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Report Overview
Summary of Alignment & Usability: Savvas Essentials: Foundational Reading | ELA
ELA K-2
The Savvas Essentials materials meet the expectations for alignment to standards and research-based practices for foundational skills instruction and meet the expectations for implementation, support materials, and assessment. Foundational Skills Instruction includes a research-based synthetic approach with systematic and explicit instruction. Materials provide a Teacher Guide that includes a Scope and Sequence and Lesson Pacing Guide, along with instructional routines and lesson targets, in addition to offering two flexible pathways to support teaching and learning. Materials contain a clear, evidence-based explanation for the expected hierarchy for teaching phonological awareness skills and research based on The Science of Reading and Scarborough’s Reading Rope. Materials delineate a scope and sequence with a cohesive, intentional sequence of phonics instruction and practice to build toward application of skills, including a clear research-based explanation for the order of phonics instruction. Materials regularly and systematically provide various assessment opportunities for students to demonstrate progress toward mastery of print concepts, word recognition, and word analysis, including a summative assessment for every module, formative daily assessments for phonological awareness in the form of Exit Tickets, and cumulative reviews. Materials provide the teacher with explicit phonics instruction through systematic and repeated modeling of grade-level standards, including systematic and repeated instruction for students to hear, say, encode, and read each newly taught grade-level phonics pattern. The digital materials enhance student learning through teacher resources and interactive activities and include opportunities for teachers to personalize learning for all students using adaptive or other technological innovations.
Kindergarten
View Full ReportEdReports reviews of foundational skills supplements determine if a program meets, partially meets, or does not meet expectations for alignment to research-based practices and college and career ready standards. This rating encompasses all grades covered in the program.
Alignment (Gateway 1)
Materials must meet or partially meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating encompasses all grades covered in the program.
Usability (Gateway 2)
1st Grade
View Full ReportEdReports reviews of foundational skills supplements determine if a program meets, partially meets, or does not meet expectations for alignment to research-based practices and college and career ready standards. This rating encompasses all grades covered in the program.
Alignment (Gateway 1)
Materials must meet or partially meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating encompasses all grades covered in the program.
Usability (Gateway 2)
2nd Grade
View Full ReportEdReports reviews of foundational skills supplements determine if a program meets, partially meets, or does not meet expectations for alignment to research-based practices and college and career ready standards. This rating encompasses all grades covered in the program.
Alignment (Gateway 1)
Materials must meet or partially meet expectations for standards alignment in order to be reviewed for usability. This rating encompasses all grades covered in the program.
Usability (Gateway 2)
Report for Kindergarten
Alignment Summary
The Kindergarten materials meet the expectations for alignment to standards and research-based practices for foundational skills instruction. Materials contain isolated, systematic, and explicit instruction for all 26 upper- and lowercase letters, and the Pacing Guide indicates the order in which letters are introduced. Students have frequent opportunities to identify, locate, and name all 26 upper- and lowercase letters. Materials provide explicit instruction and practice for all students regarding the organization of print concepts. Materials include routines and hand motions for the teacher to model phonological awareness concepts and provide ample opportunities for students to practice each new sound and sound pattern through multisensory and multimodal learning opportunities. The lessons provide teachers with systematic and repeated instruction for students to hear, say, encode, and read each newly taught grade-level phonics pattern. Materials contain systematic and explicit instruction of high-frequency words and provide students with multiple and varied opportunities over the course of the year to learn, practice, and apply word analysis strategies through interactive activities. Materialsprovide systematic, explicit instruction and practice in fluency by focusing on accuracy and automaticity in decoding. Materials provide a Teacher Guide that includes a Scope and Sequence and Lesson Pacing Guide, along with instructional routines and lesson targets, in addition to offering two flexible pathways to support teaching and learning. Materials contain a clear, evidence-based explanation for the expected hierarchy for teaching phonological awareness skills and research based on The Science of Reading and Scarborough’s Reading Rope. Materials delineate a scope and sequence with a cohesive, intentional sequence of phonics instruction and practice to build toward application of skills, including a clear research-based explanation for the order of phonics instruction. Materials regularly and systematically provide various assessment opportunities for students to demonstrate progress toward mastery of print concepts, including a summative assessment for every module, formative daily assessments for phonological awareness in the form of Exit Tickets, and cumulative reviews. The Common Core State Standards for each Lesson, summative Module Assessments, and formative assessment Exit tickets are noted in the Standards box on the digital platform. The digital materials enhance student learning through teacher resources, printable sound-spelling cards, Foldable Decodable and Passages, Articulation Videos, See and Sing Videos, and Interactive activities. The digital materials include opportunities for teachers to personalize learning for all students using adaptive or other technological innovations.
Kindergarten
Alignment (Gateway 1)
Usability (Gateway 2)
Overview of Gateway 1
Alignment to Standards and Research-Based Practices for Foundational Skills Instruction
Materials contain isolated, systematic, and explicit instruction for all 26 upper- and lowercase letters, and the Pacing Guide indicates the order in which letters are introduced. Materials provide students with frequent opportunities to identify, locate, and name all 26 upper- and lowercase letters. Materials provide explicit instruction and practice for all students regarding the organization of print concepts and feature classroom books, student editions of the book, Foldable Decodables, Decodable Passages, and Student Worktexts, as well as multimedia materials to practice print concepts, letter identification, and letter formation. Materials provide students with daily opportunities to engage in phonological awareness and include routines and hand motions for the teacher to model phonological awareness concepts and provide ample opportunities for students to practice each new sound and sound pattern through multisensory and multimodal learning opportunities. Materials provide explicit phonics instruction through systematic and repeated modeling for all grade-level standards. The lessons provide teachers with systematic and repeated instruction for students to hear, say, encode, and read each newly taught grade-level phonics pattern. Materials provide daily opportunities for students to build, manipulate, spell, and encode words using common and newly-taught sound and spelling patterns; however, there are limited opportunities for purposeful teacher modeling that demonstrates the use of phonics to encode sounds to letters and words in writing tasks. Materials contain systematic and explicit instruction of high-frequency words. The lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to read grade-level high-frequency words in sentences in the Foldable Decodables and on worktext pages, in addition to reading high-frequency words in weekly decodable books and decodable passages. Materials provide students with multiple and varied opportunities over the course of the year to learn, practice, and apply word analysis strategies through interactive activities. Materials provide systematic, explicit instruction and practice in fluency by focusing on accuracy and automaticity in decoding. Explicit instruction and teacher modeling of fluent reading focus on accuracy, rate, and expression.
Criterion 1.1: Print Concepts and Letter Recognition (Alphabet Knowledge)
Materials contain isolated, systematic, and explicit instruction for all 26 upper- and lowercase letters. The Pacing Guide indicates the order in which letters are introduced. The Display, Say, and Introduce routine is used to introduce letters, and uppercase and lowercase letters are introduced within the first two modules of the materials. Materials provide students with frequent opportunities to identify, locate, and name all 26 upper- and lowercase letters. Although the materials include activities for all 26 uppercase and lowercase letters, one activity may include up to eight uppercase and lowercase letters combined and may be the sole lesson for those letters. The Teacher Resources section of the materials includes clear guidance to support teachers with explaining and modeling the correct formation of all 26 upper- and lowercase letters in Ball and Stick, D’Nealian, and Cursive styles. Materials provide explicit instruction and practice for all students regarding the organization of print concepts. Materials feature classroom books, student editions of the book, Foldable Decodables, Decodable Passages, and Student Worktexts, as well as multimedia materials to practice print concepts, letter identification, and letter formation.
Indicator 1A
Indicator 1A.i
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1a.i. (K)
The materials contain isolated, systematic and explicit instruction for all 26 upper- and lowercase letters. Three or four uppercase and lowercase letters are introduced in the same lesson and reviewed in one follow-up lesson. The Pacing Guide indicates the order in which letters are introduced. The Display, Say, and Introduce routines is used to introduce letters and uppercase and lowercase letters are introduced within the first two modules of the materials. There is a defined sequence for letter instruction to be completed in a reasonable time frame over the school year.
Materials contain isolated, systematic and explicit instruction for all 26 letters (recognize and name uppercase and lowercase). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Recognize and name all upper- and lowercase letters of the alphabet.
