprehension Check and Research Activity that includes text-specific questions: “What type of service does Goodall’s mother set up for the local people?” and “Choose at least unfamiliar detail from the text. Briefly research that detail. In what way does the information you learned shed light on an aspect of the memoir?”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read "Feathered Friend" by Arthur C. Clarke and are prompted to write a brief argumentative essay. Students create a claim and then must find evidence/relevant details from the story to support their claim.
Teacher materials provide support for planning and implementation of text-based questions and tasks. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Each unit contains a Decide and Plan section for teachers that provides guidance on how to provide support for all students using appropriate scaffolds, modeling, and enrichment all based around text analysis.
Units all contain teacher notes throughout that include places in the texts students may need additional vocabulary or comprehension support, scaffolded questions, and support for all learners. The Teacher’s Edition supports the system for annotating, noticing, and connecting by highlighting the key places in the text to show where students should look for answers.
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read "Michaela DePrince: The War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina" by William Kremer. The Teacher’s Edition provides prompts for students who are struggling to define antagonist including, but not limited to, “...remind them to look for context clues,” “Ask them what fierce suggests and have them read from the top,” and “...skin condition qualifies for special care from the Aunties.”
Indicator 1G
Materials provide frequent opportunities and protocols for evidence-based discussions.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1g.
Materials provide varied protocols to support students’ speaking and listening skills across the year’s scope of instructional materials. Students engage in discussion throughout the unit through classroom discussions, small group discussions, and culminating discussions. Students are provided with a variety of structures to support their text-based discussion including, but not limited to, goal setting, graphic organizers, and reflection. Teachers are provided with speaking and listening guidance for most discussions with structure including, but not limited to, instructional videos, completed graphic organizers, prompts, and sentence starters for struggling students. Teachers facilitate discussions throughout each unit and over the course of the school year.
Materials provide varied protocols to support students’ developing speaking and listening skills across the whole year’s scope of instructional materials. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Materials include a Conversation and Discussion guide for middle school. This web-based tool gives specific guidelines and directions on discussions such as:
Leading a Group Discussion
Formal Group Discussion Guidelines
Informal Group Discussion Guidelines
Debates
In the Conversation and Discussion guide, materials provide the following guidance for leading a group discussion: “Here are some guidelines for leading a group discussion:
Introduce the topic and purpose of the discussion.
Lay out any rules for the discussion.
Make sure that no one talks so much that others don’t get a fair turn. Invite and encourage contributions from all participants.
Try to keep speakers from going off into topics that aren’t related to the subject of the discussion.
At the end of the discussion, give a summary of the results of the discussion and any decisions that were made.”
In the Conversation and Discussion guide, materials provide the following guidance for Formal Group discussion guidelines: “Here are some tips for successful discussions in a formal setting:
Limit your use of informal (everyday, casual) speech in a formal discussion. Informal speech is also called colloquial speech or language.
Manners are important in any discussion. Make sure you allow others to speak, and do not interrupt.
Avoid using too much exclamatory language, or dramatic language. A little goes a long way.
Diction, or the use of proper vocabulary related to the topic of the discussion, is an important element of a discussion.
Stay focused on the subject under discussion. Avoid jumping in with different issues or unrelated remarks or stories.”
In the Conversation and Discussion guide, materials provide the following guidance for Informal Group discussion guidelines: “An informal discussion is open-ended. Participants are free to speak in a more conversational manner, but most rules still apply.
Speech may be more informal but should still maintain a polite code of conduct.
Dramatic and exclamatory remarks help emphasize your point of view, but if you use them too much, they become less effective.”
In the Conversation and Discussion guide, materials provide the following guidance for Practices that make for good Debates: “During the debate, be sure to follow these practices:
Be courteous and listen to your opponent's point of view; allow others the opportunity to speak.
If you are debating as a team, support your team members.
Speak only when it is your turn, and follow the moderator's instructions.
Speak clearly, slowly, and loudly enough to be heard and understood by the audience.
Speak with spirit, enthusiasm, and conviction.”
Speaking and listening instruction includes facilitation, monitoring, and instructional supports for teachers. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Materials include a PDF download for monitoring speaking and listening standards. This resource defines a group, provides a graphic organizer for preparing for discussion, and a graphic organizer for students to keep track of who and what ideas were presented and discussed in the group.
Materials include teacher support in Annotating the Text and Participating in Discussion. This video shows a teacher and a group of students discussing texts. The video focuses more on how and what to annotate in the text. The video also has students describing the benefits of discussion for their learning.
Materials include support in Facilitating Peer-Group Learning. This video shows students working in a group to fill out a chart. The teacher gives directions to a group including roles and discussion focus. Teachers refer to charts and checklists to monitor group discussions. Teachers model taking anecdotal notes during discussion including giving specific feedback to students.
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read from Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson. After the analysis of text, teachers facilitate small group and whole-class discussions on the themes found in the text. The teacher draws the students’ attention to the last three lines of the text which raises three questions about “the ideas in her head and reality.” After reviewing this section of the text, the teacher provides the class with prompting questions about this topic. Students must take a position on the questions and discuss their response with a partner. This discussion also takes place with prompting questions provided by the teacher. Once the partner discussions end, teachers facilitate a whole-class discussion around the topic.
Indicator 1H
Materials support students’ listening and speaking about what they are reading and researching (including presentation opportunities) with relevant follow-up questions and evidence.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1h.
The materials provide multiple opportunities for students to demonstrate knowledge about what they are reading and learning through speaking and listening tasks. Students practice these skills during tasks through discussions with partners, small groups, and the whole class. The tasks require students to connect to evidence from texts, build on others’ ideas, and present information to an audience. Students synthesize and analyze evidence from texts to create presentation products. Opportunities to practice presentation skills such as eye contact, volume, and use of multimedia resources are also available. In addition, students are given opportunities to evaluate and incorporate multimedia resources.
Students have multiple opportunities over the school year to demonstrate what they are reading through varied speaking and listening opportunities. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Come to discussions prepared, having read or studied required material; explicitly draw on that preparation by referring to evidence on the topic, text, or issue to probe and reflect on ideas under discussion. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students complete a Research assignment after reviewing the media selection from the Gallery of Calvin and Hobbes Comics. The students are instructed to “Conduct research in preparation for a class discussion about what made this comic strip so popular. As the students Conduct Research, they are guided by four questions that help them gather ideas to present during the discussion. The text gives the following suggestions to help students interact during the class discussion: “As a class, discuss the findings of your research. Keep the following tips in mind:
Support your ideas by citing specific details from the selection and your research.
If you are unsure of what other classmates are trying to say, ask questions to help them expand on their ideas.
Reflect on new ideas that other classmates express, and paraphrase their ideas to confirm your understanding of them. To paraphrase, restate their ideas in your own words.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Small-Group Learning, students read the blog post “Is Our Gain Also Our Loss?” by Cailin Loesch. In the margins of the Teacher’s Edition, the teacher is given strategies to prepare students for a group discussion: “Discussion Preparation: Encourage groups to carefully evaluate their invention or device example to ensure that it has the depth to support a substantive group discussion. All group members should have had some experience with the topic to participate equally. Be aware of cultural or family-income sensitivities that might cause some students to feel uncomfortable in this discussion. Students should refer to the organization chart for answers to help groups prepare their discussions.”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from a memoir titled A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley. For the Speaking and Listening assignment, the class creates an annotated map. To Prepare for the Activity, the students “Work individually to review the excerpt, and take notes on the specific locations Brierley describes in paragraphs 33-54.” The teacher uses the following questions as a guide for the class discussion:
How does the map help you visualize Brierley’s search?
How does seeing a map of India enable you to grasp the enormous scope of his search?
How did the process of annotating the map deepen your understanding of the excerpt?”
Follow rules for collegial discussions, set specific goals and deadlines, and define individual roles as needed. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, “Childhood,” Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson. In the margin of the Teacher’s Edition, the teacher is directed to have students “Discuss with [their] Class Encourage partners to allow each speaker the opportunity to finish, but remind them of any time constraints. Point out that speakers should refer to their talking points when debating.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, students engage in discussion with a small group. Students take a position and gather specific reasons for their position. Groups create a list of rules that include “Everyone should participate in group discussions” and “People should not interrupt.” Students practice their rules, name their group, and create a communication plan. Teachers are provided with additional support, such as Accountable Talk prompts and grouping advice.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students complete a Performance Task after reading the texts. As a group, the students write an advertisement that answers the question: “Why should we explore new frontiers?” As a group, students analyze the literature using a T-Chart, discuss the elements of an advertisement, and decide on the medium they will use. They are asked to “Assign roles to each member–for instance, finding media, organizing examples, writing text, and advertisement design” and to “decide which group member or members will be presenting the advertisement to the class.”
Include multimedia components (e.g., graphics, images, music, sound) and visual displays in presentations to clarify information. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Small-Group Learning, Performance Task, students create a multimedia presentation about the advantages and disadvantages of technology. In Isaac Asimov’s science fiction story “The Fun They Had,” students should keep a record of the costs and benefits of technology. They can use their evidence to support claims in their final presentation.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read "Jabberwocky" from Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll. After reading the poem, students have the option to showcase their learning. They can present a dramatic reading of the poem using costumes to enhance the performance, or they can create a multimedia presentation. For the presentation, they are instructed to “illustrate the poem through graphics, images, artwork, music, and other multimedia displays.”
In Unit 5, Exploration, students complete a Performance Task: Presenting an Advertisement. In the Teacher’s Edition, there is a text box with the Author’s Perspective written by Ernest Morrell, Ph. D. The box provides guidance for teachers, as they support students in creating powerful digital presentations by offering the following guidelines:
“Keep it simple. Choose one striking image rather than several smaller ones. Position the visual carefully, allowing “white space” to make the image stand out.
Go for quality. Choose clear, high-quality images or take high-resolution photos.
Limit bullet points and text. The most effective slideshows have limited text. Suggest that slides should have no more than six words across and six lines down of text.
Choose color and font carefully. Cool colors (blues, greens) work best for backgrounds; warm colors (orange, red) work best for objects in the foreground. Use a simple, standard font, such as Arial or Helvetica.”
Speaking and listening work requires students to utilize, apply, and incorporate evidence from texts and/or sources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Pose and respond to specific questions with elaboration and detail by making comments that contribute to the topic, text, or issue under discussion. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read “Hachiko, The True Story of a Loyal Dog” by Pamela S. Turner, and respond to a specific question about dogs that require a compare and contrast response to the dog in the text. For example, “During the discussion, share the story you researched, and discuss similarities and differences between the dog heroes you learned about and Hachiko.” Students share their research with a partner who listens and then, “Once you have finished reading your stories aloud, talk about the similarities and differences you see between the dogs you researched and Hachiko. The teacher edition guides teachers to push students to “point out what they learned about the dog heroes they researched and how those dogs compare with Hachiko.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Small-Group Learning, Performance Task, the students develop a group multimedia presentation. The presentation responds to the following question: “Do the benefits of technology outweigh its disadvantages?” As students gather evidence and media examples that support their argument, they evaluate each text to find examples of the Benefits of Technology and the Drawbacks of Technology. While students make their presentations, the class is invited to ask questions and make comments. Before the presentations begin, the Teacher’s Edition provides four questions for the teacher to have the students consider:
“What was the presenting group’s claim?
What were some of the strongest supporting reasons and evidence?
Which multimedia components best illustrated the claim?
What presentation skills did this group excel at?”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read "Jabberwocky" from Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll and then listen and evaluate other groups’ presentations. For example, while students present a dramatic poetry reading of the text, the audience is directed to “jot down any questions [they] have and note interesting elements of each presentation. Wait until each group has finished their presentation before asking your questions or offering your comments.”
Review the key ideas expressed and demonstrate understanding of multiple perspectives through reflection and paraphrasing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “Michaela DePrince: The War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina” by William Kremer. After reading the magazine article, students are prompted to review the key ideas and overall message. In Analyzing the Text, they are asked to use their Notebook to provide evidence from the article that addresses the Essential Question: “What are some of the challenges and triumphs of growing up? What has this article taught you about challenges some children face and how they overcome them?” Students then discuss their responses with their group.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Teens and Technology Share a Future” by Stefan Etienne. In the Teacher’s Edition, the teacher is encouraged to provide the students with information about Digital Perspectives. The teacher shows a trailer for the documentary “Cyber-Seniors.” After viewing the clip, the teacher engages students “in a discussion about the ways that teens can use technology to enrich the lives of others.” They use evidence from the video to explain ways to support “older people who did not grow up using technology” and “new users like the ones in the video.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. Students Analyze the Text and Present and Discuss “passages from the selection that [they] found important. Students discuss parts of the essay that taught them about their own imagination. For both exercises, the students must “cite textual evidence to support [their] answers.”
Interpret information presented in diverse media and formats (e.g., visually, quantitatively, orally) and explain how it contributes to a topic, text, or issue under study. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, the teacher can use an article and video to increase student engagement with each text. The Current Perspectives box provides suggestions for an article and video about how humans and animals work together to help each other. The article “Relating Animals to Humans Could Help Conservation Projects” by Science Daily and the video “Dogs and People Bond through Eye Contact” provide examples that students could use to support the Performance-Based Assessment. During this activity, the students are asked to use examples from the texts and media sources to deliver an informative presentation.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students watch a video called “The Internet of Things” by IBM Social Media. Students are guided to look for examples that answer the question: “In what ways does the connection between the Internet and our devices affect everyday life?” The teacher instructs students to “write the main ideas they noted in their summaries on sentence strips and post them around the room.” Students walk around and add new ideas to their notes, so they can “organize their information into talking points” for their oral report.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “Jabberwocky" from Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll. Students interpret the text to present a visual audio or oral dramatic reading of the poem. Students reflect on the poem’s meaning so “the audience can picture and feel what is happening in the poem.” Students also respond to their peers’ questions after the presentation. The audience asks questions or offers comments after the presentation.
Delineate a speaker's argument and specific claims, distinguishing claims that are supported by reasons and evidence from claims that are not. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read the excerpt from Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson. For the Speaking and Listening assignment, they are asked to use evidence from the story and take a position on the speaker’s views about the ideas in her head and reality. In the Teacher’s Edition, the instructional directions state that students “work individually to come up with reasons to support their argument.” The teacher can “point out that the evidence can refer to what the author herself says about her storytelling as well as to what Uncle Robert and the author’s mother say about it.” During the reflection portion, the teacher gives the students time to review “the most persuasive points in the opposing argument.”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Performance Task: Speaking and Listening Focus, students deliver an informative presentation responding to, “How can the bonds between people and animals be surprising?” The teacher guides students to consider four questions as groups present:
“What is the presenting group’s main idea?
What evidence did they provide to support their main idea?
Did their use of media support their ideas?
Which pieces of media were most effective?
What presentation skills did this group excel at, and how can they improve?”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read "Jabberwocky" from Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll. In this poem, the author uses invented language to enhance the poem. From the introductory material, students know the words will not appear in a dictionary, so they are encouraged to “use context clues to figure out the parts of speech.” After reading the poem, students analyze the invented language used by the author. In the Teacher’s Edition, the teacher encourages groups to determine the meaning of the invented language like toves, slithy, gyre, gimble, and wabe. The teacher notes explain, “Students may disagree with each other about the meaning of certain words.” However, the teacher should continue to “encourage students to discuss their differing opinions respectfully and to back up their claims with evidence from their knowledge of standard English.”
Present claims and findings, sequencing ideas logically and using pertinent descriptions, facts, and details to accentuate main ideas or themes; use appropriate eye contact, adequate volume, and clear pronunciation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students “read poems, an essay, and a short story that explore relationships between animals and people. The students then plan and deliver an informative multimedia presentation that examines the question: “How can the bonds between people and animals be surprising?” The materials provide an evaluation guide for the teacher with the following questions to produce helpful feedback: “What was the presenting group’s main idea? What evidence did they provide to support their main idea? Did their use of media support their ideas? What presentation skills did this group excel at, and how can they improve?”
Unit 3, Modern Technology, Small-Group Learning, students listen to the podcast “Bored…and Brilliant? A Challenge to Disconnect From Your Phone.” The Teacher’s Edition provides instruction for Taking Notes in the Personalize for Learning box. The teacher places students in pairs, and then they “listen to the podcast in one-minute increments.” After each segment, students “share their notes and ask each other questions to confirm their understanding of the podcast.” After listening to the podcast, the teacher has the students conduct a Close Review of the content. The teacher asks “students to think about the various people's voices represented and challenges them to explain how each person adds to the main idea of the podcast.” The teacher also “encourages students to listen to key sections over again if necessary.”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read several texts about expeditions to remote places. In the form of an advertisement, students use the evidence from each text to explain why people should explore new frontiers. While students practice for the presentation, they are given a checklist that helps them adjust the presentation so that the audience will take an interest in the content, use of media, and presentation techniques. For the presentation techniques, they are reminded to “make eye contact and speak clearly with adequate volume.” The teacher then evaluates “the presentation skills that the group excelled at.”
Indicator 1I
Materials include a mix of on-demand and process writing (e.g., multiple drafts, revisions over time) and short, focused projects, incorporating digital resources where appropriate.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1i.
The materials include various on-demand and process writing opportunities. On-demand writing tasks are offered throughout the year, connecting to the Introduction, Whole-Class Learning, Small Group Learning, and Independent Learning sections. They include a mix of summaries, quick writes, and responses to texts. Process writing tasks include various types of essays using single or multiple texts as sources and following standard writing procedures from prewriting/planning to revising and/or editing. Students are provided step-by-step guidance for each task and a checklist or peer review process. At the end of each Whole-Class Learning section, students complete a writing Performance Task over the course of two days. A Performance-Based Assessment writing task is at the end of each unit with a Unit Reflection. Materials include digital resources where appropriate. The Teacher’s Edition provides guidance on how to model each type of writing, including the use of a Launch Text at the opening of the unit that functions as a model for the student’s Performance-Based Assessment. The Teacher’s Edition also includes Digital Perspectives boxes in each unit that often suggest digital resources but do not provide the resource or links to the resources.
Materials include on-demand writing opportunities that cover a year’s worth of instruction. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Introduction, students watch a video that is accessed through the Interactive Teacher’s Edition titled “Best of the Bee.” The video is about students competing in a spelling bee. Students write a response to the question, “Do you think competition should be part of everyone’s childhood?” They share their ideas in a class discussion or online through interactive textbooks.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, students complete a QuickWrite in response to the question: “What might happen if a fictional character were to come into the real world?” Teachers are provided a model response, and students revisit this response throughout the unit by reflecting on how each text connects to their response or challenges their thinking.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierly. Students use the vocabulary from this lesson to write a paragraph about an imaginary quest to find a mythical creature or a hidden treasure.
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 Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students write a compare and contrast essay to analyze a theme or central idea from the memoir Bad Boy by Walter Dean Myers and the poem “I Was a Skinny Tomboy” by Alma Luz Villanueva. After reading, students use a graphic organizer to analyze the texts. Then they draft their essays, focusing on comparing and contrasting the structures of each text. Students need to support their ideas with evidence and include effective transitions. Finally, students revise and edit their essays using the following bulleted list:
“Have you discussed how the selections present ideas about how boys and girls are ‘supposed to’ act?
Have you expressed your ideas clearly?
Have you used transitions to connect your ideas?
Have you supported your ideas with details from both selections?
Did you check your grammar, punctuation, and spelling? Did you correct any errors you found?”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, Performance Task: Writing Focus, students write an explanatory essay about the qualities that the text authors, Jane Goodall and Pamela S. Turner, believe people and animals share. Students engage in process writing by pre-writing and gathering evidence. Next, students compose a draft using Word Processing software to assist them in making edits and revisions. The teacher provides mini-lessons around strengthening writing, such as revising for the correct pronoun case. Students get multiple opportunities to revise and edit based on mini-lessons and self-assessments. A teacher-provided evaluation rubric guides the revision and editing process. Students engage in peer review of one another’s essays to finalize the revision and editing stages.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, Performance-Based Assessment: Assessment Prep, students use their collected evidence from each text in the unit to write an argument. The question that they answered while reading each text was, “Do we rely on technology too much?” After the students review their evidence, they make a claim and use at least three pieces of evidence from the readings that support their claim. After stating their position, they identify a possible counterargument and evaluate the strength of their argument. In the margin of the Teacher’s Edition, the teacher reviews the types of evidence that make strong evidence such as facts, numbers, and examples. The teacher also addresses the characteristics of credible evidence from sources such as the use of government, educational, and professional references. Once students are confident they formed a strong argument, they begin to write the argument. They follow a process for reviewing academic words presented at the beginning of the unit, reviewing the elements of effective arguments, and the argument rubric. After completing their final draft, students present a brief oral presentation on their position in the argument.
Materials include digital resources where appropriate. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
All units include Interactive Digital Perspectives such as audio, video, documents, annotation highlights, and online assessments. These resources can be accessed through the Interactive Teacher’s Edition in Realize Reader. For example, in Unit 1, Childhood, Launch Text, the teacher can play an audio recording of “Wagon Train at Dusk” by Joe Muniz. The audio reading takes 3:44, and the teacher can adjust the speed to support all learners.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, in the Teacher’s Edition material for the Introduction, there is a link to a video on “People of the Horse: Special Bond.” Students watch the video and use the content to support their answer to the following question: “Is the relationship between animals and people truly a special bond?” This response serves as a springboard for finding evidence throughout the unit to support the student’s writing for each performance task.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, students read The Phantom Tollbooth, Act II. In the Teacher’s Edition, there is a box titled Digital Perspectives. To help enrich the reading, the teacher explains, “The Dodecahedron appears in paragraph 67. To help students understand that a dodecahedron is a three-dimensional geometric figure, find images of dodecahedrons and show them to students. You might try and find both still and animated images that show the figure being folded so that they get a better sense of what it looks like. Then, encourage students to make their own dodecahedron by cutting out a pattern from paper and folding it. Discuss with students how or whether viewing the images and making the dodecahedron enhances their understanding of the text.” However, there is no link to the images or a suggestion for finding patterns to help students cut out a dodecahedron or on how to access them.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students watch a clip from BBC Science Club: "All About Exploration'' by BBC. Students create a storyboard from the video. Students share their storyboards with classmates, and digital tools can be used: “Consider animating your images and recording the voiceover narration. If you prefer, simply present your storyboard on an overhead projector and read the voiceover narration as classmates listen.”
Indicator 1J
Materials provide opportunities for students to address different text types of writing that reflect the distribution required by the standards.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1j.
The materials include a year-long writing program consisting of a 29/38/33 balance of argumentative, informative or explanatory, and narrative writing activities, which closely reflects the 35/35/30 distribution required by the standards. Throughout the year, the students receive writing instruction and opportunities to write in each mode. The materials provide multiple opportunities across the school year to write in response to tasks that are directly related to the texts and essential questions for each unit.
Materials provide multiple opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice, and apply different genres/modes/types of writing that reflect the distribution required by the standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Two units address argumentative writing. 29% of writing opportunities over five units are argumentative.
Unit 1: There are no opportunities to practice argumentative writing.
Unit 2: There are no opportunities to practice argumentative writing.
Unit 3: There are four opportunities to practice argumentative writing.
Unit 4: There are no opportunities to practice argumentative writing.
Unit 5: There are three opportunities to practice argumentative writing.
All five units address informative/explanatory. 39% of writing opportunities over five units are informative/explanatory.
Unit 1: There are two opportunities to practice informative/explanatory writing.
Unit 2: There are three opportunities to practice informative/explanatory writing.
Unit 3: There is one opportunity to practice informative/explanatory writing.
Unit 4: There are two opportunities to practice informative/explanatory writing.
Unit 5: There is one opportunity to practice informative/explanatory writing.
Four units address narrative writing. 33% of writing opportunities over five units are narrative.
Unit 1: There are three opportunities to practice narrative writing.
Unit 2: There is one opportunity to practice narrative writing.
Unit 3: There is one opportunity to practice narrative writing.
Unit 4: There are three opportunities to practice narrative writing.
Unit 5: There are no opportunities to practice narrative writing.
Explicit instruction in argumentative writing:
The Writing and Research Center includes minilessons for argumentative writing, including explicit teaching of claim, reason, evidence, counterclaim, and structure. Skill videos are available, including, but not limited to, asserting importance, eliminating faulty logic, using numerical data for evidence, and selecting a suitable tone for the audience. These can be used for whole-class, small-group, or individual support.
Explicit instruction in informative/explanatory writing:
The Writing and Research Center includes minilessons for informative/explanatory writing, including explicit teaching of how-to writing, comparison writing, and problem-solution writing. Skill videos are available, including, but not limited to, adding citations, balancing researched information with your own ideas, and using primary and secondary sources. These can be used for whole-class, small-group, or individual support.
Explicit instruction in narrative writing:
The Writing and Research Center includes minilessons for narrative writing, including explicit teaching of character and setting, plot and theme, and dialogue and language. Skill videos are available, including, but not limited to, writing a strong beginning, building conflict, and using precise word choice. These can be used for whole-class, small-group, or individual support.
Different genres/modes/types of writing are distributed throughout the school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Students have opportunities to engage in argumentative writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Introduce claim(s) and organize the reasons and evidence clearly. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “The Black Hole of Technology” by Leena Khan. Students write an argumentative essay in which they compare the arguments in this blog post to the arguments in “Teens and Technology Share a Future” by Stefan Etienne. First, they use a graphic organizer to compare the strongest reasons, the persuasive techniques, the opposing opinions, and the weaknesses. As they begin their draft, students decide on a position by stating which post was more effective, and then they use a block organization structure or a point-by-point outline to organize their main points.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read four selections about exploration. Students then write and present an advertisement. They make a claim about exploring a new frontier. First, they judge each text to find the ways the selection would make exploration seem exciting. The Teacher’s Edition suggests that the students look at their evidence to make sure that they organize their advertisement to depict a “safe, rewarding, and fun” expedition.
Support claim(s) with clear reasons and relevant evidence, using credible sources and demonstrating an understanding of the topic or text. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley and watch a video “BBC Science Club: All About Exploration'' narrated by Dara O’ Briain. For the Performance Task: Writing Focus, students write a brief argumentative essay and support their position on the following question, “Can anyone be an explorer?” One element of an argumentative essay that students are reminded to consider is the need to add credible evidence. The Teacher’s Edition suggests that teachers remind the students to use quotations when using a direct quote from the text. Students are also reminded to use several pieces of evidence to strengthen their writing.
Use words, phrases, and clauses to clarify the relationships among claim(s) and reasons. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read an excerpt from Tales From the Odyssey by Mary Pope Osborne and a blog post from Samantha Larson. Both texts suggest that adventures offer both risk and reward. Students write a compare-and-contrast essay in which they discuss the risks and rewards of exploration as presented by the authors. Students are instructed to use transitions to shift from one topic to another. They are provided with some words to help them compare ideas, such as: and, likewise, and similarly. They are provided with words to contrast ideas, such as: however, in contrast, and although.
Establish and maintain a formal style. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read four perspectives on technology. For the Performance Task: Writing Focus, they write an editorial argument where they take a position on the following question: “Do electronics devices and online access really improve our lives?” The Teacher’s Edition provides explicit instruction for levels of formal and informal language. The teacher has students compare the way they address public authority figures, such as a principal or police officer, compared to their friends. This provides an example so that students understand the difference between formal and informal types of language. The teacher reminds students that formal language can be more persuasive for different audiences. The text reminds students to “Avoid slang or informal language that will take away from the force of your [the] argument.”
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from the argument presented. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, End of Unit, Performance-Based Assessment, students state and defend a claim in response to the following question: “Do we rely on technology too much?” The student text states that in order to be successful, they must “Include a conclusion that clearly relates to the main idea you [they] expressed.” The teacher will evaluate the student’s writing using the Argument Rubric. In order to earn a four, the highest score, for Focus and Organization, the student must have a conclusion that clearly follows from the argument presented.”
Students have opportunities to engage in informative/explanatory writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Introduce a topic; organize ideas, concepts, and information, using strategies such as definition, classification, comparison/contrast, and cause/effect; include formatting (e.g., headings), graphics (e.g., charts, tables), and multimedia when useful to aiding comprehension. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. Students write a compare-and-contrast essay where they compare their childhood to the author’s childhood, or they can write a cause-and-effect essay and explain how the author’s influences were the cause of her views on imagination.
Develop the topic with relevant facts, definitions, concrete details, quotations, or other information and examples. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read an excerpt from Lewis and Clark, a graphic novel by Nick Bertozzi. Students conduct research to develop an annotated timeline. The Teacher’s Edition guides instructors to explain that “a timeline graphically represents a sequence of events in chronological order.” As they create the annotations to represent at least five events between the start of the expedition and the homecoming, students write brief explanations of each event using facts in short captions to describe the image on the timeline.
Use appropriate transitions to clarify the relationships among ideas and concepts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination'' by Esha Chhabra. They practice Effective Expression by Writing to Sources. For this assignment, students write a compare-and-contrast essay or a cause-and-effect essay. While writing the essay, they are to use transitions to organize and connect ideas. The text provides transitions such as similarly and however to support the compare-and-contrast essay to highlight similarities and differences. For the cause-and-effect essay, students are provided with since and therefore to show how a cause can determine an effect. The Teacher’s Guide suggests that students use a variety of transitional words that show the correct connections.
Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to inform about or explain the topic. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Teens and Technology Share a Future” by Stefan Etienne. The Teacher’s Edition suggests that students find domain-specific terms in the text and write a sentence to demonstrate their understanding. The domain-specific terms that appear in the reading and are suggested by the Teacher’s Edition are input methods, operating systems, tweets, and text messages.
Establish and maintain a formal style. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read an excerpt from Tales From the Odyssey by Mary Pope Osborne and “To the Top of Everest” by Samantha Larson. Students write a compare-and-contrast essay in which they present the risks and rewards associated with the adventures from each reading. Before submitting their work, they should review, revise, and edit it to make sure they have produced a formal essay with a formal tone. They should swap drafts with their group and give feedback on the following:
Using words that say exactly what the author or the writer meant
Including important details that may have been missed
Ordering the ideas so that they make sense
Spelling or grammar errors
Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from the information or explanation presented. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “Michaela DePrince: The War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina” by William Kremer. They practice Effective Expression by writing and delivering an oral presentation. They can conduct research on another African American dancer and deliver a personality profile or they can write an informative report about why Michaela DePrince’s success was so impressive. As they make an outline to organize their ideas, part III has them express a conclusion that shows the importance of their ideas.
Students have opportunities to engage in narrative writing. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Engage and orient the reader by establishing a context and introducing a narrator and/or characters; organize an event sequence that unfolds naturally and logically. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, the students read an excerpt from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley. In the introduction section for Personalizing Learning, the Challenge group produces a written response after reading the text. Students imagine they are writing a similar narrative about a person searching for his or her hometown, but the person is from the student’s hometown. Students decide on parts of their own hometown that the ones searching will use. They present these clues in a logically organized sequence.
Use narrative techniques, such as dialogue, pacing, and description, to develop experiences, events, and/or characters. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Fun They Had” by Isaac Asimov. Students write a scene with dialogue. When they revise and edit their work, they are asked to consider whether or not their writing has dialogue that contributes to the reader’s understanding of the characters and plot. They are also asked to consider whether the pacing is appropriate for capturing important ideas or building suspense.
Use a variety of transition words, phrases, and clauses to convey sequence and signal shifts from one time frame or setting to another. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, the students read an excerpt from Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson and review a gallery of comic strips from Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson. For the Performance Task: Writing Focus, students write a “personal narrative in response to the following prompt: When did you have to use your imagination to find another way to do something?” During the draft process, students are reminded to signal shifts by planning to present a clear sequence of events with transitional words or phrases. Students use a chart to organize their ideas in order. They are provided with time-order transitions such as: first, then, and earlier. They are also given suggestions for spatial-order transitions such as: in front of, beyond, and nearby.
Use precise words and phrases, relevant descriptive details, and sensory language to convey experiences and events. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Hachiko: The True Story of a Loyal Dog” by Pamela S. Turner. While practicing Effective Expression by Writing to Sources, students evaluate their story adaption. They are asked to consider the words that they choose specifically to bring the narrator in their story to life.
Provide a conclusion that follows from the narrated experiences or events. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, Launch Text, students read “Wagon Train at Dusk” by Joe Muniz. They review the author's use of dialogue and the lesson that’s woven into the conclusion.” When they write their Nonfiction Narrative at the end of the Whole-Class Learning section, they refer back to this model to see how a conclusion should follow from the experiences and events in the narrative.” During the Peer Review, classmates will evaluate the conclusion to determine if the conclusion is memorable and reflects on the experiences described in the narrative.
Where appropriate, writing opportunities are connected to texts and/or text sets (either as prompts, models, anchors, or supports). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read from Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson. Students complete a Write Now task to consider the description of truth and write about a time in which memory was different from the way another person remembered that event.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read "The Black Hole of Technology" by Leena Khan. Students use this text to analyze persuasive techniques such as repetition, appeal to emotion, and appeal to reason. Students use the text to answer questions such as what position or claim she expresses, give three examples of positive and negative words or phrases, what other techniques she uses, and how well she supports her claim.
In Unit 4, Imagination, students write a fictional narrative. Students use the Launch Text, “The Great Universal Undo” by M. Vasquez as a model for their narrative. Student instructions state to “Challenge yourself to find all of the elements of an effective narrative in the text.
In Unit 5, Exploration, students write an argument in which they state and defend a claim in response to the following question: “Should kids today be encouraged to become explorers?” Students review their Evidence Log, in which they recorded evidence that supports the essential question throughout the unit. In the Teacher’s Edition, the teacher is to acknowledge that the students have evidence from the texts to support their arguments, but “they may need to collect additional evidence, including facts, statistics, anecdotes, quotations from authorities, or examples that support their position.”
Indicator 1K
Materials include frequent opportunities for evidence-based writing to support careful analyses, well-defended claims, and clear information.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1k.
The materials provide frequent opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice, and apply writing while using evidence. The materials provide opportunities for students to practice writing that is focused on claims developed from reading closely, as well as frequent opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice, and apply writing while using evidence. During Whole-Class Learning, most units end with a writing task that involves explicit instruction in the skills needed to complete the task. The Teacher’s Edition includes expert instruction with support in the form of modeling and graphic organizers. During Small-Group Learning, students work collaboratively to complete writing projects that lead to speaking and listening components. At the end of each unit, students complete an End of Unit Assessment, applying their evidence-gathering skills to write longer pieces that answer the unit’s Essential Question.
Materials provide frequent opportunities across the school year for students to learn, practice, and apply writing using evidence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Introduction, Launch Text, students read “Wagon Train at Dusk”(author not cited). After reading, students write a summary of the text. The teacher is instructed to provide students with the following guidance for their summary paragraphs:
“Write in the the present tense.
Be concise: a summary should not be equal in length to the original text.
If you need to quote the author, use quotation marks.
Don’t put your own opinions, ideas, or interpretations into the summary. The purpose of writing a summary is to accurately represent what the author says, not to provide a critique.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Teens and Technology Share a Future” by Stefan Etienne and “The Black Hole of Technology” by Leena Khan. In the Writing to Compare section, students write an argumentative essay in which they “compare and contrast the two blog posts and decide which one is more convincing.” The teacher prompts students to complete a pre-writing activity in partners, where they first analyze the reasons and text structures of each text. Then, the teacher directs students to draft their writing either through “block organization” or “point by point organization.” The teacher tells students that “regardless of which organization option they use, they should provide plenty of support from the texts for their evaluations.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. After reading, students are complete a Writing to Sources activity in which they are presented with two options. They write explanatory essays that either compare-and-contrast their “childhood experience with imagination with that of the author” or a cause-and-effect essay in which they “explain the ways in which the author’s influences caused her to develop her current views on imagination.” The teacher first supports students in completing a graphic organizer in order to plot and analyze their evidence. The graphic organizer has two columns: one to include text details and another to include what the detail reveals about the student’s topics. The teacher uses the following questions to support students:
Compare-and-contrast essay: “Did you identify with what the author said? Or, did you feel that you couldn’t relate to her experience? You may react differently to different details.”
Cause-and-effect essay: “Identify details that reveal what influenced the author and her views on imagination. Then, make a clear connection between each detail and her perspective.”
Writing opportunities are focused around students’ careful analysis and claims developed from reading closely and working with evidence from texts and sources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read two texts, one from Bad Boy by Walter Dean Myers and the other, “I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid” by Alma Luz Villanueva. They then write a compare-contrast essay. The instructions require students to “Write a compare-and-contrast essay in which [they] analyze the ways in which the memoir and the poem present ideas about how boys and girls are supposed to act.” In order to analyze and compare and contrast the memoir and the poem, students must read closely. They take notes and compare the ways in which the two texts are alike. They also take notes on the ways that the texts are different so that they can compare them in their essay. In their essay, students use this collected evidence to make a claim.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read from My Life With the Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall. They write a how-to essay to describe the process Goodall used to gain the trust of the chimpanzees. In this essay, students must “state and explain each step clearly, and support your explanation with details from the text.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “The Black Hole of Technology” by Leena Khan. Students engage in a lesson on persuasive techniques authors use to support their claim, such as repetition, appeal to emotion, and appeal to reason. They write answers to questions on how the author used these persuasive techniques and others. Then students write to answer the question, “How well does Khan support her claim?”
Indicator 1L
Materials include explicit instruction of the grade-level grammar and usage standards, with opportunities for application in context.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 1l.