In Module 1, Lesson 3, the teacher uses the Display, Say, Introduce Routine. The teacher displays the Sound-Spelling Card for the letter I. The teacher says “this is the letter i, At the top of the card are two letters.” The teacher writes the letter Ii and says “this is the uppercase letter I and this is lowercase i.” The teacher explains that they look similar because they both have straight lines, but one is tall and has lines on top and bottom, formed. The teacher repeats this routine for the letters Jj, Kk, and Nn. For Guided practice the teacher displays letters and student identify them telling which are uppercase and which are lowercase. Students practice letter identification in their student worktexts and engage in Lesson 3 letter recognition interactive practice. Teacher use the More activities to differentiate instruction.
In Module 2, Lesson 8, the teacher uses the Display, Say, Introduce Routine. The teacher displays the Sound-Spelling Card and explains that it shows a dime and has two letters on the top. The teacher says, “This is the letter d. At the top of the card are two letters.” The teacher writes the letter Dd and says, “This letter is uppercase letter d and this is lowercase d.” The teacher explains that they are both tall and have a straight line. The teacher displays the Sound-Spelling Cards Q (quilt) and R (rocket) and repeats this routine for the letters Qq, and Rr. Students point out the similarities and differences in the letters, such as in their names, shapes, and formation. For Guided Practice, the teacher displays the letters and student identify them telling which are uppercase and which are lowercase. Students practice letter identification in their student worktexts and engage in Lesson 8 letter recognition interactive practice. Teacher use the More activities to differentiate instruction.
There is a defined sequence for letter instruction to be completed in a reasonable time frame over the school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
According to the Table of Contents, letters are introduced in the following order: Cc, Oo, Ss, Ll, Mm, Pp, Ii, Jj, Kk, Nn, Tt, Uu, Yy, Aa, Bb, Ee, Ff, Gg, Hh, Dd, Qq, Rr, Vv, Ww, Xx, Zz, spanning eight lessons.
In Module 1: students learn letters: Cc, Oo, Ss, Ll, Mm, Pp, Ii, Jj, Kk, Nn, Tt, Uu, Yy.
In Module 2: students learn letters: Aa, Bb, Ee, Ff, Gg, Hh, Dd Qq, Rr V,v Ww, Xx, Zx.
Indicator 1A.ii
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1a.ii.
The materials provide students with frequent opportunities to identify, locate, and name all 26 upper- and lowercase letters.
Materials provide students with frequent opportunities to engage in practice identifying all 26 letters (uppercase and lowercase). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 3, students look through the displayed letter cards I, i, J, j, K, k, N, and n. Students say the letter name, identify uppercase and lower case, and pracitce identifying the letters in the Quick List words and in the “Iggy Inchworm” poem on page 14. The Exit Ticket has students identify the the letters Ii, Jj, Kk, Nn.
In Module 2, Lesson 8, students play the digital game Spelling Voyage. A letter name is spoken, and the students click on the appropriate bubble. Students unlock levels to move through all 26 upper- and lowercase letters.
Materials provide opportunities to engage in practice locating all 26 letters (uppercase and lowercase). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 5, students complete an activity in which there are four target letters (Vv, Ww, Xx, Zz) and two rows of mixed up letters in circles for each target letter. Students locate the target letter among the two rows of circles by coloring them. Students repeat the process for each of the four target letters.
In Module 2, Lesson 10, students use the Sound-Spelling Cards for the target letters Dd, Aa, Zz, Bb, Xx, Ee, Ww, Ff,Vv, Gg, Qq, Hh, Rr and locate the uppercase and lowercase letters in classroom books.
Materials provide opportunities to engage in naming all 26 letters (uppercase and lowercase). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 5, the teacher displays letters and asks students to name the letter and tell whether it is uppercase or lowercase. (T, S, u, P, C, n, l, O, J, M, y, L, k). The teacher displays the following words: cup, mop, lip, jot, cook, sit, sick, nut, pool, toy. Partners point to and say the letters for each word.
In Module 2, Lesson 5, the teacher displays letters and has students identify them, telling whether they are upper- or lowercase. The teacher then displays words (cup, mop, lip, jot, cook, sit, sick, nut, pool, toy)and has students work in pairs to point and say the letters for each word.
Indicator 1A.iii
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1a.iii.
The materials provide a variety of activities that embed letter identification practice in meaningful print, such as identifying letters in poems, students’ names, printed rhymes, book titles, and classroom books. Although the materials include activities for all 26 uppercase and lowercase letters, one activity may include up to eight uppercase and lowercase letters combined and may be the sole lesson for those letters.
Materials contain a variety of tasks/activities that apply letter identification and naming of all 26 uppercase letters to meaningful print use (e.g. initial letter of a child’s name, environmental print, letter assortments, alphabet books, shared writing). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 3, the teacher displays the Letter Cards I, i, J, j, K, and k and names the letters with students. The teacher writes a student’s name and asks if there are any target letters in the name. Students circle the letters in their names and tell whether they are upper- or lowercase.
In Module 2, Lesson 8, the teacher displays the rhyme “Damselfly Dance” on page 9 of the ABC Rhyme Time book and points to the uppercase D in the title. The teacher reads the rhyme aloud. Students identify uppercase D’s and lowercase d’s in the rhyme.
Materials contain a variety of tasks/activities that apply letter identification and naming of all 26 lowercase letters to meaningful print use (e.g., initial letter of a child’s name, environmental print, letter assortments, alphabet books, shared writing). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 3, the teacher displays “Iggy Inchworm” on page 14 of the ABC Rhyme Time book and points to the uppercase I’s in the title. The teacher reads the rhyme aloud and has students identify uppercase I’s and lowercase i’s in the rhyme. The teacher and students repeat the process with letters Jj, Kk, and Nn.
In Module 2, Lesson 7, the teacher displays “Fionna Fish” on page 11 of the ABC Rhyme Time book and asks the students to identify the uppercase and lowercase Ff in the text. The teacher repeats with the poem “Go Get the Goat” on page 12 for the letters Gg and “Hamster in My House” on page 13 for the letters Hh.
Indicator 1A.iv
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1a.iv. (K-1)
The Teacher Resources section of the materials include clear guidance to support teachers with explaining and modeling the correct formation of all 26 upper- and lowercase letters in Ball and Stick, D’Nealian, and Cursive styles. As students learn a new letter, the teacher models the formation of each letter. Each time a letter is introduced in Letter Recognition, students trace and write the letter on a lined worksheet. Students skywrite letters each time sound/symbol recognition is introduced. Students who need extra practice connecting a sound to a letter may trace the letter on the Letter Card while making the appropriate sound.
Materials include clear directions for the teacher concerning how to explain and model how to correctly form each of the 26 letters (uppercase and lowercase). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Print many upper- and lowercase letters.
The Handwriting Guide includes the letter formation descriptions and detailed verbal descriptions that teachers will use when teaching letter formation. Descriptions are provided for Ball and Stick, D’Nealian, and Cursive style letter formation. For example: “Capital B—Start at top, straight to bottom line. Back to top, curve right around, to middle line, touch. Then right around to bottom line, touch.”
In Module 1, Lesson 4, the teacher writes the letters Tt and points to the letter T and says, “This is an uppercase, or capital, T.” The teacher then points to the letter t and says, “This letter is lowercase t. These two letters look similar and different! Both are tall and have straight lines with a shorter line across. But one has a shorter line at the very top, and one has a shorter line in the middle.”
Materials include frequent opportunities for students to practice forming all of the 26 letters (uppercase and lowercase). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 3, students practice letter formation of lowercase and uppercase letters Ii, Jj, Kk, and Nn on the handwriting printable.
In Module 2, Lesson 6, students practice letter formation of Aa, Bb, Ee on the lined handwriting printables. Materials include an additional student practice worksheet for students to locate the hidden upper- and lowercase letters. Then students trace the upper- and lowercase letters.
Materials include frequent opportunities for students to practice forming letters using multimodal and/or multisensory methods. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 11, students practice and repeat /m/ several times as the teacher points to the m written on the board. Students practice skywriting m with their fingers as they say /m/.
Module 4, Lesson 16, students connect the sound /p/ to the letter p, using the Letter Card p. The teacher points and says, “/p/, /p/, /p/. The sound /p/ is spelled p.” Students trace p on the card as they repeat words that begin with /p/.
Indicator 1B
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1b. (K-early Grade 1).
The materials provide explicit instruction and practice for all students regarding the organization of print concepts. The materials feature classroom books, including the book I Am a Book by Jessica White, student editions of the book, Foldable Decodables, Decodable Passages, and Student Worktexts, as well as multimedia materials to practice print concepts, letter identification, and letter formation.
Materials include sufficient and explicit instruction for all students about the organization of print concepts (e.g. follow words left to right, spoken words correlate sequences of letters, letter spacing).