The materials provide some opportunities for students to demonstrate the application of grade-level grammar and usage skills during writing tasks throughout the school year. The explicit instruction of some grammar and usage standards is inconsistent or, in some cases, lacking. Some standards are addressed but have limited practice or are not outlined thoroughly, such as spelling. Students apply grammar skills during Whole-Class and Small-Group Learning, though the opportunities are not always connected to the text or writing prompt. Grammar lessons and tasks are connected to anchor texts and topics for each unit and include several opportunities to practice using pronouns correctly. In order to practice grammar skills and conventions, students complete Language Development tasks, such as those found in the Concept Vocabulary, Word Study, Conventions, and Author’s Style sections. However, some grade-level language standards are not addressed. The End Matter of the Teacher’s Edition provides a Grammar Handbook that defines grammar terms and provides examples of various grammar concepts; however, there are limited plans to scaffold and support student learning of grammar concepsts.
Materials include explicit instruction of some 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 ensure that pronouns are in the proper case (subjective, objective, possessive). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “Declaration of the Rights of the Child” by The United Nations General Assembly. In the Language Development, Conventions section of the text, students learn that “Effective writing involves correct usage of pronouns.” They learn the meaning of the nominative or subjective case, objective case, and possessive case. A chart with examples of each type of pronoun is available. Students practice by marking pronouns in sentences and labeling the case of the pronoun. Then they read and revise three sentences using the correct pronoun for the underlined word.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from My Life With the Chimpanzees by Dr. Jane Goodall and “Hachiko: The True Story of a Loyal Dog" by Pamela S. Turner. They write an explanatory essay that answers the question: “What qualities do Goodall and Turner believe people and animals share?” During the Language Development Conventions section of the essay, students learn that using the correct pronoun case can be tricky. While the teacher is provided with an example, “it is not uncommon for people to say, ‘Between you and I’ when the correct pronoun should be ‘me.’” The teacher is only given the example and states that “using the correct pronoun case is a matter of following a couple of simple rules.” The simple rules can be found under the Write It section of the Teacher’s Edition. For example, “She and the chimps lived in Gombe. Test: Block out the rest of the subject She lived in Gombe.” If the sentence makes sense without the subject, then the pronoun is probably correct. There are examples of ways to test for the correct pronoun usage, but the simple rules are not available in the Teacher’s Edition. Students can reference a chart in their text that has a list of pronouns, the pronouns for each case, the function in a sentence, and an example. Students revise their drafts to make sure they meet the rubric point for using the correct pronoun case in their essays.
In Unit 4, Whole-Class Learning, the students read the play The Phantom Tollbooth by Susan Nanus, based on the book by Norton Juster, and view media versions of the same story. They then use their new knowledge of structuring a narrative to write a fictional narrative about one of the characters in the story. While they draft their narrative, they are encouraged to use either first-person pronouns such as I, me, we, and us if the character is telling the story. If they select a narrator who is not in the story, they should establish a third-person point of view by using pronouns like he, she, they, and them.
Students have opportunities to use intensive pronouns. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “Michaela DePrince: The War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina” by William Kremer. In the Language Development section, the students learn about the differences between intensive and reflexive pronouns. The students learn that the two types of pronouns “look the same, but they function differently within a sentence.” Students review a chart that contains examples of reflective and intensive pronouns. They return to parts of the text and mark the reflexive and intensive pronouns. To finalize their learning, they use different intensive pronouns to write three sentences about Michaela DePrince’s life.
Students have opportunities to recognize and correct inappropriate shifts in pronoun number and person. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. In the Language Development section, students identify pronouns and antecedents in their writing to ensure agreement. First, teachers lead students in a review of pronouns and antecedents. Students use a chart for review. Students then apply the learning by identifying pronouns in their writing. After identifying the pronouns, they ensure they refer to a specific antecedent and “agree in number and in person.”
Students have opportunities to recognize and correct vague pronouns (i.e., ones with unclear or ambiguous antecedents). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read "The Importance of Imagination" by Esha Chhabra. The students practice identifying vague pronouns. The instructions state, “To find and fix errors in your writing related to pronoun use, follow these steps: First, identify each pronoun/antecedent pair that you used. Second, make sure the pronoun refers to a specific antecedent. Third, decide whether the antecedent is singular or plural. Fourth, determine whether the antecedent is in the first, second, or third person.” Practice entails finding and fixing errors in the Read It section.
Students have opportunities to recognize variations from standard English in their own and others’ writing and speaking, and identify and use strategies to improve expression in conventional language. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “A Blessing” by James Wright and “Predators” by Linda Hogan. Students write a compare-and-contrast essay and revise and review a peer’s writing. The students are grouped to review the different essays. The directions for the teacher state, “Encourage students to give constructive feedback as well as positive feedback. Demonstrate how to give constructive feedback in a polite way.” However, the directions do not provide specific places in the writing to focus on or ways to structure positive feedback. While there is a checklist provided for students for review purposes, it does not specifically provide direct instruction to help students search for writing that is “clearly written and uses correct punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and grammar.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, the students read ”Feathered Friend” by Arthur C. Clarke, “Teens and Technology Share a Future” by Stefan Etienne, “The Black Hole of Technology" by Leena Khan, and watch “The Internet of Things” by IBM Social Media. After reading, students produce a written argument that addresses the prompt, “Do electronic devices and online access really improve our lives?” During REvising for Evidence and Elaboration section, the students connect vague ideas using transitional phrases such as: in addition, on the other hand, or as a result. They also practice using a formal style in their writing. Students examine two sentences, one that is informal and one that is informal.
Informal language: Technology is really messing up our lives.
Formal language: Technology is having a negative impact on our lives.
The examples guide the students “to understand how more formal language can be more persuasive for different audiences.
Students have opportunities to use punctuation (commas, parentheses, dashes) to set off nonrestrictive/parenthetical elements. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read from My Life With Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall. As students complete the Language Development activities, they are introduced to tasks related to the use of commas, parentheses, and dashes. Teachers first review the function of punctuation and share examples with the students, who use a chart to track the information. The Grammar Handbook includes practice worksheets for students. There are also examples of the text used to help students to practice the correct use of punctuation.
Students have opportunities to spell correctly. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read Hachiko: The True Story of a Loyal Dog by Pamela S. Turner. They practice spelling irregular plurals correctly. Students use a chart to review several teacher-driven examples of irregular plurals and then practice their learning with an activity that utilizes the text.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole Class Learning, the teacher does not provide direct, explicit instruction around spelling but does remind students that the spell checker will not catch all errors and to be mindful when editing and revising to ensure proper nouns are spelled correctly, such as when they write are writing about bloggers for their editorial compositions.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierly and “BBC Science Club: All About Exploration'' by Dara Ó Briain. Students write an argument where they answer the question, “Can anyone be an explorer?” After writing the draft, the students Edit for Conventions. The teacher suggests that students “edit each other’s essays for conventions and accuracy;” however, there is limited instruction to guide the students while searching for errors in another student’s work. They are offered the following advice when proofreading for accuracy, “Make sure that you have not confused words that sound the same. For example, ships sail across the sea, and they don’t sell across the see.”
Students have opportunities to vary sentence patterns for meaning, reader/listener interest, and style. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole Class Learning, students engage in a lesson on voice and examine how short and long sentences can impact tone. They are instructed to “make sure to consider [their] readers by varying [their] sentence structures.” Then when revising their narrative, teachers encourage students to revise in the area of voice, which includes “Have I used a variety of sentence structures and lengths?”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, students read The Phantom Tollbooth, Act II by Susan Nanus. Students learn about simple, compound, and complex sentences and are encouraged to use different types of sentence patterns, for example, “Mark the independent and dependent clauses. Then, label each sentence as simple, compound, or complex.” Students then write a retelling of a scene from the second act of The Phantom Tollbooth and are instructed, “Also, remember to use a variety of sentence types in your writing.”
Students have opportunities to maintain consistency in style and tone. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, Launch Text, students read “Wagon Train at Dusk” by Joe Muniz. They use this work as a model for expressing a particular style and tone as they write a personal narrative that answers the question, “When did you have to use your imagination to find another way to do something?” Students are guided to analyze the author’s voice. As they begin writing, they work to develop their own consistency in voice to convey their style by answering the following questions about their own writing:
Am I using words with which I am comfortable, even as I try to stretch my vocabulary?
Do my descriptions really show how I see things?
Does my writing seem true and authentic?
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students watch the video “The Internet of Things” by IBM Social Media. For the writing component, students practice writing a brief, objective summary. The text states, “An objective summary is a retelling of the most important ideas in an unbiased way.” Students learn that they must not include their opinion in a summary that is considered objective. In addition to writing the main ideas and evidence from the video, they note terms that are repeated throughout the video. This is the only instruction that is provided to support students while writing the objective summary. There are no models of student writing, checklists, or rubrics to help students write with an objective tone.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read “Mission Twinpossible'' by TIME for Kids, an excerpt from Tales from the Odyssey by Mary Pope Osborne, “To The Top of Everest” by Samantha Larson, and an excerpt from Lewis and Clark by Nick Bertozzi. For the Performance Task, students write an argumentative essay in which they state and support their position on the following question: “Can anyone be an explorer?” As they produce their writing sample, they must maintain “a formal style that takes the subject and reader seriously.” In order to do this, the Teacher’s Edition provides examples to support word choice for style and tone. The Teacher’s Edition helps students “grasp the idea of formal versus informal tone.” The teacher leads a discussion about the casual and informal style of an email versus the formal, serious style of a cover letter for a job. Students practice reading examples that show different tones as the author writes. As they draft their essay, the text reminds them to “choose words that create the formal style and serious tone” that is needed for this piece of writing. Students use accurate words, avoid absolute words, and use reasonable words. Each of these strategies includes examples for students to read in the text.
Indicator 1M
Materials include a cohesive, year-long plan for students to interact with and build key academic vocabulary words in and across texts.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 1m.
The materials provide a comprehensive year-long plan for students to interact with and acquire academic vocabulary in a systematic way. Materials include lessons and activities for vocabulary development critical to understanding the text, the overall concept of the unit, and the genre of writing for each unit. Academic vocabulary is highlighted at the beginning of each unit in the introduction. Concept or Media Vocabulary specific to the text or media that students review is emphasized at the beginning of each reading and throughout the lesson. Activities for demonstrating understanding of the Concept Vocabulary become more complex as the year progresses. Vocabulary is associated with the writing focus of the Performance Tasks, and students can incorporate vocabulary in authentic ways during the Performance Tasks and from their Word Networks during the Performance-Based Assessment. Stand-alone vocabulary assessments include a pretest, mid-year assessment, and end-of-year assessment. Content vocabulary is repeated over the school year and includes, but is not limited to, claim and counterclaim. There is additional independent student practice in the Vocabulary Center and guidance and resources for the teacher in the Program Resources, Teacher’s Edition, and Professional Development Center. Materials provide teacher guidance outlining a cohesive vocabulary development component.
Materials provide teacher guidance outlining a cohesive year-long vocabulary development component. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher’s Edition Table of Contents and Frontmatter, the materials include a section on Standards Correlation. It includes the Key Features of the Standards and how each section of the unit fits into the larger picture of teaching the standards. The Language Standard is complete for teaching Conventions, Effective Use, and Vocabulary. The text states, “The vocabulary standards focus on understanding words and phrases, their relationships, and their nuances and on acquiring new vocabulary, particularly general academic and domain-specific words, and phrases.” In order to teach the Language standards for vocabulary, each unit includes Vocabulary/Word Study. The Unit at a Glance section in the Teacher’s Edition and Resources includes Vocabulary and Word Study concepts that will be introduced during each reading. Each unit offers information in the Introduction regarding the Academic Vocabulary for teacher guidance, such as lessons that help with learning the vocabulary and offering possible student responses to questions that reiterate the vocabulary words. The materials offer Language Development in each of the Whole-Class and Small-Group Learning sections with Word Networks. The students are encouraged to annotate vocabulary when close reading. The Teacher’s Edition End Matter also includes a Glossary: Academic Concept Vocabulary and the academic vocabulary appears in blue font. The Index also offers a list of the academic vocabulary and concept vocabulary with corresponding page numbers.
In the Teacher’s Edition during the Launch text of each unit, the Vocabulary Development box provides teachers with additional Academic Vocabulary Reinforcement activities.
Vocabulary is repeated in contexts (before texts, in texts) and across multiple texts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In each unit, academic and concept vocabulary are embedded throughout. In each unit Introduction, students view a chart with academic vocabulary for the unit, read mentor sentences with the words, and complete a chart for the predicted meaning and related words. Each text Introduction includes a Concept Vocabulary section where students rank words from least familiar to most familiar. All words are defined in the footnotes of the text. After reading, the Concept Vocabulary section includes activities with words from the introduction and the Word Study. The structure of vocabulary lessons remains consistent throughout the year.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Hachiko, The True Story of a Loyal Dog” by Pamela S. Turner. Before reading, students rank five words from most familiar (1) to least familiar (5). The words are timidly, anxiously, patiently, thoughtfully, and silently. Students conduct a first read of the text and annotate the text by marking key vocabulary. As students read the text, the vocabulary from the chart is noted in blue font. The pronunciation and definition are provided in the margin of the student materials. After reading, students participate in tasks from the Language Development, Vocabulary section. They answer the question, “How does the concept vocabulary convey the characters’ emotional responses to important events in the story?” Students use a thesaurus to find a synonym and an antonym for each word. Finally, students complete a Word Study task examining the suffix -ly. Then students identify the verb from each word, rereading paragraphs two and seven and locate more words with the suffix -ly.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “The Internet of Things” by IBM Social Media. In the Media Vocabulary lesson, students learn about images or graphics, animation, audio, voiceover, and narrator. The teacher encourages students to discuss the words and use their meanings as they relate to technology and media. The teacher asks students to discuss if these words’ meanings change in different contexts. Students then fill in a sentence to clarify the meaning of animation in the Vocabulary Development section of the Teacher’s Edition. Later in the school year, they encounter the word animation during Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning. Students watch the video BBC Science Club: “All About Exploration” by Dara Ó Briain. The Media Vocabulary that the students learn includes more specific types of animation, such as: cut-out animation, object animation, and real-time animation. Upon a first review of the text, students learn from the Jump Start that animation tools not only tell stories but can bring history to life. During the reading, the Teacher’s Edition directs students’ attention to “the animation of the Native American” in the video. A question from the teacher prompts students to consider the details from this animation and tell them. After reading, students use the Media Vocabulary to answer the questions from the Analyzing the Media section. One specific question asks the students to answer the following question: How effective is the use of animation in conveying information about exploration?”
Attention is paid to vocabulary essential to understanding the text and to high-value academic words (e.g., words that might appear in other contexts/content areas). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Vocabulary Center, Interactive Vocabulary Lessons, Grades 6, Domain-Specific Vocabulary, the lesson includes Show It, Try It, and Apply It, Part 1 and 2. In Part 1, some examples of terms include, but are not limited to: civilization, nomadic, percent, cell, gene, and monitor. The Interactive lessons include the following student activity within the Try It tab: “Drag each word into the correct subject area column.” Students apply their learning by taking a six-question quiz in the Apply it section that asks questions pertaining to the vocabulary, such as:
In which sentence is monitor used correctly?
I bought a larger monitor so that I could watch movies on my computer.
I bought a larger monitor so that my computer would run more quickly.
In which sentence is nomadic used correctly?
The nomadic people roamed over a large area of land.
The nomadic people never left the town in which they were born.
In the Vocabulary Center, Interactive Vocabulary Lessons, Grades 6, General Academic Vocabulary, the lesson includes Show It, Try It, and Apply It, Part 1 and 2. In Part 1, some examples of terms include, but are not limited to: coherent, declare, novelty, propel, reflect, and transform. The Interactive lessons include the following student activity within the Try It tab: “Drag each word in the left-hand column to match it with the vocabulary word in the right-hand column that has the same root.” For example, students would match the new word, expel from the right-hand column with the word propel (-pel-) in the left-hand column. They apply their learning by reading a paragraph and filling in the correct vocabulary word. For example, “The students from John Glenn Middle School are pleased to (illustrate, transform, or declare) the second week in May as ‘Young Filmmakers Week.’”
In Unit 1, Childhood, Introduction, the materials include academic vocabulary terms that “help you read, write, and speak with more precision and clarity.” Here are five academic words that will be useful to you in this unit as you analyze and write nonfiction narratives.” Students complete a chart to predict meaning and write at least two related words for the following: reflect, notable, contribute, recognize, and memorize.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley. The materials provide the Concept Vocabulary that relates to the story, deliberate, thorough, intensity, quest, obsessive, and relentlessly. The words are Tier II, high-frequency academic words.
Overview of Gateway 2
Building Knowledge with Texts, Vocabulary, and Tasks
The materials are grouped around topics/themes to grow students’ knowledge over the course of the school year. There are high-quality questions and tasks that are sequenced in a way that is appropriate for the grade level and include text-specific and/or text-dependent questions and tasks. Throughout the program, there are opportunities for students to complete research to learn more about or expand their knowledge on topics. The culminating tasks in the program require students to show their knowledge and understanding of the topics/themes in each unit. While the materials provide writing instruction that aligns with the standards, well-designed explicit instruction guidance is inconsistent or lacking in some areas.
The materials spend instructional time on content that falls within grade-level aligned instruction, practice, and assessments. Over the course of each unit, the majority of questions, tasks, and assessments are aligned to grade-level standards, and by the end of the academic year, every standard is addressed. The pacing for the five units in the program is generally reasonable, and the suggested implementation schedule can be reasonably completed in one school year.
Gateway 2
v1.5
Criterion 2.1: Building Knowledge
Materials build knowledge through integrated reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language.
The materials are grouped around topics/themes to grow students’ knowledge over the course of the school year. Texts within units are connected and arranged by topics/themes around an essential question.
The materials include high-quality questions and tasks in which students analyze key ideas, details, craft, and structure within individual texts as well as across multiple texts. The tasks are sequenced in a way that is appropriate for the grade level and include text-specific and/or text-dependent questions and tasks. There are culminating tasks that require students to show their knowledge and understanding of a topic through integrated literacy skills. The program also provides multiple opportunities for students to engage in research. In each unit, there are opportunities for students to conduct both shorter and longer research tasks to build knowledge on topics and synthesize their learning.
While the materials provide writing instruction that aligns with the standards, well-designed explicit instruction guidance is lacking in some areas.
Indicator 2A
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 2a.
The materials are grouped around topics/themes to grow students’ knowledge over the course of the school year. The sequence of texts around these topics/themes helps students to read and comprehend complex texts independently and proficiently. Texts within units are connected and arranged by topics around an essential question.
Texts are connected by a grade-appropriate cohesive topic/theme/line of inquiry. Texts build knowledge and the ability to read and comprehend complex texts across a school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, the selection of texts lead to analysis and discussion around the following Essential Question: “What are some of the challenges and triumphs of growing up?” The unit begins with a launch text called Wagon Train at Dusk by Joe Muniz. It continues with Whole-Class, Small-Group, and Independent reading that all connect back to the Essential Question, including Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson, “Declaration of the Rights of the Child” by The United Nations General Assembly, and an excerpt from Bad Boy by Walter Dean Myers.