Follow words from left to right, top to bottom, and page by page. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 11, the teacher displays the book I Am a Book by Jessica White and models how to turn the pages gently, starting at the beginning and slowly turning from left to right. The See and Sing Video: What Is a Book? gives details about the front cover, back cover, title page, title, author, and illustrator. The video also includes information about how to turn pages carefully to read.
In Module 9, Lesson 41, the teacher displays the book, I Am a Book by Jessica White and says, “When we read a book, we start at the top of the page” and points to the word Oh. The teacher states, “This is where I start reading. Watch how I move my finger from left to right as I read.” The teacher points to each word as the first sentence is read aloud and states, “When I point to a word, I read a word.” The teacher then models reading and pointing to each word. “I start reading at the top and finish at the bottom. Now let’s see what happens when I get to the end of a line.” The lesson continues with how to read from left to right, return sweep, and across, repeating until the page is completely read, then moving over to the next page to repeat the process.
Recognize that spoken words are represented in written language by specific sequences of letters. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 5, Lesson 21, the teacher reads the book, I Am a Book by Jessica White, pausing on pages 24-25 to say, “Look at the letters on this page. They are out of order! I can’t read these words because the letters are out of order… When we read a book, we look at the words and the pictures to find out the meaning.”
In Module 6, Lesson 26, the teacher uses the book, I Am a Book by Jessica White, to point out the difference between letters and words and the spaces between the words. The teacher turns to page 29 and points to the letter W and the word wait. The teacher states, “This is uppercase W. The next three letters are lowercase. Together, these four letters form the word Wait.” Next, the teacher circles the word there and has students tell whether it is a letter or word.
Understand that words are separated by spaces in print. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 7, Lesson 40, the teacher displays page 4 of the book I Am a Book, by Jessica White and reads the first sentence aloud. The teacher then says, “The word Thank is the first word in this sentence. See the space between Thank and you? We see spaces between all the words in the sentence. This makes it easier to read and understand.” During Guided Practice students work in pairs to draw a small, blue square between each word of a sentence.
In Module 8, Lesson 36, the teacher displays the first sentence on page 23 of the book, I Am a Book, by Jessica White and reads it aloud. Students tell where the sentence begins and ends and how they know. The teacher reminds students that spaces separate words and points out the three words in the sentence. The teacher repeats with the second sentence on the page.
Materials include frequent and adequate lessons, tasks, and questions for all students about the organization of print concepts (e.g., follow words left to right, spoken words correlate sequences of letters, letter spacing). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 15, students use the book, I Am a Book by Jessica White, and model holding the book correctly. Students point to the front and back covers to demonstrate how to turn pages gently from left to right. Students answer questions such as: Is this the front cover or the back cover? Where is the title? Where else can we find the title? What does the title tell us? Students practice with classroom books as the teacher circulates to confirm understanding.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, students use the book, I Am a Book by Jessica White, and identify uppercase W and the three lowercase letters a, i, t. Students point to each leter as they say it. The students circle the word There with their fingers and answer if it is a letter or a word and explain how they know. Students continue identifying the letters and the spaces that separate the words in the book. Partners take turns choosing a word and identifying the letters in the word.
In Module 9, Lesson 41, students turn to pages 12–13 in I Am a Book by Jessica White and point to where to start reading and then point to each word from left to right and top to bottom. Students demonstrate what to do when they reach the bottom of the page.
Materials include a variety of physical books (teacher-guided, such as big books) that are suitable for the teaching of print concepts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 15, the materials include the teacher Big book I Am a Book, by Jessica White. The teacher displays the book and asks, “How do we hold books when we read? Show me.” The teacher confirms that students are holding the book correctly.
In Module 10, Lesson 46, the materials include the projectable book I Am a Book by Jessica White. The teacher displays the book and asks students to identify distinguishing characteristics of a sentence such as a period, question mark, or an exclamation mark.
Materials include sufficient and explicit instruction about the organization of print concepts (e.g., follow words left to right, spoken words correlate sequences of letters, letter spacing) in the context of a book. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 1, the teacher holds up a trade book and explains that the alphabet has two forms of letters, uppercase and lowercase. The teacher explains that Uppercase letters are always tall letters and that some lowercase letters are tall too. The teacher models identifying uppercase letters in the titles of classroom nooks.
In Module 7, Lesson 31, the teacher points to the book and says, “This word, When, begins with an uppercase letter. It begins the sentence. I see words and space between the words.”
Materials consistently include opportunities for students to engage in authentic practice using print concepts in the context of student books. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 7, Lesson 35, students work in pairs practicing identifying the first word and ending punctuation of sentences in the student books, I Am a Book by Jessica White.
In Module 9, Lesson 41, students use the I Am a Book little books by Jessica White to model tracking print from left to right, top to bottom, and page by page, with return sweep. The teacher circulates the room to confirm understanding or provide extra support.
Materials contain periodic cumulative review opportunities during which the teacher reminds students about previously learned grade-level print concepts and letter identification. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 5, students review the 13 letters introduced in the module. Then in Module 2, Lesson 10, students review the additional 13 letters taught in the module.
In Module 3, Lesson 15, the Learning Targets for this review and assessment lesson are (1) Hold a book right side up and turn the pages correctly, (2) Understand how to take care of books, and (3) Identify the front cover, back cover, and title page of a book. These concepts were previously introduced in Lesson 11.
In Module 7, Lesson 35, the teacher uses the book I Am a Book by Jessica White to review print concepts. The teacher asks students, “How does a sentence begin? How does a sentence end?” The teacher then gives copies of the student version of the book to have partners take turns opening the book to a new page, choosing a sentence, and identifying the first word and end punctuation.
Materials include students’ practice of previously learned print concepts, letter identification, and letter formation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 7, Lesson 35, when engaging in a reteach of the book I Am a Book by Jessica White, students respond to the questions, “How does a sentence begin? How does a sentence end?” In partner groups, students take turns opening the student version of the book to a new page, choosing a sentence, and identifying the first word and end punctuation.
In Module 7, Lesson 40, students review and practice letter identification of y, j, v, z, qu, and x. Students line up facing the teacher and the first student on Team 1 identifies the letter name, pronounces the sound and says a word beginning with that sound-spelling. The student goes to the end of the line, and the process repeats with the first student from Team 2, and so on.
Criterion 1.2: Phonological Awareness
Materials emphasize explicit, systematic instruction of research-based and/or evidence-based phonological awareness.
Materials provide students with daily opportunities to engage in phonological awareness. The materials follow a Module, Lesson, and Day format, and each Module is broken down into five days. Materials include a variety of types of activities for phonological awareness, including Activity Breaks, Interactive Play, and Picture Cards. Materials provide the teacher with systematic, explicit modeling for instruction in syllables, sounds (phonemes), and spoken words during Minilessons using the Teach, Model, Guide, Practice Routine. Materials include routines and hand motions for the teacher to model phonological awareness concepts and provide ample opportunities for students to practice each new sound and sound pattern. Lessons include Phonological Awareness Minilessons with student practice as well as Daily Phonological Awareness Review opportunities for students. Materials contain multisensory and multimodal learning opportunities for students to practice each newly taught skill as called for in the grade-level standards.
Indicator 1C
Materials have frequent opportunities for students to engage in phonological awareness activities during Kindergarten and early Grade 1.
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1c.
The materials provide students with daily opportunities for students to engage in phonological awareness. The materials follow a Module, Lesson, and Day format, and each Module is broken down into five days. Each day contains at least one phonological awareness activity. Most days include a Daily Phonological Awareness Review and/or a Review and Reinforce Activity providing students opportunities to practice phonological awareness in cumulative review. The materials include a variety of types of activities for phonological awareness, including Activity Breaks, Interactive Play, and Picture Cards.
Materials include a variety of activities for phonological awareness. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 2, Lesson 6, students play the interactive game Javi’s Make and Takeaway Words. The game can be used to practice the blending and segmenting of syllables and onset and rime.
In Module 4, Lesson 16, students chop as they blend onset and rime for the following sounds: /j/ -et, jet; /l/ -ake, lake; /r/ -ug, rug. For more practice students chop the words pen, tot, jam, duck, pot, fan, pail, ran. Students bring their hands together to say the word.
In Module 5, Lesson 22, students listen to the word map and isolate and pronounce the initial phonemes. Students use Picture Cards to isolate and pronounce the initial sound of net, mop, and hen. Students stand in a circle and listen to a CVC word beginning with m, t, s, b, p, n, or c. Students repeat the word, say the initial sound, and pass the beanbag to the next student.
There are frequent opportunities for students to practice phonological awareness. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 12, students practice in pairs with Picture Cards with two-syllable words. The first student chooses a card and says the word. The partner segments the syllables. Then students switch roles and continue.
In Module 6, Lesson 27, students repeat words, saying the sounds in each word and isolate the final sound. The students clap as they isolate and pronounce the final sounds for man, red, and leaf. A student volunteer repeats for the word fig.
In Module 9, Lesson 44, students use a pushing motion to symbolize getting rid of the final sound and then change the ending sound sounds in the words: cap:can, fit:fix, yes:yet, fun:fuss, hi:he. Students play Spin for Sounds and provide a new final sound to make new words.
Indicator 1D
Materials provide explicit instruction in phonological awareness through systematic modeling across the K-1 grade band.
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1d.
The materials provide the teacher with systematic, explicit modeling for instruction in syllables, sounds (phonemes), and spoken words during Minilessons using the Teach, Model, Guide Practice Routine. The materials include routines and hand motions for the teacher to model phonological awareness concepts. Teacher resources contain examples for teacher modeling. The More section of each Minilesson provides teachers with a Quick List to use as examples and to provide additional practice for students.
Materials provide the teacher with systematic, explicit modeling for instruction in syllables, sounds (phonemes), and spoken words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Recognize and produce rhyming words.
In Module 1, Lesson 1, the teacher displays Picture Cards for the words cat and bat, and students listen as the teacher says the words. The teacher tells the students that cat and bat rhyme and have the same ending sound. Students listen again as the words are repeated, and mat, pat, fat, sat, and hat are added. During Model, Picture Cards for the words fan and man are used, and students tell whether or not they rhyme. The teacher replies with, “Yes, they both end with /an/.” The lesson continues with fan and bat.
In Module 1, Lesson 2, the teacher displays the Picture Cards for hen and pen. Students say the words with the teacher. The teacher reminds students that the words rhyme because they have the same ending sound, /en/. The teacher says more rhyming words and holds a finger up for each word (men, ten). The students mimic putting fingers up. During Model, a picture card for the word pail is displayed. The teacher says several rhyming words and reminds students that they rhyme because they all have the same ending sound.
Count, pronounce, blend, and segment syllables in spoken words.
In Module 2, Lesson 8, the teacher displays a picture card for the word doll and says, “This word has one part.” The teacher models by placing fingers on their chin and says the word. The teacher states, “My chin moves once when I say the word doll. The word has one part, or syllable.” The teacher continues modeling with the two-syllable words rabbit, robin, and starfish. The teacher guides students to hold their chins and say zebra, noting how the chin moves for each part while confirming that the word has two parts, or syllables.
In Module 3, Lesson 11, the teacher tells students that words are made up of parts or syllables and that blending syllables means putting them together. This is demonstrated with clapping as the teacher says and blends syllables for the words mit-ten, mitten, el-bow, elbow. During Model, the teacher claps hands as each syllable is said for sidewalk. The teacher claps faster to blend to syllables. During Guide Practice, the teacher and students use the clapping motion as they blend the syllables for the words monkey, paper, and pencil.
In Module 3, Lesson 12, the teacher tells students that words are made up of parts, or syllables. The teacher states, “Listen to this word: tiger. I can segment, or break apart, the word into syllables. I’ll say each part: (slowly) ti (pause) ger. What is the first syllable of this word? What is the second syllable? Now listen as I say another word: carpet…” The teacher continues instruction then models segmenting syllables in words while tapping their index fingers together as they say each syllable.
Blend and segment onsets and rimes of single-syllable spoken words.
In Module 4, Lesson 18, the teacher blends onset and rime by saying, “Listen to the first sound in a word: /m/. Now listen to the second part of the word: -an. I’ll say the sounds together: /m/ (pause) -an. Does that sound like a word? Let’s blend the sounds to say a word: /m/, -an; (faster) man.” The teacher models again using the word tap. The teacher states,“The first sound in this word is /t/. The rest of the word is -ap. I’ll say each part: /t/ (pause) -ap; (more quickly) tap.” The teacher models holding out two hands, thumbs up, saying the onset /b/ as they chop with their right hand, the rime -at with their left hand, then bringing the hands together as they say the word bat. The teacher models again, then guides students to practice blending onset and rime using the chopping motion.
In Module 4, Lesson 19, the teacher begins the lesson by blending onset and rime using the word pin. The teacher then demonstrates segmenting onset and rime using the word map. The teacher states, “Say this word after me: map. The first sound in this word is /m/. The rest of the word is -ap. I’ll say each part: /m/ (pause) -ap; (more quickly) map.” The teacher models holding out both hands with thumbs up. The teacher says the onset /p/ as they chop with the right hand, chopping with the left hand as they say at, then blends the word as they bring the hands together: pat. The teacher keeps their hands together and says, “nap” while bringing hands apart and chop as they segment: /n/ -ap. The teacher models again then guides students to practice the chopping motion as they blend and segment onset and rime for the words: tab, tin, bat, lit.
Isolate and pronounce the initial, medial vowel, and final sounds (phonemes) in three-phoneme (consonant-vowel-consonant, or CVC) words. (This does not include CVCs ending with /l/, /r/, or /x/.)
In Module 4, Lesson 22, the teacher displays a picture card for the word cap and says, “Listen to this word: cap.” The teacher tells students the sounds in the word by saying them slowly. The teacher states, “Listen to the sounds in the word cap: (slowly) /k/ (emphasize) /aaa//p/. The middle sound in cap is /a/. Now listen for the middle sound in this word: dip.” The teacher continues modeling using provided examples. The teacher guides students to practice by touching their heads as they isolate and pronounce medial sounds for the words bat, map, and top.
In Module 5, Lesson 21, the teacher displays a picture card for the word pan and says, “The first sound in the word pan is /p/. Now say the first sound with me: /p/.” The teacher displays a picture card for the word man and says, “Listen as I say the sounds in another word: /m//a//n/. The first sound in man is /m/.” The teacher models with additional words then guides students to use the megaphone motion to isolate and pronounce the initial sound in words.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, the teacher displays a picture card for the word duck and says, “Let’s say it together: duck. Listen to the sounds in duck: (slowly) /d/ /u/ /k/. The last sound in duck is /k/. Now say it with me: duck. The last sound is /k/. I’ll say just the last sound: /k/.” The teacher continues modeling, then guides student practice.
Add or substitute individual sounds (phonemes) in simple, one-syllable words to make new words.
In Module 8, Lesson 36, the teacher says, “Listen to this word: lip. The sounds are /l//i//p/, lip. Now I’ll add /s/ to the beginning of the word. The sounds are /s//l//i//p/, slip. The new word is slip.” The teacher continues instruction and models using hand motions for adding initial phonemes. The teacher opens their palms as they say the word low, saying, “Let’s add /f/ at the beginning.” The teacher claps as they say the sounds /f//l//o/, then opens their palms saying the word flow. The teacher models again, then guides students to practice using the hand motion.
In Module 10, Lesson 46, the teacher says, “Listen as I say the sounds in pat: /p/ (emphasize) /a//t/, pat. The sound in the middle of pat is /a/. If I change the middle sound from /a/ to /o/, I can make a new word: /p//o//t/, pot. The new word is pot.” The teacher continues instruction and modeling, then guides students to practice using a hand motion.
Materials provide the teacher with examples for instruction in syllables, sounds (phonemes), and spoken words called for in grade level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 2, Lesson 11, the teacher says the word, and students tap fingers for each syllable and count the syllables in the words apple, jam, bedroom, pencil, picnic, sunset, window, and duck.
In Module 7, Lesson 31, the teacher uses the Picture Card cat and says the sounds: /k/ /a/ /t/. The teacher blends the sounds to say the word cat. The teacher repeats the routine using the Picture Cards clock and drum to model blending phonemes. The teacher displays the Picture Cards flag, lamp, dress, and mask and children tap their palms as they say each sound and then clap after they blend the word.
In Module 8, Lesson 39, the teacher has students play the Spin and Move game. The teacher says a word from the Quick Lit and spins the spinner. The teacher models clapping hands to the right, to the center, and to the left to take away the final phoneme. Words include lake, gasp, seem, pant.
Indicator 1E
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1e.
The materials provide ample opportunities for students to practice each new sound and sound pattern. Lessons include Phonological Awareness Minilessons with student practice as well as Daily Phonological Awareness Review opportunities for students. The materials contain multisensory and multimodal learning opportunities for students to practice each newly taught skill as called for in the grade-level standards. The More section of each lesson includes Interactive Game links and Activity Breaks.