In Unit 4, Imagination, students focus on this Essential Question: “Where can imagination lead?” In this unit, the Launch Text models a fictional narrative, which is the “mode of writing that will be at the core of the Performance-Based Assessment.” The students read “The Great Universal Undo” by M. Vasquez. Additional texts in the unit all connect to the theme and culminate in a unit assessment in which the students write a short story that explores the following question: “What might happen if a fictional character were to come into the real world?” Some of these texts include The Phantom Tollbooth, Acts I and II by Susan Nanus, based on the book by Norton Juster, the Jabberwocky from Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll, and the reflective essay “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra.
In Unit 5, Exploration, texts all connect to the Essential Question: “What drives people to explore?” This unit begins with an argument with a title that matches the Essential Question and acts as a model for the student Performance Assessment. All text and media in this unit is connected to the theme of exploration, including the memoir A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley, the news article “Mission Twinposssible” by TIME for Kids, and the graphic novel Lewis & Clark by Nick Bertozzi.
Indicator 2B
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 2b.
The materials include high-quality questions and tasks in which students analyze key ideas, details, craft, and structure within individual texts as well as across multiple texts. The materials are organized in a consistent pattern across all units with multiple after-reading activities. Each unit is divided into five main parts: The Introduction, Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, Independent Learning, and the End Of Unit (Assessment, Reflection, and Test). Before beginning each reading, students engage in a First Read, which requires them to note what they notice, annotate the key vocabulary and passages, connect ideas with other selections, and respond by writing a brief summary. The Close Read notes in the Teacher’s Edition help support student analysis of key ideas, details, craft, and structure as the students read. After reading, the students work through activities to ensure their understanding of the key ideas in the reading. The Comprehension Check, Close Read of the Text, Analyze the Text, and Analyze Craft and Structure questions require students to revisit the text and use specific text evidence in their answers. In the Teacher’s Edition, the sample answers also include the depth of knowledge levels for some questions; most are at DOK 2 or 3. For some texts, the questions lead to the subsequent Writing or Speaking and Listening activities. These questions also build toward the various Performance Tasks embedded after Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, and at the End of the Unit. Throughout each unit, students keep an Evidence Log and notebook to record responses and help them prepare for the culminating tasks.
For most texts, students analyze key ideas and details (according to grade-level standards). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read from My Life with Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall. During the Close Read section of lessons, students are asked how a reader can infer from the author’s first-person narrative and draw conclusions based on details from the text. Later, students analyze paragraph 8 from the text and “notice and highlight details that tell [them] what Dr. Goodall saw when she went out to view the chimps.” They are asked, “Why do you think Dr. Goodall has chosen to repeat these words?” They also consider “How does this repetition help communicate Goodall’s experience to the reader?” In addition, students identify details that illustrate how “Goodall contrasts the chimps’ and baboons’ behavior” and answer the question, “What does this contrast reveal about the chimps?” In the section called Analyze the Text, students “make inferences” by answering the question, “What do David Graybeard’s visits to Dr. Goodall’s camp show about the chimpanzees’ changing response to her presence?”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. During the section called Close Read, students “identify the main characters, setting, and plot.” They consider why characters do certain things and are reminded to use what they already know to “make inferences about the character’s motivation.” When looking at dialogue, students are asked, “Why do you think the author chose to include Alice’s own words in this paragraph?” In paragraphs 6-7, students are directed to identify “details…that show what Alice is thinking” and consider what the details tell them. Students are asked why the author uses these details. In the section called Analyze the Text, students are asked, “How do the details about what Alice is seeing and thinking help you to picture her experience as she falls?”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierly and answer a series of questions to analyze the text. Students connect, infer, interpret, and respond to the unit’s essential question. One question that requires student analysis of the text is, “What does Brierley mean when he says, ‘And I had to try not to bend my memories to fit what I was looking at’?”
For most texts, students analyze craft and structure (according to grade-level standards). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid” by Alma Luz Villanueva. When they Analyze Craft and Structure, teachers guide students to annotate lines 1–4 for something that it reveals about the character. Then, “Help students to draw conclusions about the importance of these details…why the author might have included these details so early.”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “Black Cowboy, Wild Horses” by Julius Lester and consider the plot of the story, paying close attention to the conflict found in the story. Students review the major components of a plot; exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution, and discuss “the difference between the external conflicts and the internal conflicts that Bob encounters.” Students are asked, “In this story, what does Bob Lemmons want to achieve?” and must “Identify at least two problems Bob solves in order to achieve his goal.” Students identify details related to the setting and are asked, “To which stage of the story do [these details] belong?” Students also analyze the plot with regard to its climax and are asked, “At what point do you think the story reaches its climax or point of greatest tension?”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, students read The Phantom Tollbooth, Act ll by Susan Nanus. Under the Analyze Craft and Structure section of the lesson, students consider the “dramatic structure” of the text. Students review the main purpose of lines of dialogue and stage directions. They are taught that “stage directions help readers visualize, or picture, the action. They also reveal important information about how characters feel, respond, and behave.” Students identify details found in the stage directions for the text and are asked, “How does the stage direction make the action more clear?”
Indicator 2C
Materials require students to analyze the integration of knowledge 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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 2c.
The materials include multiple opportunities for students to analyze the integration of knowledge and ideas within individual texts and across multiple texts. The tasks are sequenced in a way that is appropriate for the grade level and include text-specific and/or text-dependent questions and tasks. The materials provide related questions as students comprehend and analyze texts and complete culminating tasks. Most sets of questions and tasks require students to analyze the integration of knowledge and ideas across the unit to build knowledge around a topic/theme and the essential question. In some instances, the materials pair two or more texts, and students practice the same skills across all texts. Multiple texts connect to the essential question in preparation for the end-of-unit assessment. In this assessment, students synthesize ideas based on various text-dependent prompts that align with grade-level standards.
Most sets of questions and tasks support students’ analysis of knowledge and ideas. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read from Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson. In the section called Close Read the Text, students “mark words that indicate the exact words of Woodson and her sister in lines 9–23 of ‘sometimes’” and respond to the following questions: “What can you tell about Woodson from these lines? What can you tell about her sister? How does this dialogue help you understand the differences between Woodson and her sister?” In lines 23–38 of “believing,” students are asked to “mark words that show how the poet’s mother reacts to her stories. Then, mark words that show how her uncle reacts.” Students respond to the following questions: “Why does the poet include these different reactions? How does this contrast help the reader better understand the poet’s struggle?” In the section called Analyze the Text, students are asked to respond to the essential question for the unit: “What are some of the challenges and triumphs of growing up?”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Teens and Technology Share a Future” by Stefan Etienne. In the lesson section called Close Read the Text, students are asked to identify “two comparisons the author makes” and are asked the following questions: “Why does the author use these comparisons? How do these comparisons help readers understand the writer’s ideas?” In the section called Analyze the Text, students respond to the essential question for the unit: “How is modern technology helpful and harmful to society?”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read from Tales from The Odyssey by Mary Pope Osborne. In the Close Read section, students “reread paragraph four and mark the names of the two gods, where they rule, and what Odysseus thinks they are doing to him and his men.” They then “consider what these details help them understand.” Students also conduct research to find “images that show Odysseus and his men among the lotus-eaters.” They consider these images as they respond to the following questions: “How did the images you found compare to what you imagined as you read? Which did you find more powerful-the descriptions in the text or the images? Why?”
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 Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read from “Bad Boy” by Walter Dean Myers and “I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid” by Alma Luz Villanueva. Students “compare and contrast the theme” of these two texts. In preparation for the writing, students “discuss differences between poetry and prose.” When students review the lessons in Effective Expression, they are instructed that The memoir Bad Boy and the poem “I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid” share a central idea or theme, which is that being different can be difficult. Students prepare for writing by answering the following questions that relate to the texts: “What are the advantages of a memoir for expressing ideas? What are the advantages of a poem for expressing ideas? Which text do you think does a better job of expressing ideas about how boys and girls are ‘supposed’ to act? Why?”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, students read from My Life with the Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall, and Hachiko, The True Story of a Loyal Dog by Pamela S Turner. While reading from My Life with the Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall students answer the question, “Why does Goodall contrast the chimps’ and baboons’ behavior.” After reading Hachiko, The True Story of a Loyal Dog by Pamela S Turner, students answer the question, “How can people and animals relate to each other?” Finally, students complete a Performance Task to answer the prompt, “What qualities do Goodall and Turner believe people and animals share?”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, students read The Phantom Tollbooth, Act II by Susan Nanus, and listen to the audio version The Phantom Tollbooth by Leena Khan. Afterward, students compare-and-contrast the text and audio version as they identify what they “see” and “hear” in both versions. Students are prompted to “Discuss how reading the play is like or unlike the experience of listening to the audio. Use examples from Act II of the text and the audio excerpt to support your ideas.” In addition, students state which version they prefer and why. Following this comparison, students draft a fictional narrative in which they use their own imaginations “to write a new short story about one or more of those characters” in the Phantom and the Tollbooth.
Indicator 2D
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 2d.
The materials include three culminating tasks that require students to show their knowledge and understanding of a topic through integrated literacy skills. Each unit across the grade level includes an essential question connecting to a topic/theme. The units include Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, and Independent Learning opportunities. Students build knowledge on the topic/theme by reading texts or watching videos. They complete writing tasks and engage in speaking and listening with peers. The Whole-Group Learning Performance Tasks assess writing, and the Small-Group Learning Performance Tasks assess speaking and listening skills. Throughout the unit, brief writing tasks follow each reading and provide practice opportunities for multiple skills. Teachers provide feedback during writing exercises to move students toward mastery by the end of the unit. The Teacher Resources includes an Assessment section that provides culminating online and PDF versions of selection tests, extension selection tests, unit tests, and extension unit tests. Each culminating exam includes multiple choice and short answer questions testing various standards.
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 the Teacher’s Edition, each Introduction for the unit includes information about the Unit Goals, including goals related to Reading, Writing, Research, Language, and Speaking and Listening. The Teacher’s Edition states, “These unit goals were backward designed from the Performance-Based Assessment at the end of the unit and the Whole-Class and Small Group Performance Tasks. Students will practice and become proficient in many more standards over the course of this unit.”
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Group Learning, Performance Task: Writing Focus, students write a Nonfiction Narrative in response to the question: “When did you have to use your imagination to find another way to do something?” Students use this opportunity to demonstrate mastery of narrative writing standards. For example, they need to illustrate a conflict or problem, share details about those who play a role in the resolution of the conflict, and respond to the question, which is related to the essential question for the unit. Students must also ensure that events in the narrative take place sequentially and include appropriate transitions. Once students create the final version of their narrative, they are asked to “Use a class or school website, a class whiteboard, or email to share and comment on other classmates’ narratives.”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, students read “Predators” by Linda Hogan and “A Blessing” by James Wright in order to complete the culminating task of writing a compare-and-contrast essay. Although Speaking and Listening standards are not indicated in the margins of this task, students begin by engaging in a collaborative discussion with diverse partners, a 6th-grade speaking and listening standard. Students are tasked to “With [their] group, discuss the questions as they relate to each poem on its own. Use the chart to write [their] notes and to identify relevant details from the poems.” After collaborating, students write an informative text independently. Students come back to their groups for peer review at the end of this task, “with some guidance and support from peers and adults, [they] develop and strengthen writing as needed by planning, revising, editing, rewriting.”
Indicator 2E
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 6 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 2e.
The materials provide writing instruction that aligns with the standards. Materials support students’ growth in writing over the school year. The Teacher’s Edition includes limited information related to a year-long writing plan, along with some well-designed lessons, protocols, and support for teachers to implement and monitor student writing development. Each unit includes lessons and activities that follow a consistent pattern for developing writing tasks. Narrative, informative or explanatory, and argumentative writing activities are offered across the year in the Unit Introduction, Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, and Independent Learning sections. Each unit contains some instructional materials that support students as they practice the skills that help yield success on the End of Unit Performance-Based Writing Assessment. The Teacher’s Edition includes some guidance, protocols, models, and support for teachers to implement and monitor students’ writing development. There is limited information relating to a year-long writing plan. Mentor texts are provided for students to reference and learn techniques to apply in their own writing. Some guidance is provided for students as they practice and apply writing standards, mostly in reminders to teachers rather than explicit instruction and modeling. While all standards are tagged as a part of the instruction and tasks, a number of standards do not have explicit instruction; rather, students are told to address the skill indicated in the standard. While there are some interactive and minilessons available in the resources, the materials do not consistently outline where these resources may be helpful to teachers and students. Those resources that are available for students and teachers to access are generic resources that are not specific to each text, writing, task, or unit.
Materials include writing instruction that aligns 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:
Each unit provides a Launch Text to model the mode of writing that will be used in the Performance-Based Assessments. Throughout Whole-Class Learning, the teacher will “lead the shared reading experience, providing modeling and support, as students begin exploring perspectives on the unit topic.” Writing tasks connect with the texts students read. The Performance Task assists students in building toward proficiency with the Unit Performance-Based Assessment.
In Unit 1, Childhood, Unit Introduction, students read "Wagon Train at Dusk” by Joe Muniz. This nonfiction narrative models an attention-grabbing introduction and recounts a story in chronological order. During the reading, students pay attention to the “specific and descriptive words.” They also review the way the author uses dialogue throughout the text. At the end of the story, students review the way the theme of the story is “woven into the conclusion.” Students reference the Model Narrative when completing the Performance Task and writing a nonfiction narrative.
In Unit 4, Imagination, students write a research report about various reimaginations of Alice from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Students review different ways of organizing images and texts to achieve various outcomes in writing. Teacher instructions state that chronological order might be best for these tasks.
In Unit 5, Exploration, students write an argumentative essay for the Performance Task: Writing Focus. Students state and support a position on the question, “Can anyone be an explorer?” Students receive clear guidance on the elements of an effective argumentative essay and are guided back to the launch text, which is an argumentative model, to identify those elements. For additional guidance, the Teacher Edition encourages teachers to make finding elements of an argument interactive. For example, in “Project ‘What on Earth Is Left to Explore?’” from the Interactive Teacher’s Edition, the directions to teachers state, “have students identify the elements of an argument and identify the writer’s claim. Next, ask volunteers to identify evidence that supports the author’s claim.”
Instructional materials include some well-designed guidance, protocols, models, and support for teachers to implement and monitor students’ writing development. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, students write an explanatory essay for the Performance Task: Writing Focus. Teachers use a bulleted list to guide students to find elements of an explanatory essay in the Launch Text, “Reading Buddies.” Students identify the following elements: an introduction with a thesis, logical organization, details, transitions, precise language, and a concluding statement. Then, the teacher guides students to write a working thesis and then review their evidence to make sure they have supporting evidence. The directions state, “After you have crafted a working thesis, look for evidence from the two texts to support it.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Performance Based Assessment, students write an argumentative essay. Before writing, students are told to review the Argument Rubric. The rubric is a four-point rubric and is organized into three categories: Focus and Organization, Evidence and Elaboration, and Conventions. The teacher points out the differences between the scores of 3 and 4, “pay particular attention to the differences between an argument that contains all of the required elements and one that is compelling, well-organized, and thoroughly supported by clear reasons and relevant evidence.” While there is general teacher guidance provided, there is no explicit instruction.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, Performance Task: Writing Focus, students write a short story about one of the characters in “Phantom Tollbooth” by Susan Nanus. Students are provided with a story starter to assist. The “Jump Start” activities are directed by the teacher and help to establish the process for this writing task. Students are prompted to brainstorm ideas in collaboration with the teacher. The EssayScorer is used to complete this prompt, and teachers assign the activity in the EssayScorer to help students prepare for the writing task. The launch text for the unit is accessible as a model narrative to both teachers and students so they can identify the key elements of the writing prompt. Teachers also have access to resources by Kelly Gallagher, M.Ed., which stresses the importance of intensive modeling. This information guides teachers through a process to review tasks related to purposeful editing. While there is general teacher guidance provided, there is no explicit instruction.
Indicator 2F
Materials include a progression of focused research projects to encourage students to develop knowledge in a given area by confronting and analyzing different aspects of a topic using multiple texts and source materials.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 2f.
The materials provide multiple opportunities for students to engage in research. Short text-specific research opportunities connect to each text through Research to Clarify and Research to Explore tasks. Throughout each unit, there are opportunities for students to conduct brief research to build knowledge about the topic of the text and/or unit, including, but not limited to, Cross-Curricular tasks and Challenge tasks. Materials provide for longer research tasks that require students to synthesize and analyze tasks connected to the unit topics. Materials include teaching around research standards such as avoiding plagiarism and correctly citing sources. Research tasks build mastery over the school year and connect to research standards.
Research projects are sequenced across a school year to include a progression of research skills according to grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Gather relevant information from multiple print and digital sources; assess the credibility of each source; and quote or paraphrase the data and conclusions of others while avoiding plagiarism and providing basic bibliographic information for sources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “Monkey Master” by Waldemar Januszczak. They conduct research to clarify an “unfamiliar detail from the text.” In addition, small groups are asked to conduct research, and participate in a group discussion on ”a topic that is related to the text.” Students “use a variety of reliable print and online sources” for this work. As students research, they “look for relevant visuals, such as photographs or videos, that will be interesting to share with [their] group.” Students cite their sources, but this is not an assessed skill.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. They create a research report on one of two possible topics. Small groups “conduct research to find both textual information as well as illustrations, image stills, and other visuals to include” in the report. Students ensure they are using “several credible print and digital sources” and “record the bibliographic information for each source” they use. Students use a chart to record the information they need for the report.
Materials support teachers in employing projects that develop students’ knowledge of different aspects of a topic via provided resources. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Resources, a Plagiarism Checker is provided for teachers to access via Safe Assign, which offers guidance for implementation, including Video Tutorials: “SafeAssign is effective as both a deterrent and an educational tool. Use SafeAssign to review assignment submissions for originality and create opportunities to help students identify how to properly attribute sources rather than paraphrase.” The tool will assist educators when assigning research projects.
The materials offer Research Minilessons and a Writing and Research Center with a Research Writing PowerPoint Presentation that introduces research writing and provides prewriting tips to assist students in formulating a research question and making a Research Plan, such as “Once you have written your major research question, you are ready to make a research plan. As part of your plan, you will create a timeline for finishing your report. You also will find and evaluate sources of information.” The PowerPoint Presentation includes guidance relating how to organize a research report and revise and edit the draft. A grammar minilesson follows, and student instructions for publishing the piece state: “When you’ve finished your final draft, publish it. Use this chart to identify a way to publish your informational research report for the appropriate audience.” The Teacher’s Edition: End Matter, Tool Kit: Research includes detailed guidance for Conducting Research, Reviewing Research Findings, and Incorporating Research Into Writing.
Materials provide many opportunities for students to synthesize and analyze content tied to the texts under study as a part of the research process. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Conduct short research projects to answer a question, drawing on several sources and refocusing the inquiry when appropriate. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students read the Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strips, "Ghosts” and "Do You Like Her?” and "Xing" by Bill Watterson and conduct a short research project with John Calvin or Thomas Hobbes. Students “write a short essay that introduces Calvin’s or Hobbes’s ideas and explains the connection with the cartoon character.” Students question whether their research shows a meaningful connection between the historical figures and the cartoon characters.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. They answer comprehension questions, including Research to Clarify questions and Research to Explore questions. Students choose an unfamiliar detail from the text and briefly research that detail. Then students choose something they find interesting and write a research question. Teacher materials provide prompts and probing questions to assist students with this task.