Materials provide ample opportunities for students to practice each new sound and sound pattern. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Recognize and produce rhyming words.
In Module 1, Lesson 1, students play Spin and Rhyme. They spin the digital spinner, say the name of the picture, and say a rhyming word.
In Module 2, Lesson 11, students listen to a word pair and produce one more word that rhymes with the words. The words used in this activity are cat/mat, frog/log, hen/pen, bee/tree, fish/dish, and whale/pail.
Count, pronounce, blend, and segment syllables in spoken words.
In Module 2, Lesson 8, students listen to a word then tap and count each syllable. Students practice four words with one syllable, four words with two syllables, and one word with three syllables.
In Module 5, Lesson 21, students listen to two- and three-syllable words. Students repeat the word and segment the syllables, clapping for each syllable. The words used in the exercise are: disappoint, person, enter, Sunday, hiccup, sidewalk, understand, and surface.
In Module 7, Lesson 31, students say the sounds in clock slowly /k/ /l/ /o/ /k/, tap their palms as they say each sound, and then blend the sounds to say the word clock. Students repeat the routine to blend phonemes and say the words flag, lamp, dress, mask
Blend and segment onsets and rimes of single-syllable spoken words.
In Module 4, Lesson 16, students work with a partner to practice segmenting onset and rime using six to eight Picture Cards of one-syllable words. The students take turns drawing a card, saying the word, then segmenting the word into onset and rime.
In Module 4, Lesson 18, students listen to words, hold out their two hands thumbs up and chop with their right hand when they say the onset and chop with their left hand as they say the rime. Students bring their hands together to blend the parts together. Students practice with tab, mat, fat. Students play Spin and Move. They say the word from the Quick List and spin the spinner. If the student segments the onset and rime correctly, the class performs the movement indicated on the spinner.
In Module 7, Lesson 32, students look at the Picture Card lake, listen to the sounds: /l/ /a/ /k/ /e/ (slowly) and blend the sounds (faster) to say lake. Students repeat the routine with the Picture Cards blue, duck, frog, and nest. For each card the students chop as they say each phoneme and clap after they blend the word. The words are: blast, clap, mend, lag, sock, desk, jump, fill, club.
Isolate and pronounce the initial, medial vowel, and final sounds (phonemes) in three-phoneme (consonant-vowel-consonant, or CVC) words. (This does not include CVCs ending with /l/, /r/, or /x/.)
In Module 5, Lesson 21, students say the initial sound for each word. The words used in the exercise are pit, bat, mom, nod, bed, mug, met, nip, boat, and fin.
In Module 5, Lesson 24, students use five Picture Cards for the words box, fan, gum, net, and wig. A student says the word and then stands next to the displayed Picture Card with the same medial sound. The activity is continued for all students and medial sounds.
In Module 6, Lesson 27, students use Picture Cards for the words man, red, and leaf. The students repeat saying the sounds in each word and isolating the final sound. The students clap as they isolate and pronounce final sounds for man, red, and leaf. A student volunteer repeats the routine for the word fig.
Add or substitute individual sounds (phonemes) in simple, one-syllable words to make new words.
In Module 8, Lesson 36, students add initial phonemes to make new words using the Blend Sounds instructional routine. Students listen to words and clap as they segment the sounds. Students then open their palms and use the motion to add initial phonemes /s/ and /b/ to the word, low. Students continue the motions as they add initial phonemes to the word am to make the words: bam, Tam, ram, lamb, yam.
In Module 10, Lesson 46, students practice substituting medial sounds in spoken words. Students touch their index finger to their thumb for /s/, clap for /e/, and touch their index finger to their thumb again for /t/. Students use the same motions for each sound they substitute in the words wig:wag, hot:hat, bad:bed, fun:fin.
Materials include a variety of multimodal/multisensory activities for student practice of phonological awareness. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 2, Lesson 10, students hold their chin and count each time it moves for each syllable or word part in the words: mailbox, baseball, sunlight, yesterday. Students form a circle, listen to words with two to three syllables, and stamp a foot for each word parth they hear and say the words airplane, sidewalk, basketball.
In Module 6, Lesson 28, the teacher says the word gum and then says each sound in gum and touches shoulder (/g/), head (/u/), and then opposite shoulder (/m/). This is repeated and then also done for the word tack. During Guide Practice, students make the same motion as they isolate and pronounce initial, medial, and final sounds for the words get and win.
Criterion 1.3: Phonics
Materials emphasize explicit, systematic instruction of research-based and/or evidence-based phonics.
Materials provide the explicit phonics instruction through systematic and repeated modeling for all grade level standards. The lessons provide teachers with systematic and repeated instruction for students to hear, say, encode, and read each newly taught grade level phonics pattern. Materials contain lessons that provide students with frequent opportunities to decode phonetically spelled words through phonics activity practice and decodables. Students practice previously learned phonics skills by reading decodable books, playing interactive games such as Concentration and Go Fish!, participating in partner work, and completing worksheets. Materials provide explicit, systematic practice for decoding phonetically regular words in a sentence through the use of Foldable Decodable Readers, Quick Lists, and student worktext pages. Materials provide Quick Lists that include words and sentences which address phonetic target skills in that lesson. Materials provide daily opportunities for students to build, manipulate, spell, and encode words using common and newly-taught sound and spelling patterns. The Sequential and Differentiated learning pathways include teacher-level instruction and modeling in a Minilesson and the More section of each lesson includes additional practice opportunities to differentiate learning. Materials include limited opportunities for purposeful teacher modeling that demonstrates the use of phonics to encode sounds to letters and words in writing tasks. Although materials include explicit teacher modeling of blending words, the routines lack teacher modeling of explicit encoding when writing. While materials include a Dictation Routine during which students use their knowledge of sound-spellings patterns to encode the dictated words, materials do not include explicit modeling of encoding routines.
Indicator 1F
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1f.
The materials provide the explicit phonics instruction through systematic and repeated modeling for all grade level standards. The lessons provide teachers with systematic and repeated instruction for students to hear, say, encode, and read each newly taught grade level phonics pattern.
Materials contain explicit instructions for systematic and repeated teacher modeling of all grade level phonics standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Demonstrate basic knowledge of one-to-one letter-sound correspondences by producing the primary sound or many of the most frequent sounds for each consonant.
In Module 3, Lesson 12, the teacher says, “This is a picture of a tomato. The word tomato begins with the letter t. The letter t spells the sound /t/. Say the sound with me: /t/.” The teacher continues instruction by writing the letter t on the board, pointing to it and saying, “The sound /t/ is spelled t.” The teacher asks students to say /t/ several times as they point to it, then skywrite it.
In Module 4, Lesson 16, the teacher displays the Sound-Spelling Card 18 for the word pilot. The teacher says, “This is a picture of a pilot. The letter p spells the consonant sound /p/. Say the sound with me: /p/, /p/, /p/.” The teacher writes the word pat on the board and underlines the p. The teacher points to the p and says, “What sound does the letter p spell?” If the teacher sees a need, the letter is pointed to several times for the students to repeat the /p/ sound. The teacher says, “We already learned that a spells the sound /a/ and t spells the sound /t/. I can blend sounds to read a word.” The teacher slides a finger under the sound-spellings and says /p/ /a/ /t/, pat.
Associate the long and short sounds with the common spellings (graphemes) for the five major vowels.
In Module 7, Lesson 33, after teaching the letter/sound for Ww, the teacher displays the Sound-Spelling Card 24 for the word umbrella, and says, “This is a picture of an umbrella. The word umbrella begins with the sound /u/. The letter u spells the sound /u/. Say the sound with me.” The teacher writes the word us on the board and underlines the letter u and asks, “What sound does the letter u spell? I can blend sounds to read a word.” The teacher slides a finger under the sound-spellings and says: /u/ /s/, us.
In Module 9, Lesson 44, the teacher displays Sound-Spelling Card 82 for the word no and says, “This is a picture that shows no. The word no ends with the sound /long o/. The sound /long o/ can be spelled o at the end of a word. Say the sound with me: /long o/.”
In Module 10, Lesson 46, the teacher displays Sound-Spelling Card 74 for the word rake and says, “This is a picture of a rake. The word rake has the sound /long a/ in it. The word rake has the pattern VCe. The letter a is a vowel (points to the a), and the e at the end is silent (points to the e). A vowel- consonant-silent e pattern usually means the vowel sound is long, not short.”
Distinguish between similarly spelled words by identifying the sounds of the letters that differ.