In Unit 5, Exploration Whole-Class Learning, students view a video by the BBC Science Club titled “All About Exploration” by Dara Ó Briain. They research an explorer whose accomplishments could be added to the “All About Exploration” video. Students then storyboard what they found and present this mini-research to the class.
Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “Black Cowboy, Wild Horses” by Julius Lester. The “create an informative multimedia presentation” on one of two possible topics. Once students complete their research, they are asked to “conclude [their] presentation by comparing [their] topic to Julius Lester’s portrayal of the legendary figure of Bob Lemmons in “Black Cowboy, Wild Horses.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, students complete a performance-based assessment prep where they review all their evidence gathered from the unit and evaluate how “the texts they’ve read and the multimedia they’ve reviewed confirmed, challenged, or changed their initial response to the question. How can imagination lead you to somewhere unexpected?” Students use a checklist to evaluate the strength of their evidence: “Do you have enough details and examples, both from the texts and your own experience, to write a well-developed, engaging fictional narrative? If not, make a plan.”
Criterion 2.2: Coherence
Materials promote mastery of grade-level standards by the end of the year.
The materials spend instructional time on content that falls within grade-level aligned instruction, practice, and assessments. Over the course of each unit, the majority of questions, tasks, and assessments are aligned to grade-level standards, with opportunities for explicit instruction. By the end of the academic year, every standard is addressed, and there are multiple opportunities for students to revisit standards to promote mastery.
The program is organized into five units, and the culminating task for each unit is a Performance-Based Assessment. The pacing for the units is generally reasonable, and the suggested implementation schedule can be reasonably completed in one school year.
Indicator 2G
Materials spend the majority of instructional time on content that falls within grade-level aligned instruction, practice, and assessments.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 2g.
The materials spend instructional time on content that falls within grade-level aligned instruction, practice, and assessments. Over the course of each unit, the majority of questions, tasks, and assessments are aligned to grade-level standards, with opportunities for explicit instruction. By the end of the academic year, every standard is addressed, and there are multiple opportunities for students to revisit standards to promote mastery. Some standards are repeatedly addressed within and across units to ensure students master the full intent of the standard. Students have opportunities in each grade-level standard to build skills in a logical sequence over the course of the year.
Over the course of each unit, the majority of instruction is aligned to grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In each unit, the Unit at a Glance section lists the standards for each student activity in one of three columns: Analyze Craft and Structure, Conventions/Author’s Style, and Composition/Research/Speaking and Listening. The Teacher’s Edition: End Matter PDF includes an Index of Skills where page number references are provided. In the Teacher’s Edition, Table of Contents, and Frontmatter PDF, the materials provide the Standards Correlation to myPerspectives® English Language Arts document with page numbers: “The following correlation shows points at which focused standards instruction is provided in the Student Edition. The Teacher’s Edition provides further opportunity to address standards through Personalize for Learning notes and additional resources available only in the Teacher’s Edition.”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Hachiko: A True Story of a Loyal Dog” by Pamela S. Turner. In Writing to Sources, the students address standard W6.3: “Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.” Students write their own version of the story through the eyes of Hachiko, the dog. The Teacher’s Edition explains that students are writing their own adaptation: “As students reread the story, remind them to make notes about Hachiko relates to the people in the story and how he might express his thoughts about his life experiences.” Students then build their story adaptation by identifying the main plot events, taking careful notes about Hachiko’s actions and relationships, and adding details to show the sensory details Hachiko felt as he lived through his experience. According to the Standards Correlation chart, there are four specific instances across the school year when the students have an opportunity to address standard RI.6.3, and teachers can engage in explicit instruction.
In Unit 4, Imagination, students read “Jabberwocky” from Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll and study the author’s word choice and tone, which aligns with standard RL.6.4: “Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of a specific word choice on meaning and tone.” In the Author’s Style section of this lesson, instruction takes place to review invented language, and students explore the “syntax of each sentence.” In small groups, students “choose one stanza from “Jabberwocky” and identify the invented language, followed by a discussion that addresses the impact of the language to “infer a possible meaning for each invented word.”
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 each unit, a Whole-Class Learning Performance Task with a writing focus and a Small-Group Learning Performance Task with a speaking and listening focus is included consistently across the school year. Shorter tasks follow the reading of text selections. The questions throughout the Whole-Class Learning and Small-Group Learning connect to the Essential Question of each unit and help prepare students for the successful completion of the performance tasks.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “Monkey Master” by Waldemar Januszczak. They complete the majority of the close reading of the text to answer questions that align with grade-level standards. For example, “According to the author, before attending the exhibition, how did he view the art created by apes or other animals? In what ways have his thoughts on the topic changed?” and “Use your knowledge of the suffix -ist to write a definition for purist, as well as for each of these words: humorist, naturalist, realist. Then, use a dictionary to confirm your understanding of the meaning of each word.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. Students complete the close read of the text to answer questions that align with grade-level standards. For example, “What does the author mean when she writes, “The tools are there. You just need to reorient them towards the unexpected?” and “Use a dictionary to look up these words related to careers: paralegal, paramedic, paramilitary. Discuss with your group how the prefix para- contributes to the meaning.”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Mission Twinpossible” by TIME for Kids. They answer questions regarding the vocabulary from the text, centering on language standards. For example, as part of the Word Study portion of the Comprehension Check, students engage in the following assignment: “Explain how the root -dur- contributes to the meaning of the technical vocabulary term endurance test. Then, find the definition of each of the following words, and explain how the root -dur- contributes to its meaning: durable, duress, duration.”
Over the course of each unit, the majority of assessment questions are aligned to grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In each unit, a Performance-Based Assessment is included, and the unit activities are backward-designed to the Performance-Based Assessment. The materials offer Selection Tests, Extension Selections Tests, Unit Tests, Beginning-, Middle-, and End-of-Year Tests, Next Generation Practice Tests, Next Generation Performance Tasks, and Customizable Test Prep Banks. In the online Teacher’s Materials under Assessment, there is an Interpretation Guide for each Unit Test and an Answer Key for each Selection Test, which indicates the standard that is assessed for each question. All questions on all tests are aligned to one or more standards.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, there are assessment opportunities that are aligned with grade-level standards. Unit assessments include Selected and Short Responses and the Performance Task. Teachers are provided with an answer key and an Interpretation Guide that provides information about the alignment of the grade-level standards to each question. For example, question 1, “Which feature of the passage best explains why it is a memoir?” aligns with RI.6.6 and “Drawing on details from Ayrton’s notes, write two paragraphs. Begin your first with the underlined sentence. In your essay, make sure you expand on the first part of the draft and include a concluding statement that logically completes the essay” aligns with W.6.2. The performance task aligns with W.6.2 “You will write a brief explanatory essay that tells about how slow the process can be to bring back a population of wolves that has been endangered.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, there are assessment opportunities that are aligned with grade-level standards. Unit assessments include selected and short responses and the Performance Task. Teachers are provided with an answer key and an Interpretation Guide that provides information about the alignment of the grade-level standards to each question. For example, question 3, “What is the clearest purpose of the stage direction in the following excerpt?“ aligns with RL.6.5. Question 32, “Drawing on details from Nate’s notes, write the rest of the fictional narrative, beginning with the underlined sentence. To develop the story, make sure to include a conflict. Explain how the conflict is resolved or settled and what the characters learn from it.” This aligns with W.6.3. The Performance Task aligns with W.6.3, “You will write a brief short story about a crow, using facts about crows as the basis for your story.”
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 each unit, the Teacher’s Edition Table of Contents and Frontmatter PDF are available. The Standards Correlation document provides the Standard in the first column, and where those standards appear in the Print and Interactive Editions in the second column with corresponding page numbers. The materials address standards multiple times across a school year to ensure students can reach mastery. For example, standard W.6.2 is thoroughly addressed across most of the units. The Standards Correlation document lists the following texts and page numbers for this standard: “Declaration of the Rights of the Child, 49; Bad Boy / I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid, 77; My Life With the Chimpanzees, 116; A Blessing /Predators, 151; The Internet of Things, 227; Bored . . . and Brilliant?, 259; The Phantom Tollbooth,/ The Phantom Tollbooth (media), 351; Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, 371; The Importance of Imagination, 387; All About Exploration, 433; Mission Twinpossible, 451; Tales From the Odyssey/To the Top of Everest, 474–475; Whole-Class Performance Task, Unit 2: 128–130, 132; Performance-Based Assessment, Unit 2: 179–181.”
The Frontmatter document in the Teacher Edition online explains that each unit is backward aligned to the Performance-Based Assessments. This helps to ensure that instructional and academic tasks are standards-aligned and repeated in support of this performance task. At the end of the Frontmatter document, there is a list of the standards assessed for each text and task under the section Standards Correlation. For example, in Grade 6, there is a heavy emphasis on analyzing evidence and arguments, as well as composing arguments. The standards that mostly align with this focus, RI.6.1, RI.6.5, W.6.2, and L.6.4, are repeatedly assessed through multiple tasks and activities. Additionally, many of these supporting standards, such as standards RI.6.1 and RI.6.6, are repeated in each unit for different purposes utilizing different text types.
In Units 2, Animal Allies, and Unit 4, Imagination, there is instruction that builds proficiency in RL.6.6. According to the Unit At A Glance: “Explain how an author develops the point of view of the narrator or speaker in a text.” In Unit 2, Animal Allies, students read from My Life With Chimpanzees by Jane Goodall. Under the lesson section called Analyze Craft and Structure, students review the author’s purpose by discussing the “memoir” and completing activities that focus on details that “explain what each passage shows about Goodall’s experiences.” Students then review their notes and respond to this question: “What might be Goodall’s overall purpose for writing?” In Unit 4, Imagination, students read The Phantom Tollbooth, Act l by Susan Nanus. Under the less section called Analyze Craft and Structure, students review point of view and look at how passages of dialogue tell them “about a character, the setting, and an action.”
Indicator 2H
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 2h.
The materials are organized into five units, and the culminating task for each unit is a Performance-Based Assessment. The pacing for the units is generally reasonable. Implementation and pacing for each unit can be found in the introduction and also in the Unit at a Glance. In the introduction of each unit, a pacing plan is provided for the whole group text–breaking implementation of the material day by day with assigned texts or tasks to be completed. The pacing plan for implementation of Small Group and Independent Reading texts is broken out day by day, text by text, leading into the Performance Based Assessment. The Unit at a Glance resource provides a table view breakout with text, pacing/# of days, along with other key information. The pacing guide is built on a 40- to 50-minute daily class. Trade book integration provides alternative implementations, which can be found in the Teacher Edition Table of Contents and Front Matter for each unit.
Suggested implementation schedules and alternative implementation schedules align to core learning and objectives. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, the pacing guide covers 36 total days and includes whole-class, small-group, and independent learning. Alternative trade book options are available that include The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett, Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis, and The Young Landlords by Walter Dean Myers. The Teacher’s Edition provides a pacing guide for reading the trade books either in lieu of lessons included in the unit or in addition to the lessons. Teachers are advised: “However you choose to integrate trade books, the Pacing Guide below offers suggestions for aligning the trade books with this unit.” Trade book lesson plans are available in the program supplement called myPerspectives+. In addition to trade books, Unit 1 includes Hook and Inspire activities that would extend the unit introduction. This unit includes materials that supplement Bad Boy and include additional videos, articles, and image galleries that can be reviewed to help build background knowledge and provide interest.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “A Blessing” by James Wright. Pacing implementation suggests two days of instruction for this text. The text is a 24-line free verse poem. Tasks entail a comprehension check, brief research of one detail in the poem, three question analysis of the text, three sentence concept vocabulary review, a five-question analyze craft and structure task, and a closing convention lesson on the action and linking verbs with five interactive questions to complete and apply. Considering the length of the text, students should be able to complete these tasks in the suggested two days.
In Unit 5, Exploration, the pacing guide covers 36 total days and includes whole-class, small-group, and independent learning. Alternative trade book options are available that include Around the World in 80 Days, The House of Dies Drear, and Maniac Magee. The Teacher’s Edition provides a pacing guide for reading the trade books either in lieu of lessons included in the unit or in addition to the lessons. Teachers are advised: “However you choose to integrate trade books, the Pacing Guide below offers suggestions for aligning the trade books with this unit.” Trade book lesson plans are available in the program supplement called myPerspectives+. In addition to trade books, Unit 5 includes Hook and Inspire activities that would extend the unit introduction. This unit includes materials that supplement A Long Way Home and include additional videos, articles, and image galleries that can be reviewed to help build background knowledge and provide interest.
Suggested implementation schedules can be reasonably completed in the time allotted. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
There is a Grade 6 Unit Planning Guide in the Program resources that is available in Microsoft Word format that reviews each unit’s topic, essential question, unit overview, unit goals, selections, and media listed by Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, and Independent Learning. It also reviews the Performance-Based Assessment and Unit Reflection. Lastly, it provides a day-to-day plan that reviews each day’s focus, referenced pages in the Student Edition, Unit Goals, Academic Vocabulary, Home Connection Letters, Standards, Tasks, Text Selection Titles, and ELL Supports. This unit guide implies teachers will be following the lessons exactly, which contradicts what is embedded in the Teacher Edition, suggesting leaving time for reteaching, enrichment, and use of trade books and optional tasks.
In Unit 1, Childhood, there are 36 daily lessons that include two days to introduce the unit, 13 days of whole-group instruction, three days for the first performance task, 12 days of small-group learning, two days for the second performance task, two days of independent learning, and two days for the performance based assessment. The pacing is based on a 40-50 minute class period and a recommendation for block scheduling to combine multiple lessons. An additional suggestion is made for teachers to “revise pacing to differentiate and support core instruction by integrating components and resources as students require.”
Unit 5 includes a pacing guide that introduces the unit over two days, provides 13 days for whole-class learning activities, 12 days for small-group learning, two days for independent learning activities, and seven days dispersed intermittently throughout the unit for performance tasks. The pacing guide alone is reasonable, but it does not leave room for supplemental learning or remediated instruction.
Optional tasks do not distract from core learning. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, students read “A Blessing” by James Wright. Two options may be available to students. One option is a challenge activity, “Invite students to write a poem based on ‘A Blessing’ from the perspective of one of the ponies.” Students practice applying figurative language and sensory and sound devices that supplement and support the materials for the text. Three different trade books may be integrated with this unit, and if that choice is made, the novels fit the theme of Animal Allies and will supplement learning.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. Two optional tasks are suggested that appear to support learning and not distract from core learning. For example, one option requires students to create a positive-negative chart while reading. The teacher's directions state, “Have students chart a character’s good and bad behavior, positive and negative influence, or the highest and lowest point in a story.” The tracking of these elements will help students delve deeper into the text and complete the tasks that follow the text.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read “To the Top of Everest” by Samantha Larson. Teachers have an optional task for English Language Learners. Students are instructed to reread paragraphs 24 and 25 and describe the camp. Teachers are instructed to point out certain words, such as hypoxic. Then students write a paragraph describing the main idea and supporting details of the section.
Optional tasks are meaningful and enhance core instruction. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, optional pacing for supplemental trade books is provided. Direction for the incorporation of the trade books includes using them as supplemental texts, substitution for unit text, and a way to extend independent learning. Teacher instructions note that if they are used as substitute text to review the standards that are taught with those selections and no other information is provided. Three trade books are suggested, The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett, Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis, and The Young Landlords by Walter Dean Meyers. Each trade book has a suggested pacing calendar that correlates with the core curriculum. For example, The Secret Garden chapters 1-15 are read along lessons 3-18, chapters 16-24 are read along lessons 19-30, and chapters 25-27 are read during lessons 33 and 34. Each trade book has the Lexile, summary, and connection to the unit’s essential question.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, students read “Black Cowboy, Wild Horses” by Julius Lester. In the Hook and Inspire section, there are videos and supporting texts, and activities to help students get into, through, and beyond the text. In addition, there is a list of hyperlinked extension activities, such as Animal Tracking, in which students are challenged to emulate Bob Lemmons by tracking animals. A website is linked that allows the teacher to print animal tracking sheets. This compilation of related tasks, texts, and activities focuses on student-centered learning that is active, engaging, and enhances learning.
In the Perspectives optional resources, teachers have access to Listenwise Currents Events, which provide audio features on topics connected to the topics of each unit. For example, there is an audio recording of “Debate: Does Birth Order Matter?” from NPR that relates to the topics in Unit 1, Childhood.
In the Perspectives optional resources, teachers have access to additional skill-based resources, including the Grammar Center, Writing and Research Center, Collaboration Center, Speaking and Listening Center, and Vocabulary Center. These “Centers” contain lessons, worksheets, videos, and other resources to support students. For example, in the Collaboration Center, there is a video for students to “Build Consensus.” In the “Vocabulary Center,” there are worksheets for word study, including but not limited to prefixes, suffixes, and homophones.
Overview of Gateway 3
Usability
The materials meet the expectations for usability. The materials provide comprehensive guidance, correlation information to the ELA standards, information for students and families to support learning, and a list of supplemental resources in order to support the teacher with instruction. In addition, the materials include explanations of the instructional approaches and include and reference research-based strategies.
There is a clear assessment system that provides multiple assessment opportunities to determine students’ learning. The standards assessed in each assessment are indicated, and the materials offer accommodations for assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills.
The materials include strategies, supports, and resources for diverse learners to work with grade-level content and to meet or exceed grade-level expectations. They regularly provide opportunities to extend and deepen learning for students who read, write, speak, and/or listen above grade level and strategies for English Language Learners as they work with grade-level content.
The program includes a balance of representations of people with various demographics and physical characteristics in images and information. A variety of texts with authors from a variety of genders, races, and ethnicities are included.
The materials integrate technology in ways that engage students in grade-level standards. All of the materials are through the online Interactive Student Edition, which contains a variety of interactive tools. The visual design in both the print and digital editions supports student learning and makes the organizational structure clear.
Gateway 3
v1.5
Criterion 3.1: Teacher Supports
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 provide comprehensive guidance, correlation information to the ELA standards, information for students and families to support learning, and a list of supplemental resources in order to support the teacher with instruction. In addition, the materials include explanations of the instructional approaches and include and reference research-based strategies.
Indicator 3A
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3a.
The materials provide comprehensive guidance that will assist the teacher in presenting the materials. The Teacher Resources provide a Unit at a Glance for each unit, providing information on implementing the materials and an expected pacing guide. Unit Goals and Academic vocabulary are listed at the beginning of each unit. The teacher wrap provides learning goals for each unit, suggestions to implement and model parts of the curriculum, and possible student responses. The Getting Started section provides overviews on the program’s structure for the teacher in either video or PDF format.