In Module 9, Lesson 43, the teacher writes and reads the words sad and mad and says, “Some words look almost the same because they have some of the same letters. Sad and mad have the letter a in the middle. They both have the letter d at the end.” The teacher underlines the s and m and says, “But sad begins with the letter s, and mad begins with the letter m. When you see two or more words that look alike, look at the letters carefully and say the sounds to read the words.” In Blend and Read, using the words hit and hot, the teacher asks, “Which letters are different in these words? Which sounds are different?” The teacher underlines the letters i and o and says, “I can blend sounds to read words.” The teacher slides a finger under the sound-spellings and says, “/h/(emphasized) /i/ /t/, hit; /h/ (emphasized) /o/ /t/, hot.”
In Module 9, Lesson 45, the teacher writes and reads the words pet and met and says “Which letters are different? Which sounds are different?” The teacher displays the word pairs sit/sip, nap/tap and students identify which letters and sounds are different and then read the words.
Lessons provide teachers with systematic and repeated instruction for students to hear, say, encode, and read each newly taught grade level phonics pattern. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 18, the teacher displays the Picture Card bat and explains that the first sound in the word bat is /b/ spelled b and explains that the word bat ends with the sounds /a/ /t/. The teacher writes the word bat and underlines the letters a, t and slides a finger under the sound-spellings explaining that it is called the -at family. The teacher repeats the routine for pan and tan in the an word family and models reading and writing the words.
In Module 5, Lesson 21, the teacher displays Sound-Spelling Card 3 for the word carrot and says, “This is a picture of a carrot. The letter c spells the consonant sound /k/. Say the sound with me: /k/.” The teacher writes the word cat and underlines the letter c and says, “What sound does the letter c spell? We already learn the sounds /a/ spelled a and /t/ spelled t. I can blend sounds to read a word.” The teacher slides a finger under the sound-spellings and says /k/ /a/ /t/, cat. The teacher models how to blend sounds to read words and how to use sound spellings to write the word cap.
Indicator 1G
Materials include frequent practice opportunities for students to decode words that consist of common and newly-taught sound and spelling patterns and provide opportunities for students to review previously taught phonics skills.
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1g.
The materials contain lessons that provide students with frequent opportunities to decode phonetically spelled words through phonics activity practice and decodables. Students practice previously learned phonics skills by reading decodable books, playing interactive games such as Concentration and Go Fish!, participating in partner work, and completing worksheets.
Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to decode (phonemes, onset and rime, and/or syllables) phonetically spelled words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 13, students decode the words sat, Sam, at, am, mat, and tam.
In Module 4, Lesson 19, the teacher models, then guides students to read words from the -it and -in families, such as pin, in, it, sit, bin, tin, pit, bit, Sit in it. It is a pin. It is in the bin. I was at the pit.
In Module 8, Lesson 39, students decode the words box, fox, Lex, Jax and read the words in the Foldable Decodable The Boy Who Cried Fox.
Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to read complete words by saying the entire word as a unit using newly taught phonics skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 14, the students sit in a circle and review the newly taught sound spelling pattern to read the words bat, sat, tab, mat, bam, and tam. Students pass a ball around until the music stops. The student holding the ball reads.
In Module 5, Lesson 24, students review the newly taught sound spelling pattern and read the words top, Bip, tip, dip, dot, not, and Bot. Students practice reading words in the decodable reader “Bip and Bot.”
In Module 6, Lesson 30, students work in pairs to take turns reading newly taught words aloud to each other. Students read words such as kit, fan, get, ten, kid, Ben, den, met, gas, and fit.
Materials contain opportunities for students to review previously learned grade-level phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 7, Lesson 35, students form two groups and review the Sound-Spelling Cards for h, l, w, and short u. Students from one group stand up and say the letter, pronounce the sound, and say a word with that sound-spelling. Students from the other group write the word on the board. Groups alternate speaking and writing.
In Module 8, Lesson 40, students review the Sound-Spelling Cards and blend sounds to say the words yam, yes, jam, van, zip, quit, and wax.
In Module 10, Lesson 50, students review and practice the previously learned sound spelling pattern for final e. Students work in pairs to create a T-Chart and add an e at the end of each word, read the new word, and write it in the second column. The words in the first column are cap, bit, hop, not, cut, and mad.
Materials contain a variety of methods to promote students’ practice of previously taught grade level phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 20, students review previously taught word families and work in pairs to complete two T-Charts with columns labeled -an, -at, -in, and -it. Students create and read words for each word family.
In Module 7, Lesson 35, the students use game templates and the previously taught words from the Quick List to practice h, l, w, and short vowel u. Students choose a game from Spin and Spell, Spin and Read, Rhyme It, Concentration, Go Fish!, and Match It, Read It.
In Module 10, Lesson 50, students review and practice decoding words with the previously taught VCe pattern. Students work in pairs to add an e to short vowel words. Students read words, then add an e to each word, and read the new word with the VCe pattern.
Indicator 1H
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1h.
The materials provide explicit, systematic practice for decoding phonetically regular words in a sentence through the use of Foldable Decodable Readers, Quick Lists, and student worktext pages. Each lesson features a Foldable Decodable. Materials provide Quick Lists that include words and sentences which address phonetic target skills in that lesson.
Materials provide explicit, systematic practice for decoding phonetically regular words in a sentence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 16, the teacher introduces the decodable story Tap the Map. The teacher displays the words pat, tap, and map and guides students in reading them. The teacher follows the instructional routine by reading the book aloud to students as they follow along with their fingers under each word. Then the teacher goes back and points out phonics target words and instructs students to highlight or underline them. For the second read, students echo-read as the teacher reads each sentence. The teacher provides additional reads by having students read two or three times orally.
In Module 7, Lesson 31, the teacher reads the Foldable Decodable, Hippity Hop! aloud one page at a time, and students echo-read. The teacher goes back and points out the phonics target words and high-frequency words. Students underline or highlight them. During the second read, students read with a partner, taking turns in reading each page. The teacher listens as students read and provides corrective feedback.
Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to decode words in a sentence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 16, students read 10 sentences in a decodable book. Sentences utilize decodable words and Rebus Pictures for spelling patterns that students have not yet learned.
In Module 6, Lesson 30, students read the Foldable Decodable, Get Set! Go! with the teacher, with a partner, and independently. The decodable features CVC words with short vowel e, as well as Consonant Gg /g/. Students also read 11 decodable sentences.
Indicator 1I
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1i.
The materials provide daily opportunities for students to build, manipulate, spell, and encode words using common and newly-taught sound and spelling patterns. The Sequential and Differentiated learning pathways include teacher-level instruction and modeling in a Minilesson and the More section of each lesson includes additional practice opportunities to differentiate learning.
The materials contain teacher-level instruction/modeling for building/ manipulating/spelling and encoding words using common and newly-taught sound and spelling patterns of phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 18, the teacher reviews the Picture Card for the word bat and uses the Display and Say routine to explain that the first sound in the word bat is /b/ spelled b and the word bat ends with sounds /a/ /t/. The teacher uses the Blend Sounds Routine and models writing the word bat and explains the ending sounds /a/ /t/. The teacher models blending the sounds to read the word bat. In Guided Practice, the teacher tells students that they will blend sounds to read words, The teacher models writing the words pat and ban. For Dictation, the teacher reminds students to use their sound-spelling to write the words mat, sat man, ban as the teacher says each word slowly.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, the teacher displays the Sound-Spelling Card 13 for the word kite and uses the Display and Say Routine to explain that the letter k spells the sound /k/. The teacher uses the Blend and Read Routine to model writing the word kit and underlines the letter k and asks, “What sound does the letter k spell.?” The teacher points out that both c and k can spell the sound /k/. The teacher models blending the sounds to read the word kite. In Guided Practice, the teacher tells students that they will blend sounds to read words, the teacher models writing the word kid and slides a finger under the sound-spelling as students blend to read the word. For Dictation, the teacher reminds students to use their sound-spelling to write the words kit, kid, Kip, and Kim as the teacher says each word slowly.
In Module 9, Lesson 44, the teacher display Sound-Spelling Card 82 for the word no and uses the Display and Say Routine to explain that the word no ends with the sound /o/ and that the sound /o/ can be spelled o at the end of a word. The teacher uses the Blend and Read Routine to model writing the word go and underlines the o at the end and says, “What sound can o spell?” The teacher models blending the sounds to read a word by sliding a finger under the sound-spellings and saying /g/ /o/, go. The teacher uses the Display, Say, and Blend Routine for the sounds /i/ and /e/ in CV words using Sound-Spelling Cards 78 for the word hi and 75 for the word we. In Guided Practice, the teacher tells students they are going to blend sounds to read words. The teacher writes the word so and slides a finger under the sound-spellings as students blend to read the word. For Dictation, the teacher reminds students to use their sound-spelling to write the words we, go, hi, and me as the teacher says each word slowly.
Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to build/manipulate/spell and encode words using common and newly-taught sound and spelling patterns phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 18, students practice building, manipulation, spelling, and encoding words using the practice generator. The practice page provides the word ending for the newly taught word families, -at, -an. Students fill in the first letter to spell different words. Student practice in the individually played interactive game Spelling Voyage Lesson 18. Spelling Voyage ties decoding and encoding practice together and students select or type letters to spell words in the word families -at, -an.
In Module 6, Lesson 28, students practice blending words with the newly taught sound spelling pattern consonant g and vowel e. Students use their sound spelling knowledge to read the words peg, beg, gab, sag. Students use the Picture Cards: bag, egg, flag, frog, goat, gum, jug to sort the sound-spellings. Students practice building, manipulating, spelling, and encoding in the individually played interactive game Spelling Voyage Lesson 28.
In Module 10, Lesson 49, students practice changing the words cub, cut, hug, tub, and pet on the board by applying an e to the end of the word. Students use their knowledge of sound-spellings to write each word as they say each word slowly. One student reads the word, and the partner adds an e at the end of the word in a different color and reads the new word. Partners continue practicing reading and writing the remaining words. Students practice writing final e words in the student worktext and in Phonics Lesson 49 Interactive Practice.
Indicator 1J
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten partially meet the criteria for 1j. (mid K-Grade 2)
The materials include limited opportunities for purposeful teacher modeling that demonstrates the use of phonics to encode sounds to letters and words in writing tasks. Although materials include explicit teacher modeling of blending words, the routines lack teacher modeling of explicit encoding when writing. Rather, the teacher writes an entire word and demonstrates how to decode the word. While materials include a Dictation Routine during which students use their knowledge of sound-spellings patterns to encode the dictated words, materials do not include explicit modeling of encoding routines. The modeling in the materials include print to speech, during which the teacher writes the words and models the sounds, as opposed to modeling speech to print. The materials provide students with activities and tasks to promote application of phonics as they encode words in sentences or in phrases based on common and newly taught phonics patterns.
Materials include limited teacher-level instruction of teacher modeling that demonstrates the use of phonics to encode sounds to letters and words in writing tasks. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 7, Lesson 31, during Dictation, the teacher asks students to use their knowledge of sound-spellings to write the words hot, hopl, had, and hid as the teacher slowly says them. The materials do not include explicit modeling of encoding routines.
In Module 9, Lesson 42, during Dictation, the teacher asks students to use their knowledge of sound-spellings to write the words melt, camp, gift, and pond as the teacher slowly says them. The materials do not include explicit modeling of encoding routines
Lessons provide students with frequent activities and tasks to promote application of phonics as they encode words in sentences or in phrases based on common and newly taught phonics patterns. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 11, students use their knowledge of consonant Mm /m/ sound-spellings to write the words map, man, mom, mug. Students individually complete the interactive Spelling Voyage Lesson 11, which includes decoding and encoding of the target sound spelling.
In Module 7, Lesson 33, students use their knowledge of consonant Ww /w/ and Vowel Uu /u/ sound-spellings to write the words web, wig, bus, rug. Students say the picture name, spell the sounds, and write the word for the picture on Worktext page 123. The words include rug, web, sun, nut, wig, cub. Students individually complete the interactive Spelling Voyage Lesson 33, which includes decoding and encoding of the target sound spelling.
In Module 9, Lesson 44, students use their knowledge of consonants Vv /v/ and Zz /z/ to write the words vet, van, zig, zag. Students partner practice Build-a-Word and take turns spelling and writing the CVC words with v or z.
Criterion 1.4: Word Recognition and Word Analysis
Materials contain systematic and explicit instruction of high-frequency words. The teacher uses the Sight Word Routines when new non-decodable, high-frequency words are introduced which include See and Say, Spell and Write, Read with Automaticity. The lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to read grade-level high-frequency words in sentences in the Foldable Decodables and on worktext pages. Students also read high-frequency words in weekly decodable books and decodable passages. The materials contain frequent explicit instruction of word analysis strategies. Materials provide students with multiple and varied opportunities over the course of the year to learn, practice, and apply word analysis strategies through interactive activities, See and Sing videos, partner practice, and Student Worktexts.
Indicator 1K
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1k.
The materials contain systematic and explicit instruction of high-frequency words. The teacher uses the Sight Word Routines when new non-decodable, high-frequency words are introduced which include See and Say, Spell and Write, Read with Automaticity. The spelling of high-frequency words is often accompanied by a chant. Students practice identifying and reading high-frequency words in isolation, in context in Foldable Decodables, and during Interactive Play, Activity Breaks, and Partner Practice. The materials include 75 high-frequency words that are covered throughout the curriculum, divided between the 10 modules.
Materials include systematic and explicit instruction of high-frequency words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Read common high-frequency words by sight (e.g., the, of, to, you, she, my, is, are, do, does).
In Module 3, Lesson 12, the teacher uses the See and Say Routine and displays the high-frequency Word Cards a and the. The teacher uses the Spell and Write Routine to teach the spelling chants for a and the. The teacher points to the word and guides students to say it and chant it : “A can be a letter, and a can be a word. When a is a word, I will spell it a.” The teacher repeats the routine with the word the.
In Module 8, Lesson 39, the teacher uses the See and Say Routine and displays the high-frequency Word Cards have and do. The teacher reminds students that they already know the sound /h/ spelled h. In Spell and Write, students learn the chant, “I have friends, H-A-V-E. You have friends, H-A-V-E. H-A-V-E spells have, you see!” Once students know the chant, they spell the word and write it on a sheet of paper. The routine is repeated for do.
Materials include frequent opportunities for the teacher to model the spelling and reading of high-frequency words in isolation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 16, in the Spell and Write Routine the teacher models the chant to learn to spell the word to: ”I can spell to: T-o, to. It has an o, but its sound is /ü/.” The teacher repeats the routine with the word of.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, in the Spell and Write Routine, the teacher models the chant to learn to spell the word does: “D-O-E-S spells does-it does! D-O-E-S-it does?” The teacher repeats the routine with the word play.
In Module 7, Lesson 32, the teacher models spelling the high-frequency words here and eat by displaying the High-Frequency Word Card for each word and following the Sight Words: See and Say, Spell and Write Routines.
Students practice identifying and reading high-frequency words in isolation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 11, students practice reading words I and you using gestures to indicate I or you. Using the Read with Automaticity Routine students, continue reading the words until they can read the words with automaticity.
In Module 4, Lesson 18, students practice reading words said and is. Using the Read with Automaticity Routine, students continue reading the words said and is until they can read the words with automaticity.
In Module 8, Lesson 39, students practice reading words have and do. Using the Read with Automaticity Routine, students continue reading the words until they can read the words with automaticity.
Materials include a sufficient quantity of grade-appropriate high-frequency words for students to make reading progress. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
According to the Kindergarten Planning and Pacing Chart, 75 high-frequency words are included in Kindergarten instruction. Usually two new words are introduced each week. There are two weeks where one word is introduced, three weeks where three words are introduced, one week where four words are introduced, one week where five words are introduced, and one week where seven two-letter decodable words are introduced.
According to the Table of Contents, High-Frequency Words are listed in order of instruction: I, you, a, the, at, am, and, was, to, of, it, in, said, is, for, are, can, come, ran, not, on, did, away, down, play, does, see, they, big, red, get, my, find, one, two,here, eat, up, run, but, will, well, look, little, yes, yellow, what, funny, she, have, do, there, this, jump, help, must, went, three, where, he, be, we, go, so, no, me, came, make, ate, like, ride, blue, that, out, with.
Indicator 1L
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1l.
The lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to read grade-level high-frequency words in sentences in the Foldable Decodables and on worktext pages. Students also read high-frequency words in weekly decodable books and decodable passages. Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to write grade level high-frequency words in tasks, in order to promote automaticity in writing grade appropriate high-frequency words.
Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to read grade-level high-frequency words in a sentence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 12, students echo read the Foldable Decodable Who Eats two or three times with a partner. Sentences from the decodable text include the high-frequency words a and the.
In Module, 5, Lesson 24, students echo read the Foldable Decodable Bip and Bot two or three times with a partner. Sentences from the decodable text include the high-frequency words away, down, a, is, for, and the.