Materials provide comprehensive guidance that will assist teachers in presenting the student and ancillary materials. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Teacher Resources section contains a section titled Unit at a Glance. This resource includes a list of texts used for whole group, small group, and independent learning, with Lexile and genres. The pacing for each component in the unit and the performance task are included.
The Getting Started section includes a Program Overview section. This resource includes videos and documents that provide a program overview and information on the student-centered unit structure, program components, digital resources, and program assessments.
The Teacher’s Edition Table of Contents and Frontmatter provide teacher details on all the unit components and how to use the materials.
The Introduction page of each unit provides a Pacing Plan to show how many days to focus on whole group texts, small group learning, and performance tasks.
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:
The Teacher’s Edition lists Unit Goals in the Introduction section of each unit. Reading Goals, Writing and Research Goals, Language Goals, and Speaking and Listening Goals are listed.
The Teacher’s Edition lists academic vocabulary at the beginning of each unit. Directions on how to incorporate the vocabulary, as well as possible student responses, are provided.
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read Feathered Friend, a science fiction short story by Arthur C. Clarke. In the Teacher’s Edition, Reading Support, Decide and Plan, Challenge, the following suggestion is provided “Ask students to write what they think of the idea of using animals the way the author suggested using the canary–as a safety alarm for loss of oxygen. Have them give their opinion about whether it is humane to use an animal for this purpose and explain why, or why not.”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, the materials provide information in the teacher wrap to help students analyze the text while reading an excerpt from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierly: “Students may have marked paragraphs 48 and 49 during their first read. Use these paragraphs to help students understand tone. Encourage students to talk about the annotations that they marked. You may want to model a close read with the class based on the highlights shown in the text.”
Indicator 3B
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3b.
The materials provide adult-level explanations and examples for the teacher. The Planning section before each text gives rationales for text quality and connections to the Essential Question and the culminating Performance Tasks. The Professional Development Center online includes videos on various topics. The Teacher’s Edition provides notes in the margins that explain grade level and outside grade level concepts and strategies. Support materials are found in the digital platform and in the Front and End Matter of the Teacher’s Edition that provide information subjects such as English Language Learning, grammar terms, and close reading steps.
Materials contain 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:
The Professional Development Center provides teacher support videos on topics such as assessment, differentiation, engagement, text complexity, and vocabulary. WIthin each topic there are a variety of videos. For example, under Engagement, a teacher support video discusses Multiliteracies and Multicultural Education.
The Unit Introduction for each unit includes academic vocabulary from the unit with an explanation for use: “Complete pronunciations, parts of speech, and definitions are provided for you. Students are only expected to provide the definition.” The word, part of speech, pronunciation, meaning, and related words are all listed in the margin.
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read an excerpt from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll. The Teacher’s Edition states the following regarding Insight: “This story suggests that life can change suddenly without warning. It is also noteworthy that, bored as she has been, Alice finds the strange events more interesting than worrying. She keeps her wits about her.”
Materials contain 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:
The Digital Resources in the online platform contain a range of support to deepen teacher knowledge, such as: Teacher Support Videos, English Language Support Lessons, and English Language Learning literacy strategies.
The Teacher’s Edition Endmatter contains a Tool Kit and a Glossary. Teachers can use the Toolkit for guidance on how to teach skills like close-reading writing, research, etc. The Glossary contains the definitions of Academic Vocabulary words.
Indicator 3C
Materials include standards correlation information that explains the role of the standards in the context of the overall series.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3c.
The materials provide correlation information for the ELA standards throughout the units. The Teacher’s Edition Frontmatter contains a correlation chart for each grade that lists the standards for literature, informational text, writing, speaking and listening, and language and where the standards are addressed in each unit. Standards are labeled throughout the Teacher’s Edition in multiple places. The Unit at a Glance shows the standards addressed throughout each unit. The Planning and Personalize for Learning pages preceding each text list standards for each lesson and suggest scaffolds and extensions. The Standards Support Through Teaching and Learning Cycle lists instructional standards addressed with each text and a flow chart on how to teach and assess the standards. The editable Unit Planning Guide displays standards day by day. Standards are included without numbers in the Student Edition, with each text and activity at the bottom of the page.
Correlation information is present for the ELA standards addressed throughout the grade level/series. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Frontmatter, a correlation chart lists the standards for literature, informational text, writing, speaking and listening, and language. Standards are listed by number and written out. The location of where those standards are addressed in the print and online editions is stated on the chart.
In the Standards Support Through Teaching and Learning Cycle, the standards are included for each text, along with an explanation of how to support students in reaching the standards. The chart provides information on how to decide and plan, teach, analyze and revise, and identify needs. The chart also shows the standards addressed for the current grade level and how to help students with a “catching up” section and a “looking forward” section.
In the Unit at a Glance, standards are addressed throughout the sections of the unit. For example, Whole-Class Learning shows Vocabulary/Word Study, Analyze Craft and Structure, Conventions/Author’s Style, and Composition/Research/Speaking and Listening. The materials list the standards for each component on the chart.
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:
In the Unit Planning Guide, Getting Started, a downloadable Word document is available online that lays out lessons and activities in a grid format, day by day for the entire year, with standards for each day listed. These tags match the Teacher’s Edition correlations.
In the Planning: Lesson Resources, the list of texts includes the associated standards for each lesson (Making Meaning, Language Development, and/or Effective Expression).
In the Program Level Resources, the First Read Guide: Generic and the Close-Read Guide state: “Anchor Reading Standard 10: Read and comprehend complex literary and informational texts independently and proficiently.” These guides are meant for student use.
Indicator 3D
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 provide information for students and families to support learning. Students interact with the Unit Introduction activities at the beginning of each unit to understand the Essential Question, Unit Goals, and Academic Vocabulary. A downloadable Home Connection letter is available to inform parents and caregivers about the program in both English and Spanish.
Materials contain strategies for informing students, parents, or caregivers about the ELA program. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Each unit includes a Home Connection letter that briefly explains the unit’s theme; the Essential Question; all texts, authors, and genres; performance tasks and performance-based assessments; and the standards addressed in the unit. The letter also includes a Talk it Over With Your Student section that includes questions parents/guardians can ask their student about the Essential Question, texts they can read together, and the texts students are reading at school.
The Program Overview includes a document with Distance Learning Tips for Parents/Guardians, which provides helpful tips, such as designating a learning space, establishing a daily routine, and setting clear learning expectations.
Materials contain suggestions for how parents or caregivers can help support student progress and achievement. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 4, Imagination, the Home Connection letter includes questions for parents/guardians to ask students. The questions include, but are not limited to: “What are some of the ways you could answer the question “Where can imagination lead? What do the text selections say about the importance of imagination? What can we do to encourage imagination?”
Indicator 3E
Materials provide explanations of the instructional approaches of the program and identification of the research-based strategies.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3e.
The materials include explanations of the instructional approaches and include and reference research-based strategies. The Getting Started section provides information regarding research-based strategies and practices. The Professional Development Center provides videos and White Papers with experts discussing the importance of various components of the program and research-based practices. The videos include assessment, differentiations, engagement, text complexity, and vocabulary. The Student Resource section includes many research-based practices, such as worksheets or graphic organizers.
Materials explain the instructional approaches of the program. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher’s Edition, Table of Contents and Frontmatter, Welcome!, page T3, teachers are presented with the instructional approaches that will connect various texts throughout units: “myPerspectives is a student-centered English Language Arts program that embraces culturally responsive learning through the diverse representation of literature, authors, characters, cultures, and themes.” Students are encouraged, based on the approach of the “polyvocal classroom” to “[b]ring knowledge from their different backgrounds and cultures to enrich critical literacy in the classroom” and “[p]erform research in response to a prompt or task of their choosing and complete project-based tasks in a format of their choosing.”
In the Getting Started, Student-Centered Unit Structure, Collins and O’Brien are referenced as experts: “When student-centered learning opportunities are implemented properly, students experience a multitude of positive outcomes including increased motivation, deeper retention of knowledge, greater understanding, and improved attitudes towards the subject being taught.”
Materials include and reference research-based strategies. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Professional Development Center, Differentiation, White Papers, “Differentiation in Middle School: Teaching English to Diverse Learners” by Jim Cummins and “Evidence-Based Literacy Instruction: The Central Role of Literacy Engagement” by Jim Cummins. Cummins includes several research-based strategies in both of these white papers with an extensive list of references. In addition, there are white papers in Vocabulary, Writing, and Text Complexity written by experts in the field about research-based strategies in each of the three areas, with references listed at the end of each.
In the Teacher’s Edition, Table of Contents and Frontmatter, Welcome!, Experts’ Perspective, research-based strategies are introduced: “myPerspectives is informed by a team of respected experts…[o]ur authors bring new ideas, innovations, and strategies that transform teaching.” For example, expert Jim Cummins, Ph.D., is quoted: “Research focuses on literacy development in school contexts characterized by cultural and linguistic diversity.”
Throughout the Teacher’s Edition, sidebars and text boxes contain notes from the authors of the program. The Author’s Perspective provides context and support for student activities.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, students complete a Performance Task: Speaking and Listening Focus. The Author’s Perspective box gives advice for the “Strategic Use of Media: Media is becoming more important as a communication tool, but teachers need to guide students to understand media’s value. As groups plan their presentation, remind them that it is important to use media and visuals strategically so that they support the presentation but don’t dominate it. Students should ensure that each piece of media has a specific purpose and is not mere filler.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, the students read “The Importance of Imagination” by Esha Chhabra. To help the teacher facilitate the practice of Deep Reading, a text box includes two techniques from Kelly Gallagher, M.Ed., that teachers can use to model how to make inferences:
“Study Photographs: Have students study a photo and describe what might have happened in it. Discuss their responses, encouraging students to support their ideas.
Complete a Say/Doesn’t Say T-chart: Draw a T-chart on the board. On the left, have students write what the passage says (literal comprehension). On the right, have them record what the passage doesn’t say. This helps students get at the author’s inference.”
In the online materials, the Getting Started section leads to training materials on MySavvasTraining.com. Video tutorials and printable handouts are organized into the sections Getting Started, Ready for Instruction, Assessments and Reporting, and Additional Resources.
The Getting Started, Student-Centered Unit Structure describes the Word Network routine to launch each unit: “With Word Networks, students learn a generative approach to vocabulary. A Word Network is a collection of words related to a topic. As students read the selections in each unit, they will identify words related to the Unit Concept and add them to their Word Networks.”
The Getting Started, Writing for the Purpose of Learning section explains the program’s approach to aspects of writing, such as Writing to Learn, Writing to Sources, Writing Modes, Writing Process, and Writing for Assessment. For example, Writing to Learn strategies include “QuickWrites, Evidence Log, Research to Clarify and Research to Explore [and] First Read prompts. These activities encourage students to jot down ideas and evidence. Students write to confirm what they know and uncover what they don’t know.”
The Ready for Instruction Small-Group Learning Strategies section prepares teachers for this second part of each unit. The training states, “The teacher’s role during Small-Group Learning is to serve as a facilitator as opposed to lecturer and let students learn in a collaborative way from each other. This approach allows them to take ownership of their own learning.” It goes on to preview some of the specific strategies, such as Accountable Talk: “Remind students that groups should communicate politely. You can post these Accountable Talk suggestions and encourage students to add their own. Students should remember to: Ask clarifying questions. Explain your thinking. Build on the ideas of others.”
Indicator 3F
Materials provide a comprehensive list of supplies needed to support instructional activities.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3f.
The materials provide a list of supplemental resources to accompany each text needed to support instruction. The Planning: Lesson Resources page in the Teacher’s Edition before each text lists related Student Resources and Teacher Resources, including optional extra support, extension, or accommodations for the lessons. These same resources are listed in the context in the margins of the Teacher’s Edition and online. Symbols are next to each resource to specify if they are an audio resource, video, document, annotation highlight, or online assessment.
Materials provide a comprehensive list of supplies needed to support instructional activities. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher’s Edition and Student Edition, Lesson Resources are listed at the beginning of each lesson, which includes both Student Resources and Teacher Resources. Examples of Student Resources include selection audio, word network, and evidence log, which are “available online in the interactive Student Edition or Unit Resources.” Examples of Teacher Resources include Selection Resources, Reteach/Practice, Assessment, My Resources, annotation highlights, accessible leveled text, concept vocabulary, and word study, which are “available online in the Interactive Teacher’s Edition or Unit Resources.”
In the Teacher’s Edition Frontmatter, suggested trade books are listed. The title and author of the text are listed. Trade book lesson plans are available online at myPerspectives+.
In the Teacher’s Edition, Current Perspectives, news stories, and interesting media are listed. The materials list the name of the media and where it can be found.
Indicator 3G
This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.
Indicator 3H
This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.
Criterion 3.2: Assessment
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 provide a clear assessment system that provides multiple assessment opportunities to determine students’ learning. Teachers can monitor learning and interpret student performance in various assessments as students work toward the culminating tasks, such as unit tests, selection tests, performance-based tasks, and writing tasks. The assessments include a variety of modalities and types across the year and opportunities for students to demonstrate their knowledge of the grade-level reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language standards. The standards assessed in each assessment are indicated. In addition, the materials offer accommodations for assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills.
Indicator 3I
Assessment information is included in the materials to indicate which standards are assessed.
The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3i.
The materials identify the standards addressed with each assessment. Assessments are listed throughout the materials in multiple locations. Performance-based tasks and assessments, with their related standards, are listed in the Teacher’s Edition and Student Edition, Unit At A Glance. Standards for activities, tasks, and assessments in each unit correlate directly to the Performance Task as well as the End Of Unit Performance Based Assessment and Unit Test. The online materials include an Assessment tab, which lists all the assessments used throughout the materials. The reading test associated with each text includes an answer key that includes the objective and standard for each question. In the unit tests, the student view shows the assessed skills with each question.
Materials consistently identify the standards and practices assessed for formal assessments. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the online Assessment tab, the standards for the Beginning-, Middle-, and End-of-Year Tests are listed. The standards, listed on the top of the page, are hyperlinked so that a separate text box opens when clicked on. This text box lists the standards addressed in the standards.
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Performance Task: Writing Focus, students write an explanatory essay. Students read the excerpts from My Life With the Chimpanzees and “Hachiko: The True Story of a Loyal Dog” to consider qualities that human beings and animals seem to share. Then, they respond to the prompt: “What qualities do Goodall and Turner believe people and animals share?” Students write about the feelings and ways of behaving that are common between humans and animals. The assessed standards include: “Write informative/explanatory texts to examine a topic and convey ideas, concepts, and information through the selection, organization, and analysis of relevant content. Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking. Ensure that pronouns are in the proper case (subjective, objective, possessive).” A scoring rubric is included in the Student Edition.
Indicator 3J
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3j.
The materials provide multiple assessment opportunities to determine students’ learning. Teachers can monitor learning and interpret student performance with various assessments as the students work toward the culminating tasks, such as unit tests, selection tests, performance-based tasks, and writing tasks. Support materials include rubrics, answer keys, comprehension questions, graphic organizers, and class discussions. Opportunities for teachers to provide feedback, both formal and informal, are available throughout units, such as discussion, research based on self-selected texts, and evidence logs. Each unit test contains an interpretation guide that lists the standards, depth of knowledge, and remediation options. Skills practice pages and standard support are included. The Common Core Companion Workbook provides extra practice based on Common Core State Standards. Sufficient guidance and suggestions are included to help teachers follow up with students.
Assessment system provides multiple opportunities to determine students’ learning and sufficient guidance to teachers for interpreting student performance. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Each Unit from the Table of Contents is complete with an Answer Key for the texts and assignments. The Unit Answer Key provides answers with key details that are related to the texts, possible responses students might provide during discussions, and Comprehension Checks.
In the Table of Contents, Assessments include Selection Tests, Extension Selection Tests, Unit Tests, Beginning-, Middle-, and End-of-Year Tests, and Extension Beginning-, Middle-, and End-of-Year Tests. Teachers can locate the Answer Keys for each test, along with short response answers that state the important information for students to include in their writing.
In the Table of Contents, myPerspectives+, teachers have access to graphic organizers and writing rubrics to support student success. Both the Graphic Organizers and the Rubrics are provided in DOC and PDF formats. Organizers include, but are not limited to, Comic Strip Organizers, Inference Maps, and a Vocabulary Square. Rubrics include, but are not limited to, Generic (Holistic) Writing, Multimedia Reports, Poems, Informative/Explanatory Writing, and Narrative Evaluation Charts.
In each unit, Quickwrite activities provide opportunities to assess writing skills and student understanding in response to a prompt.
In each unit, Analyze the Text activities offer opportunities for students to demonstrate overall text comprehension. The tasks require students to cite textual evidence as they respond to specific text-based questions.
Assessment system provides multiple opportunities to determine students’ learning and suggestions to teachers for following up with students. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Each unit offers a pre- and post-informal assessment of student improvement as students revisit their goals toward the end of the unit.
In each unit, students answer Comprehension Check questions that show students’ understanding of the texts and complete Research to Clarify activities to learn more about a specific detail from the text and respond. Students complete Prepare to Share activities where they share ideas with peers about their self-selected text as part of the Independent Learning task.
In each Unit Test, the Interpretation Guide provides information on remediation resources: “As warranted by student results on this assessment, you may wish to assign the remediation resources indicated in the chart. Resources include skills practice and extended standards support, and you can choose to use whichever resource is appropriate for your students.” The Interpretation Guide includes the objective instructional standards, depth of knowledge, skills practice pages, and standard support.
The Common Core Companion Workbook provides explanations, examples, and academic vocabulary, related to the Common Core Standards. Practice worksheets are included in the Workbook.
Indicator 3K
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3k.
The materials have assessments that include a variety of modalities and types across the year. The assessments include opportunities for students to demonstrate their knowledge of the grade-level reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language standards. Within a unit, students complete formative comprehension and skill checks, synthesize their learning through writing and speaking performance tasks, revising, editing, and presenting their work.
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:
The Beginning-of-Year and Mid-Year benchmark tests are used to assess most grade-level reading and language standards.
Formative Assessments include Evidence Logs, Selection Tests, Comprehension Checks, and Unit Reflections.
According to the Standards Correlation chart in the Teacher’s Edition Frontmatter, Writing, and Speaking and Listening standards are formally assessed through a Performance Task or Performance-Based Assessments.
Students complete a Performance Task: Writing Focus after reading all Whole-Class Learning texts. After all the texts in a unit are read, students complete a final two-part Writing, and Speaking and Listening Performance-Based Assessment.
Following the Performance-Based Assessment, teachers are instructed to administer the Unit Test, Selected Response, and Performance Task “to apply standards and skills taught in the unit to a fresh, cold-read passage.”
At the end of each unit, students take the Unit Test. In the test’s Selected and Short Response part, students answer multiple-choice questions about new passages and perform a writing task.
Indicator 3L
Assessments offer accommodations that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills without changing the content of the assessment.
The materials offer accommodations for assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills. Under the Assessment tab, the various types of assessments have a brief overview to explain each option. The Interactive Student Edition includes a link to the performance task that students can utilize. The Academic Vocabulary section will read the vocabulary to the student. Otherwise, there are no clear text-to-speech accommodations included in the materials. Different types of assessments are provided, and most of them are available online, as a PDF, or in a print version. In the PDF version, students may annotate the text and mark it up with the tools provided.
Materials 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:
Many of the assessments can be downloaded into Microsoft Word in order to print. This would allow the teacher to increase the size of the font for the students before printing the test.
For assessments referring directly to previously-read texts, audio versions of the texts are available in the Interactive Student Edition.
The materials include customizable test prep banks for reading, language and editing, and writing. The materials provide multiple test banks from each section for teachers to choose from.
Unit-level and Performance-Based Assessments may be assigned to students as PDFs online, where teachers or students may add highlighting or notes.
In the Interactive Student Edition, students can click on a link to the performance-based assessment for each unit. Students can zoom in and out using their mouse or fingers. The materials will read aloud the academic vocabulary and definitions. Students can also open the rubrics and print them if needed.
Materials include guidance for teachers on the use of provided accommodations. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Selection tests can be assigned online, as a PDF, and printed. The materials provide information under each option for the teacher. For example, under the PDF version, it states, “PDF format allows students to use the Interactive PDF Tool to annotate and complete the assignment.”
In the Getting Started section, the materials provide a Customize Worksheet and Assessments document. This document shows step-by-step directions for the teacher on how to edit and assign assessments.
Criterion 3.3: Student Supports
The program includes materials designed for each student’s regular and active participation in grade-level/grade-band/series content.
The materials include strategies, supports, and resources for diverse learners to work with grade-level content and to meet or exceed grade-level expectations. They regularly provide opportunities to extend and deepen learning for students who read, write, speak, and/or listen above grade level and strategies for English Language Learners as they work with grade-level content. The program includes varied approaches to learning tasks over time and a variety of ways that students are expected to demonstrate their understanding. There is guidance for grouping students in a variety of ways across each unit. Units follow the structure of Whole-Class Learning, with some informal peer groupings, Small-Group Learning entirely focused on collaborative work, and Independent Learning, which concludes with a “Learn From Your Classmates” discussion.
The materials include a balance of representations of people with various demographics and physical characteristics in images and information. A variety of texts with authors from a variety of genders, races, and ethnicities are included. In addition, there is some guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon students’ home language to facilitate learning and guidance for teachers to facilitate learning and content that support linguistically and culturally diverse students.
Indicator 3M
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3m.
The materials include strategies, supports, and resources for diverse learners to work with grade-level content and to meet or exceed grade-level expectations. Program-level resources explain best practices for scaffolding and differentiating access to literacy learning. Text-specific suggestions provide educators with support for addressing needs before, during, and after reading the text. Throughout the Teacher’s Edition, Personalize for Learning boxes are found in the margins. At the beginning of each unit, the Personalize for Learning section provides the text complexity rubric and a Decide and Plan flowchart. The flowchart includes Strategic Support that offers strategies for all students, including special populations. The materials also provide support guidance according to students’ performance on formative assessments. This may include other resources provided in the Interactive Teacher’s Edition or Unit Resources.
Materials regularly provide 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 Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, students examine three comic strips from the Galley of Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson. In order to understand the context and gain additional background knowledge, a teacher can link the students to Audio Summaries: “Audio summaries of the Gallery of Calvin and Hobbes Comics are available online in both English and Spanish in the Interactive Teacher’s Edition or Unit Resources. Assigning these summaries prior to reading the selection may help students build additional background knowledge and set a context for their first read.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “Feathered Friend” by Arthur C. Clarke. The Standards Support Through Teaching and Learning Cycle guides the teacher to Identify Needs from the Beginning-of-Year Assessment. If particular students struggle with reading, the Teacher’s Edition, Catching Up column suggests that the teacher “...administer the Analyze Craft and Structure: Determining Theme (RP) worksheet to familiarize students with the central idea.”
Indicator 3N
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3n.
The materials regularly provide opportunities to extend and deepen learning for students who read, write, speak, and/or listen above grade level. In the Teacher’s Edition, at the beginning of each text, the Personalize for Learning section contains a text-complexity chart and a Decide and Plan flowchart. Throughout the materials and in the flowchart, ideas to challenge students are provided that relate to reading, writing, and research and take the form of discussions, written work, or brief presentations. These suggestions are usually balanced by other modifications for language learners or students who need more support rather than extra work for early finishers.
Materials provide multiple opportunities for advanced students to investigate the grade-level content at a higher level of complexity. Materials are free of instances of advanced students doing more assignments than their classmates. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read the excerpt from Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson. In the Personalize for Learning section, Decide and Plan flowchart, the Challenge section provides ideas relating to text analysis and written response. The text analysis idea states: “Pair students. Ask each partner to choose one of the poems. Ask them to describe to their partner what the poem is about and what feelings the author is expressing in the poem. Then ask partners to tell the class about the poems their partners described.” The written response idea states: “Have students read more selections from the book Brown Girl Dreaming. Ask them to choose several of their favorite selections and write what those poems were about, why they liked them the best, and what feelings the author was expressing in the poems.”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Small-Group Learning, the students read “A Blessing” by James Wright. In the Personalize for Learning, Standards Support Through Teaching and Learning Cycle, teachers determine which students can engage with standards in greater depth: “If students have done well on the Beginning-of-Year Assessment, then challenge them to keep progressing and learning by giving them opportunities to practice the skills in depth.” The Looking Forward column gives ideas for extension tasks: “Challenge students to make a list of words that impact the tone and meaning of the poems. Then have them discuss the list with a partner. What effect does each word have? Why did the author choose each word?” and “Challenge students to create a list of five multiple-meaning words and write a sentence using each of their words.”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, the students read “Mission Twinpossible” from TIME for Kids. In the Teacher’s Edition, there are text boxes in the margins that provide options for differentiating assignments. A text box in this reading suggests that the teacher “Encourage interested students to research past space missions. What have scientists learned about the effects of long space travel on the human body? What about the effects on personality? Students may choose to research one astronaut who has spent a long time in space, such as Russian cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov, who spent 438 days on the former Mir space station, or Spanish American astronaut Michael López-Alegría, who spent 215 days in space. Students should write a short informational report, sharing what they learn.” This Challenge activity appears below the whole class “Research to Explore: Choose something that interests you from the article, and formulate a research question” task.
Indicator 3O
Materials provide varied approaches to learning tasks over time and variety in how students are expected to demonstrate their learning with opportunities for for students to monitor their learning.
The materials provide varied approaches to learning tasks over time and a variety of ways that students are expected to demonstrate their understanding. The materials include a large number of teacher prompts and questions in the margins of the Teacher’s Edition. Students are provided with the opportunity to answer comprehension questions and complete research, writing, and speaking and listening tasks on the texts they read throughout the unit. During writing exercises, students are expected to complete peer and self-reflection for writing samples. Each unit contains unit goals that the student rates themselves on at the beginning and the end of the unit. An evidence log is also included to allow students to connect their learning and provide evidence of learning.
Materials provide multi-modal opportunities for students to question, investigate, sense-make, and problem-solve using a variety of formats and methods. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
At the end of most Whole-Group learning texts, students complete a Comprehension Check provided in the Student Edition. This comprehension check includes Research to Clarify and Research to Explore prompts to help them expand their thinking and knowledge based on the text.
Throughout each unit, the Teacher’s Edition provides questions and prompts for the teacher to use to incorporate and facilitate whole-group and small-group discussions.
Students have 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:
The materials contain an Evidence Log for students to fill out during the units. The Evidence Log asks students to make connections to the text and provide evidence from the text and any additional notes or ideas. Throughout the Teacher’s Edition, the materials will prompt the teacher to ask the student to add evidence to their Evidence Log.
Materials leverage the use of a variety of 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:
The reading assignments follow a similar pattern for teaching the text. However, a variety of literacy skills are taught over the course of each unit. During Whole-Group Learning, students complete lessons for Making Meaning and Language Development. Making Meaning includes a first read, a close read, an analysis of the text, and craft and structure. Language Development includes concept vocabulary, word study, and conventions.
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 Small-Group Learning, students may write about the texts they have read. The materials contain a “Reviewing and Revising” section during the writing process. This section gives students a checklist to help peers review each other’s work.
Materials provide a clear path for students to monitor and move their own learning. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Unit Introduction contains Unit Goals. This section includes but is not limited to, reading, writing, research, language, and speaking and listening goals. Students rate themselves on a scale from 1 to 5 to determine how well they already meet the goal.
The end of each unit contains a Unit Reflection. This reflection includes prompts such as “Look back at the goals at the beginning of the unit. Use a different colored pen to rate yourself again. Then, think about the reading and activities that contributed the most to the growth of your understanding. Record your thoughts.”
Indicator 3P
Materials provide opportunities for teachers to use a variety of grouping strategies.
The materials provide guidance for grouping students in a variety of ways across each unit. Units follow the structure of Whole-Class Learning, with some informal peer groupings; Small-Group Learning entirely focused on collaborative work; and Independent Learning, which concludes with a “Learn From Your Classmates” discussion. Teachers receive optional suggestions for student-to-student interaction in the Teacher’s Edition and general guidance on how to form small groups.
Materials provide grouping strategies for students. Materials provide for varied types of interaction among students. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “Michaela DePrince: The War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina” by William Kremer and complete a Speaking and Listening task together: “With your group, write and deliver an oral presentation. Choose from the following options: Option 1: Michaela DePrince talks about the difficulties of being an African American ballerina. Conduct research on another African American dancer. Then, prepare and deliver a personality profile of the dancer you chose. Compare and contrast his or her experience with DePrince’s. Include descriptive details and a logical sequence of ideas so that the points of comparison and contrast are clear to your audience. Option 2: Becoming a ballet dancer takes hard work and many years of training. Research to learn about the challenges aspiring dancers face. Then, write and deliver an informative report in which you talk about why DePrince’s success is so impressive. Include facts, descriptive details, and ideas ordered in a way that makes sense to readers.”
In Unit 2, Animal Allies, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, students read “Hachiko, The True Story of a Loyal Dog” by Pamela S. Turner and complete a Writing to Sources task. The Teacher’s Edition offers the suggestion, “If students are unable to relate the story from Hachiko’s point of view, then have them work with a partner to review the selection, listing each of Hachiko’s experiences with the humans in the story and how he might have expressed what was happening around him.”
In Unit 5, Introduction, students engage in a Four Corners Debate: “Consider this statement: There is nothing left on Earth to explore. Decide your position and check one of the boxes [strongly agree, agree, disagree, strongly disagree]. Then, briefly note why you feel this way. Each corner of the classroom represents one position on the question. Go to the corner of the room that represents your position. Briefly discuss reasons for your position with the others in your corner. Make a list of three strong reasons. Start off the debate by stating your position and one reason. Then, go around the room, presenting positions and reasons. If you change your mind as the debate continues, move to the corner that represents your new position. Then, explain why your thinking changed.”
A “Share Your Independent Learning” section concludes this part of the unit with three tasks: “Prepare to Share: Even when you read something independently, your understanding continues to grow when you share what you have learned with others. Reflect on the text you explored independently and write notes about its connection to the unit. In your notes, consider why this text belongs in this unit;” “Learn From Your Classmates: Discuss It: Share your ideas about the text you explored on your own. As you talk with your classmates, jot down ideas that you learn from them;” “Reflect: Review your notes, and underline the most important insight you gained from these writing and discussion activities. Explain how this idea adds to your understanding of the topic.”
Materials provide guidance for the teacher on grouping students in a variety of grouping formats. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
A box in the Teacher’s Edition at the start of Small-Group Learning notes, “Forming Groups: You may wish to form groups for Small-Group Learning so that each consists of students with different learning abilities. Some students may be adept at organizing information, whereas others may have strengths related to generating or synthesizing information. A good mix of abilities can make the experience of Small-Group Learning dynamic and productive.”
Personalize for Learning boxes appear in the margin of the Teacher’s Edition with suggestions, as in this example from Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, Anchor Text, The Phantom Tollbooth, Act II by Susan Nanus: “First–Read Support: If a student struggles to comprehend the text during the first read, have a partner conduct a think–aloud to explain the thought process as he or she works through the NOTICE, ANNOTATE, CONNECT, and RESPOND steps. For example, in paragraph 10, the student might notice the question asked by the Voice and annotate it to return to in the close read to see what it reveals about the character whose voice is speaking.”
After students complete their First Read of their chosen Independent Learning tasks, teachers have a note to “Make It Interactive” for a Close Read: “Group students according to their chosen selection. Then, have students meet to discuss the selection in-depth. Their discussions should be guided by their insights and questions.”
Indicator 3Q
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 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3q.
The materials provide strategies and support for English Language Learners as they work with grade-level content. In the Teacher’s Edition, general accommodations, strategies, and suggestions are provided to assist teachers with each text. Personalize for Learning suggestions are before and during many reading, writing, vocabulary, language, as well as speaking and listening activities. Before each text, a Decide and Plan flow chart on the Personalize for Learning page provides strategies for teachers to use with English Language Learners.
Materials consistently 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 through regular and active participation in grade-level literacy work. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “Declaration of the Rights of the Child” by The United Nations General Assembly. The Teacher’s Edition, Personalize for Learning, Decide and Plan flow chart, includes the English Language Support box to support Meaning/Purpose: “Guide students to highlight or copy keywords and phrases in each paragraph that help to identify the main ideas. For example, in paragraph 2, students might highlight discrimination, race, color, sex, language, religion, and political or other opinions.”
In Unit 3, Modern Technology, Whole-Class Learning, students read “The Black Hole of Technology” by Leena Khan. In the Writing to Compare section, students learn a new way to prepare for whole-class discussions. The Teacher’s Edition, Personalize for Learning, English Language Support box provides support to create mind maps. All levels of ELLs are to complete the same task: “To help students prepare for the discussion, encourage them to create a mind map of keywords and phrases that relate to each argument.”
In Unit 4, Imagination, Whole-Class Learning, Performance Task: Speaking and Listening Focus, students write a fictional narrative. In the Teacher’s Edition, Personalize for Learning, the English Language Support box includes support for understanding Syntax. All levels of ELLs are to complete the same task: “Varying sentence structure may be challenging for English language learners. Pair students with a partner and have them identify places in their writing where combining sentences might add variety and interest to their writing. Have students consider the specific relationship among ideas in sentences as they consider how best to combine sentences. Then ask students to review the suggestions and determine whether or how much the suggested revision will change the meaning of the sentence.”
Indicator 3R
Materials provide a balance of images or information about people, representing various demographic and physical characteristics.
The materials include a balance of representations of people with various demographics and physical characteristics in both images and information. A variety of texts with authors from a variety of genders, races, and ethnicities are included. In the About the Author section for each text, important background information for authors of a variety of race and/or ethnicities are provided. People of various demographics are depicted in a positive light, without any obvious or blatant stereotypes. The texts are written by authors of different backgrounds and feature protagonists of diverse races, ethnicities, countries of origin, gender expressions, and people with developmental disabilities. The materials balance positive portrayals of demographics or physical characteristics and avoid stereotypes or language that might be offensive to a particular group. Notes in the Teacher’s Edition provide ways to highlight positive portrayals in texts.
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 Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read “I Was a Skinny Tomboy Kid” by Alma Villanueva. In the Teacher’s Edition, the Insight box states that the author applies a “delicate touch, incorporating the protagonist’s gender-nonconforming behavior in youth and how she feels about that time in her life as she looks back.” This insight helps students navigate gender roles, which can be a difficult part of childhood.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, students read an excerpt from the memoir A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley. The author was born in India and lived in an orphanage in the capital of Kolkata, formerly known as Calcutta. He was eventually adopted by an Australian family and was raised in Tasmania. After twenty-five years, he finds his birth family and learns more about his heritage. The Text Complexity Rubric states that “The personal account is told chronologically, and it is mixed with some information about India and the author’s early history.” In addition, the rubric adds that there are descriptions that include “details with a wide range of information about India’s geography, religions, and languages.”
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 Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, students read The Importance of the Imagination by Esha Chhabra. As students Analyze the Craft and Structure of the essay, they learn that a text can be influenced by the “author’s thoughts, beliefs, and reflections on an idea or experience.” In the Teacher’s Edition, the Author’s Influences section states that “the author explains that some of her assumptions are based on her heritage.” Students are to find examples to show that the author’s Asian heritage, her high school history teacher, and her parents” shaped her ideas about the topic of her essay. The Formative Assessment also has the students “identify the author’s influences, then has them identify the anecdotes or supporting details and discuss what influenced each detail.” If students still need support with this skill, the teacher can provide a separate assignment for review: Author’s Influences.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Small-Group Learning, students read Lewis & Clark by Nick Bertozzi. The Teacher Edition has the teacher “Call students’ attention to panel 18, and note that York was an African-American man enslaved by Clark’s family. He was a valuable member of the expedition, and he is reputed to have facilitated relations with Native Americans and saved several lives, including Clark’s. Recordings of radio interviews with experts discussing York, his interactions with Native Americans, and how he felt at the end of the expedition can be found online.” Students use this information to understand the positive role York played in the Lewis & Clark expedition.
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 Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read an excerpt from Bad Boy by Walter Dean Myers. Planning pages in the Teacher’s Edition explain the Connection to Performance Tasks: “This selection will contribute to students’ understanding of the variety of challenges individuals face and triumphs they experience in their own lives. Myers had to hide some of his interests from his friends to avoid being teased for them. But he was able to fulfill his interests in reading and dance.”
Indicator 3S
Materials provide guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon student home language to facilitate learning.
The materials provide some guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon students’ home language to facilitate learning. The Professional Development Center contains multiple short videos and documents regarding differentiation. In many of the videos and documents, the importance of understanding a student’s identity and using their home language is conveyed. In the Teacher’s Edition, a few Personalize for Learning boxes suggest connections between Spanish and English cognates. Spanish is the only language offered in supplemental materials.
Materials provide suggestions and strategies to use the home language to support students in learning ELA. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Professional Development Center contains a section for differentiation. In this section, a video titled “How to Differentiate Learning for English Learners” with Jim Cummings is included. It suggests strategies for scaffolding, such as using graphic organizers, visuals, and rephrasing to help students better understand. This video discusses how important it is that educators understand each student’s identity. Another video titled “Leveled Texts for ELLs” with Elfrieda “Freddy” Hiebert suggests strategies for scaffolding grade-leveled texts for ELL students instead of providing an alternate text.
The online materials contain a myPerspectives+: English Learner Support section that includes the digital text, Every Teacher’s Toolkit by Karen Kawaguchi. The text includes strategies for language learners, including definitions and suggestions for two areas: “Culturally and linguistically responsive teaching” and “Validate Home Languages.” Both sections include details on how to help strengthen student skills in areas such as academic vocabulary, grammar, and presentation skills.
The online materials for Unit 4, Imagination, Small-Group Learning, Spanish Resources section contains the Spanish translation from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and a video of the “Jabberwocky.”
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:
In the online materials, the Spanish Resources Library contains Spanish versions of texts for use in Small-Group Learning and Independent Learning. A video introduction to the unit in Spanish and stand-alone Spanish grammar and writing worksheets are also included. Teacher Resources in this section include an answer guide for the grammar worksheets.
In the Professional Development Center, a white paper titled “Differentiation in Middle School: Teaching English to Diverse Learners” is a resource that teachers can access. One suggestion states, “Encourage students to draw on their multilingual repertoires as a stepping stone to English (e.g., initial writing or note-taking in L1 as a means of transferring knowledge and skills from L1 to English).”
In Unit 5, Exploration, Unit Introduction, Personalize for Learning, the English Language Support box offers support for using Spanish Cognates to understand the vocabulary in the unit. The instruction suggests that teachers “Use these cognates with students whose home language is Spanish.” The teacher has the students practice the words “critical – critico, valid – vàlido, and coherent – coherente.”
Indicator 3T
Materials provide guidance to encourage teachers to draw upon student cultural and social backgrounds to facilitate learning.
The materials include teacher guidance to facilitate learning and content that support linguistically and culturally diverse students. The FrontMatter highlights the importance of allowing students to use their personal experiences when completing tasks: “Students are encouraged to draw upon their prior experiences, diverse identities, varied experiences, and the richness of their cultural backgrounds.” The Professional Development Center also includes information to help teachers engage with culturally diverse students. Some unit topics and texts allow for open-ended, relevant personal connections. Before each text in Whole-Class Learning and Small-Group Learning, the Jumpstart box offers suggestions for discussion topics related to the text. Other texts or activities include teacher notes that explain how to offer instruction to a range of students. Spanish language tools for some Small-Group Learning and Independent Learning texts are available in student materials. A home-school connection letter is available in English and Spanish.
Materials make connections to the linguistic, cultural, and conventions used in learning ELA. Materials make connections to the linguistic and cultural diversity to facilitate learning. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher’s Edition Frontmatter, the materials state, “The texts, Essential Questions, and learning tasks encourage discussions that allow students to draw upon their prior experiences, diverse identities, varied experiences, and the richness of their cultural background. This active learning environment brings students together as they develop intercultural competence, learn from each other, and gain the confidence that allows them to be agents of change.”
The Frontmatter pages at the start of the Teacher’s Edition describe the program’s culturally responsive foundation: “Ernest Morrell, Ph.D., helped inform the development of myPerspectives to ensure the program fosters a polyvocal classroom that encourages students to talk with each other, learn from each other, and more importantly, bring knowledge from their different backgrounds and cultures to enrich critical literacy in the classroom. The texts, Essential Questions, and learning tasks encourage discussions that allow students to draw upon their prior experiences, diverse identities, varied experiences, and the richness of their cultural backgrounds.”
In Unit 1, Childhood, Small-Group Learning, students read an excerpt from Bad Boy by Walter Dean Myers. In the Teacher’s Edition, the Cross-Curricular Perspectives, Social Studies box states: “Gender roles and expectations vary from country to country. In some cultures, dancing is very important among men, and male dancing is the norm. Challenge students to research such a culture and report their findings to the class. Cultures in which men traditionally dance include many Native American groups, the Wodaabe of Nigeria and Cameroon, Celts in Ireland, and men in the southwestern Indian state of Kerala, who dance Kathakali. Have students conclude their reports with speculation about why dance is considered a masculine pursuit in some cultures and less so in others.”
Materials include 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 Professional Development Center, Engagement, the video “Multiliteracies and Multicultural Education” provides information on the importance of supporting other cultures in the classroom. Jim Cummins, Ph.D., discusses how “when we tap into students’ cultural backgrounds, we’re tapping into their knowledge base.”
In the Professional Development Center, myPerspectives in Action, the video, “Facilitating Small Group Learning with Diverse Learners,” provides information about how two teachers, an ELA teacher, and a Special Education teacher, encourage and support all students to engage in small group discussions about a poem they are reading.
In Unit 5, Exploration, Whole-Class Learning, Performance Task: Writing Focus, Teacher’s Edition, an Author’s Perspective box gives guidance for teaching writing: “There is an important sense in which the development of academic expertise on the part of English learners is a process of socialization rather than simply instruction. As a result, English writing development will be enhanced when students can work in pairs to create texts to share with others. That’s because the processes of collaboration and communication entail social interaction, which fosters language development.”
Materials include equity guidance and opportunities. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Professional Development Center, the document “Differentiation in Middle School: Teaching English to Diverse Learners” by Jim Cummins, Ph.D., is provided. The document states four essential instructional strategies. One of the strategies is Connect to Students’ Lives and Affirm their Identities: “Connecting instruction to student’s lives by evoking personal and intellectual responses to texts represents not only a form of differentiation but also affirms students’ identities. Students who feel that their voices are heard, and their culture and identity validated in the classroom are much more likely to engage academically than those who feel ignored or devalued.”
Materials include 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:
Spanish language resources are available for teachers. Translations are provided for Small-Group Learning and Independent Learning reading selections. Audio summaries of texts are provided in the digital materials. The Teacher’s Edition notes, “Audio summaries are available online in both English and Spanish in the Interactive Teacher’s Edition or Unit Resources. Assigning these summaries prior to reading the selection may help students build additional background knowledge and set a context for their first read.” Spanish grammar and Spanish writing worksheets are also available for students, though they are not available in other languages.
In the online Interactive Student Edition, students can highlight any word or words and view a translation in one of 104 languages, such as Pashto, Hmong, Haitian Creole, or Filipino. Thirty-five languages (including Portuguese, Slovak, Afrikaans, and Arabic) have the additional layer of that text being read aloud in the target language. Some audio translations do not have the speaker speaking the language correctly.
Materials include prompts where students are encouraged to share how they (or their parents) do things at home or use information to solve personal problems, etc. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Unit 5, Explorations, Whole Group, students read an excerpt from A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley. After reading the text, the materials include a WriteNow section where the students analyze and interpret by reflecting on the text with various question prompts. The materials state, “Encourage students to use text details and provide examples from their own lives as they respond to the questions.”
Indicator 3U
This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.
Indicator 3V
This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.
Criterion 3.4: Intentional Design
The program includes a visual design that is engaging and references or integrates digital technology, when applicable, with guidance for teachers.
The materials integrate technology in ways that engage students in grade-level standards. All of the materials are through the online Interactive Student Edition, which contains a variety of interactive tools. The program includes digital technology that provides opportunities for students to collaborate with their teachers and peers. The Interactive Student Edition prompts students to discuss tasks with classmates and record their collective notes in the digital notebook. Students save their work through the online assignments, and teachers review and provide feedback to students. The materials also include a discussion board that teachers and students allow for digital conversations.
The materials incorporate a visual design in print and digital editions that support student learning, make the organizational structure clear, and communicate clearly. The four sections (Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, Independent Learning, and Performance Based Assessments) are color-coded and match the color coding in the Teacher Edition.
Indicator 3W
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 integrate technology in ways that engage students in grade-level standards. All of the materials are through the online Interactive Student Edition, which contains a variety of interactive tools. Students highlight, annotate, and translate the text into a variety of languages, many of which can also be read aloud to them in that language. Students respond to prompts by typing in text boxes or charts. Students navigate the Interactive Student Edition by clicking on labeled tabs that take them to various sections of the textbook. Digital tools allow teachers to view and respond to student responses and customize the materials to meet the needs of students. Teachers can assign work through the online platform and access other digital resources like the Hook and Inspire pages for anchor texts, which have links to supplemental videos and texts.
Digital technology and interactive tools, such as data collection tools, simulations, and/or modeling tools are available to students. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Interactive Student Edition, students adjust the font size using a button at the top of the page. Students search for different topics or words by using the magnifying glass at the top of the page.
In the Interactive Student Edition, students read and listen to the texts, type their responses to questions, and plan their writing. Students submit their work via this platform, allowing teachers to see all student responses immediately.
Digital tools support student engagement in ELA. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Interactive Student Edition contains clear links to the Unit Introduction, Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, Independent Learning, Performance-Based Assessment, and Unit Reflection. A drop-down menu provides access to the table of contents, bookmarks, annotations, highlights, notebook, and glossary.
In each Unit Performance-Based Assessment, students can click on a notebook icon to open a text box to write ideas they are going to use for their multimedia presentation.
In the Interactive Student Edition, materials are organized to keep students on track and to support their work. For example, a header bar shows where students are in the lesson and unit. Comprehension Checks are displayed in the right-hand column, keeping the text center for reference.
Digital materials can be customized for local use (i.e., student and/or community interests). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Table of Contents can be customized for a variety of purposes in both the Teacher’s Edition and Student Edition: “You can customize the program by rearranging the Table of Contents, creating your own tests, and uploading your own resources to match your curriculum.” Students may customize the table of contents by clicking on the three vertical dots next to the table of contents. Teachers may then move items, remove items, or add files, links, titles, or notes for students.
In the Interactive Student Edition, students can select any text and make personal customizations, such as translating the words, highlighting in one of four colors, circling the text, underlining it, or adding a note.
In the Hook and Inspire section, teachers can choose from various resources, such as videos, articles, and extension activities that can be customized. The landing page includes ways teachers can support students’ learning “Into,” “Through,” and “Beyond” the Whole-Class Learning and Small-Group Anchor Texts. The page states, “Hook and inspire your students with these ideas. Build your own Playlist of media, short texts, novel connections, and extension activities to enrich your teaching.” In Unit 5, Exploration, from Sacajewea by Joseph Bruchac, the following “Into” resources are provided but are not limited to: “Sacajawea Statue” (article by Lewis & Clark National Historic Trails): Introduce the story’s protagonist and narrator with this webpage about one of her many commemorative statues. Tell students that there are more statues erected in honor of Sacajawea than of any other American woman; “The Lewis and Clark Expedition: Interactive Map” (The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History): Explore the Corps of Discovery’s journey with this interactive map. Students will learn about important places along the route and significant dates–including November 4, 1804, the day Sacajawea and her husband Toussaint Charbonneau joined the expedition; “Writing Native Biographies'' (myPerspectives Video Library) Share this video in which author Joseph Bruchac discusses why he writes biographies about Native Americans and describes the care he takes to ensure his stories are culturally accurate.”
In the Interactive Student Edition, the Small-Group Learning section includes a chart of learning strategies. Each section of the chart includes a box where students can add their own ideas. For example, the Support Others section includes the following chart topics: “Build off ideas from others in your group. Invite others who have not yet spoken to do so.” A blank Support Others box is available for students to type further ideas.
Indicator 3X
Materials include or reference digital technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other, when applicable.
The materials include digital technology that provides opportunities for students to collaborate with their teachers and peers. The Interactive Student Edition prompts students to discuss tasks with classmates and record their collective notes in the digital notebook. Students save their work through the online assignments, and teachers review and provide feedback to students. The materials also include a discussion board that teachers and students allow for digital conversations. The connected Savvas Realize platform allows tasks to be assigned, completed, scored, and tracked digitally by teachers. Teachers provide feedback to students while they work on assignments. The Collaboration Center includes videos referencing how students can collaborate with email, text messaging, and shared documents.
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:
The Savvas Realize platform, MyPerspectives, connects to Google Classroom so that tasks can be assigned and completed. Students can annotate PDFs or attach separate files to their work. Teachers can view completion rates, score tasks, and see students’ mastery of the standards. Teachers can also select assignments for individual students or sub-groups of the class.
The Interactive Student Edition is an online platform that allows the teacher the opportunity to assign activities. The “Student work is saved, and teachers may review it at any time. If work is completed offline, work will sync up when online again.”
In the Table of Contents, Getting Started, Program Overview a tab for Digital Resources is available. The On-Demand Training page includes a Digital Tour handout and a video. Digital Tools in a Discussion Board “facilitate collaboration and real-time peer-to-peer sharing of ideas.” In addition, there is an EssayScorer that allows teachers to provide immediate feedback to students for revising and editing.
In the Collaboration Center, videos are provided that model how to collaborate. Some videos reference online tools students can use for collaboration. For example, the Build Consensus video discusses collaboration using shared documents, text messaging, and email. The teacher can assign these videos to students.
Indicator 3Y
The visual design (whether in print or digital) supports students in engaging thoughtfully with the subject, and is neither distracting nor chaotic.
The materials incorporate a visual design in both the print and digital editions that support student learning, make the organizational structure clear, and communicate clearly. Each of the four sections (Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, Independent Learning, and Performance Based Assessments) are color-coded and match the color coding in the Teacher Edition. Charts, diagrams, photos, illustrations, and icons are included thoughtfully on the pages. The table of contents, glossary, index, and other resources are clearly labeled and easy to find. The layout for each selection is consistent so students can find the information they need.
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:
In the Interactive Student Edition, the pages typically have a colored band at the top that contains a heading and any pictures or illustrations that accompany the text. The stories typically do not contain any illustrations or pictures other than what is on the colored band at the top of the page.
The Interactive Student Edition has clearly labeled links that are included for information about the author, background, and standards addressed with each text. These are clearly labeled above the text.
In the print/PDF Student Edition, pictures are typically at the top of the first page of text, without many additional pictures or illustrations throughout each passage. The PDF has wide margins and sometimes provides additional information for the students in the margins. Icons in the margins refer students to external tools they can use, such as a pencil and paper icon to represent Evidence Log and a spiral-bound book icon for the Notebook.
Teacher and student materials are consistent in layout and structure across lessons/modules/units. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In each edition, all units follow the same order of sections that are clearly color-coded: Whole-Class Learning is blue, Small-Group Learning is turquoise, Independent Learning is purple, and Performance-Based Assessment is orange. The opening page of each unit contains clearly labeled links to the Unit Introduction, Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, Independent Learning, Performance-Based Assessment, and Unit Reflection. The links are color-coded to match the section colors and are consistent across the materials. There is a photo on the left side of the page that connects to the unit theme.
In the Teacher’s Edition, Introduction of each unit, a Pacing Plan is provided at the bottom of the pages with a timeline for the entire unit, a numbered square for each day, a blue, turquoise, purple, or orange line denoting the section of the unit, and the names of the texts or tasks associated with the section.
In the Teacher’s Edition, each text displays the same four Planning pages that include a summary of the text, Lesson Resources (a table laying out the text’s Making Meaning, Language Development, and Effective Expression tasks), Reading Support (a text complexity rubric), and Standards Support Through Teaching and Learning Cycle, which details a cycle of Identify Needs, Decide and Plan, Teach, and Analyze and Revise.
In the Interactive Student Edition in Whole-Class Learning, Small-Group Learning, and Independent Learning, at the top of the first page of each text, links are clearly labeled and include information about the author, background, and standards addressed in each text. A sidebar contains links to the table of contents, bookmarks, annotation and highlights, notebook, and glossary. They are clearly labeled and accessed the same way throughout the materials.
In the Interactive Student Edition, the Performance-Based Assessments have clearly labeled parts, including links to the Academic Vocabulary, Word Network, and Rubric sections.
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:
In the print Student Edition, the header on most pages (except for pages with texts) includes the unit Essential Question.
The Interactive Student Edition contains clickable nested links showing navigation within the unit (e.g., Unit 1 Childhood > Whole-Class Learning > Gallery of Calvin and Hobbes Comics ), and the right side of the screen has an expandable menu to navigate within the text (e.g., Making Meaning, Language Development, Effective Expression).
Indicator 3Z
Materials provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning, when applicable.
The materials include several layers of support for teachers to understand and use the program’s embedded technology. The Getting Started with myPerspectives digital page contains links to two resources: MySavvasTraining.com and Savvas Realize. The website, MySavvasTraining.com, presents high-level videos and handouts on topics such as accessing student data, downloading assignments in order to modify them and creating playlists of learning material. The Savvas Realize section focuses on the technical aspects of the assignment platform, such as demonstrating how to assign content to students, managing discussion boards, and using the Realize Reader digital textbook. The video and/or printable handout, Digital Resources, explains the embedded technology available to teachers and students. The documents almost always contain step-by-step directions and screenshots/images to help the teacher use technology with this program.
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:
In the Table of Contents, Getting Started, teachers can access videos and PowerPoint presentations about the different aspects of the program, such as the Table of Contents, the Student Edition, and assessments. One of the Program Overview videos in Digital Resources is a 12-minute video with information about how to utilize and navigate the online program, customize instruction, save time with digital tools, and engage students. A printable handout with the same information is available.
In the Table of Contents, Getting Started, Teacher How-To Resources, a document is provided to understand how to use the resources, such as Google classroom assignments, customize worksheets and assessments, share playlists, and ExamView: Getting Started. The documents provide step-by-step directions for teachers to utilize online materials and technology.
In the Table of Contents, Getting Started, Savvas Realize is the online platform for managing classes, assigning and turning in tasks, and examining data. The Savvas Realize training site provides technical support to teachers in the following categories:
Assignments > Realize Reader Assignments: “Savvas Realize Reader gives you access to digital textbooks and assignments in an engaging, interactive learning environment. Realize Reader content can also include video, interactive charts, graphs, drag-and-drop activities, and a notebook service, in addition to basic features, such as annotations, highlights, and bookmarks.” Directions follow for accessing the Realize Reader content through Realize, via the Realize Reader app, or downloading for offline use.
Discussions > Manage Active Discussions: “Discussions enable you to facilitate class and group discussions on important academic and social topics. Students can reflect on learning, share ideas and opinions, or ask and answer questions. You can create, monitor, and reply to discussions, and students can participate in discussions you create. In addition, you can choose whether or not to score discussions.” Directions follow, showing teachers how to select a discussion and then add a comment, attach a file, or edit comments.
Data > Results by Assignment: “The Results by Assignment page includes data for class and individual student test scores, progress, and usage.” Directions follow on how to “View Class Results by Assignment,” including Scores Data, Progress Data, and Usage Data.
In the Table of Contents, MySavvasTraining.com provides different sections for program-level overviews of structure and features and includes video tutorials with accompanying handouts. The categories include:
Getting Started > Digital Tour: Technological features are highlighted, including the Discussion Board feature (“to facilitate collaboration and real-time peer-to-peer sharing of ideas”), the EssayScorer tool (“provides immediate feedback to students for revising and improving their writing, giving them additional practice and saving you time”), and content creation tools (“you can customize the program by rearranging the Table of Contents, creating your own tests, and uploading your own resources to match your curriculum.”
Assessments and Reporting > Assessments: This video describes assessments overall, including those with embedded technology: Next Generation Practice Tests and Performance Tasks “give students the opportunity to practice formats like drag and drop so that they are prepared for online interactive testing,” and the Data tab on Savvas Realize organizes “student and class data that shows standards mastery on assessments and online activities, as well as overall progress. You can dig deeper with additional data points to reveal more detailed information on student mastery, progress, and usage. You can also view data for individual students from the class assignment list.”
Additional Resources > Revision Assistant for Teachers: A 24-page guide shows teachers how to set up, launch, and use Revision Assistant, which is “an online revision tool that helps students to improve their writing. It provides instant, differentiated feedback aligned to genre-specific rubrics and allows students to share their work and revisions with their teacher.”