In Module 10, Lesson 46, students echo read aloud the Foldable Decodable A Cake for Nate two or three times with a partner. Sentences from the decodable text include the high-frequency words to, the, can, I, help, said, it, did, he and am.
Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities to write grade level high-frequency words in tasks (such as sentences) in order to promote automaticity in writing grade appropriate high-frequency words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 12, students engage in the Read and Write Routine with the High-Frequency Word Cards a and the. The Exit Ticket provides students the opportunity to write each high frequency word.
In Module 4, Lesson 18, students complete a worksheet focused on the high-frequency words said and is. First, students read each word. Then students find and circle the word in sentences and a box of random words. Next, students add a missing letter to complete the word said. In the next box, students color the letters to spell said. Then the students practice writing said on handwriting lines and in Elkonin boxes. Last, students write a sentence using one or both words.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, students engage in the Read and Write Routine with the High-Frequency Words play and does. Students practice writing the words, write the words in a sentence, and illustrate a picture to go with the sentence on page 96 in the Student Worktext.
Materials provide repeated, explicit instruction in how to use student-friendly reference materials and resources and reading high-frequency words (e.g., word cards, word lists, word ladders, student dictionaries). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 7, Lesson 35, the teacher displays 11 High-Frequency Word Cards: one, two, here, eat, up, run, but, will, well, look, little. The teacher reminds students that for some words, they can blend the sounds using the sound-spellings they have learned and that there are some words they read that don’t have the sound-spellings they know, such as one. During Guided Practice, the teacher displays High-Frequency Word Cards as a resource, and pairs take turns reading the words aloud to each other.
In Module 9, Lesson 50, the teacher reviews the HIgh-Frequency Word Cards came, make, ate, like, ride, blue, that, out, and with. The teacher reminds students they have learned sound-spellings for many words, but there will be words that they do not have sound-spellings they have learned. Students work with a partner and use the high-frequency words as a resource for completing a T-chart on the board, sorting the words they can blend and the words they need to memorize.
Indicator 1M
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1m.
The materials contain frequent explicit instruction of word analysis strategies. Materials provide students with multiple and varied opportunities over the course of the year to learn, practice, and apply word analysis strategies through interactive activities, See and Sing videos, partner practice, and Student Worktexts.
Materials contain frequent explicit instruction of word analysis strategies (e.g. phoneme/grapheme recognition, syllabication, morpheme analysis). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 13, the teacher uses the Display and Say Routine and displays the Sound-Spelling Card 1 for the word apple. The teacher explains that apple starts with the sound /ă/ spelled a. The teacher uses the Blend and Read Routine to write the word sat, underlines the letters s and a, and models blending the sounds to read a word. The teacher slides a finger under the sound-spellings and says, /s//ă//t/, sat.
In Module 5, Lesson 21, the teacher uses the Display and Say Routine and displays the Sound-Spelling Card 3 for the word carrot and explains that carrot starts with the sound /k/. The teacher asks, “What sound does the letter c spell?” The teacher reminds students they have learned the sounds /ă/ spelled a and /t/ spelled t. The teacher uses the Blend and Read Routine, writes the word cat, underlines the c, and slides a finger under the sound-spellings and says, /c/ /ă/ /t/.
Materials contain frequent explicit instruction of word solving strategies to decode unfamiliar words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 19, the teacher writes and says the word pin and says, “The first sound in the word pin is spelled /p/. The word pin ends with sounds /ĭ/ /n/. The letters i, n spell the ending sounds /ĭ/ /n/.” The teacher uses the Blend and Read Routine to underline the letters i, n and says, “What sounds do the letters i, n spell when they are together?” The teacher points to the letters and slides a finger under the sound-spellings and says, “/p /ĭ/ /n/, pin.
In Module 7, Lesson 32, the teacher uses the Display and Say and the Blend and Read Routines to explicitly instruct students to decode words by phoneme. The teacher displays Sound-Spelling Card 14 for the word ladder and says, “This is a picture of a ladder. The word ladder begins with the sound /l/. When the letter l is in a word, it spells the sound /l/. Say the sound with me: /l/.” The teacher writes the word let on the board, underlines the letter l, and points under each sound-spelling, saying, “What sound does the letter l spell? I can blend sounds together to read a word: /l//ĕ//t/, let.” The teacher guides students to blend sounds to read words lip, lap, lag, let, lot, lid, fill, sell, fell, tell, led, and log.
Multiple and varied opportunities are provided over the course of the year for students to learn, practice, and apply word analysis strategies. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 17, students use the Blend and Read Routine to identify and read words on the board that have the letters N and I. Students use Letter Cards m, t, s, b, p, n, and i to build and read words.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, students practice word analysis in the Foldable Decodable, A Kit for Kim. Students identify, highlight, and underline words with consonant Kk /k/ and the high-frequency words play, does, is, a, for, and and.
In Module 9, Lesson 42, students say each picture name and sort pictures to the correct ending consonant blend column. The columns are entitled -st, -mp, -sk, and -nd. Pictures to be sorted include vest, chimp, sand, and jump.
Criterion 1.5: Decoding Accuracy, Decoding Automaticity and Fluency
Materials provide systematic and explicit instruction and practice in fluency by focusing on accuracy and automaticity in decoding in K and 1, and rate, expression, and accuracy in mid-to-late 1st and 2nd grade. Materials for 2nd grade fluency practice should vary (decodables and grade-level texts).
Materials provide systematic, explicit instruction and practice in fluency by focusing on accuracy and automaticity in decoding. Explicit instruction and teacher modeling of fluent reading focus on accuracy, rate, and expression. Fluency lessons contain explicit fluency instruction using the instructional routine Teach/Model/Read the Text in Decodable Passages.
Indicator 1N
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1n. (K-1)
The materials provide systematic, explicit instruction and practice in fluency by focusing on accuracy and automaticity in decoding. Explicit instruction and teacher modeling of fluent reading focus on accuracy, rate, and expression. Fluency lessons contain explicit fluency instruction using the instructional routine Teach/Model/Read the Text in Decodable Passages. The teacher models fluent reading with each Decodable Reader and students echo-read the text one page at a time. Additionally, students reread Foldable Decodable Books multiple times within each lesson as part of recurring instructional routines.
Materials provide systematic and explicit instruction and practice in fluency by focusing on accuracy and automaticity in decoding. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 6, Lesson 30, the teacher reminds students, “We can read some words because we know the sound-spellings and we blend the sounds together.” The teacher explains that some words don’t have sound- spellings that the students have learned so they must practice so that when we see them, we can read them quickly, with automaticity. The teacher displays the High-Frequency Word Card, reads the word, and uses it in a simple sentence. The teacher and student choral read the words play, does, see, they, big, red, get my, find. Students choral read and then work in pairs to read the high-frequency word flash cards.
In Module 7, Lesson 35, the teacher explains that it is important to read each and every word accurately, or correctly. The teacher chooses a classroom library book and models reading orally with accuracy and automaticity. The teacher says, “As I read, I made sure that I read each word. I didn’t change any words or leave out any words. I didn’t add any extra words.” The teacher listens as students read the Decodable Passage on page 134 of the Student Worktext and provides corrective feedback about their fluency. The teacher pairs students for additional reads to increase their accuracy and fluency.
In Module 8, Lesson 40, the teacher explains ,”When you read, it is important to read at a rate, or speed, that is not too fast or too slow. You should read at the same rate that you use when you talk.” The teacher explains that when people read too quickly or too slowly, it can be hard to understand what they are saying. The teacher models reading using a classroom library book to demonstrate reading at an appropriate rate. The teacher listens to the students orally read Student Worktext, page 154, Decodable Passage and provides corrective feedback about their reading rate and decoding. The teacher pairs students for additional reads to increase their accuracy and fluency.
Materials provide opportunities for students in Kindergarten and Grade 1 to engage in decoding practice focused on accuracy and automaticity. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 6, Lesson 28, students review the phonics focus pattern Consonant Kk and decode the words Kim, kid, kit, Kip. Students review the High-Frequency Words play, does, is, a for, and. Students read the Foldable Decodable A Kit for Kim to further develop automaticity. Students receive corrective feedback on accuracy and automaticity.
The teacher reviews the phonics focus sound-spellings and makes sure the students can identify the letters k, f, g and e in print and correctly pronounce the sounds. Students review the High-Frequency Word Cards until they can quickly read the words.
In Module 9, Lesson 45, students read At the Pond on page 174 of the Student Worktext to practice decoding words with learned phonics patterns. Students receive corrective feedback on accuracy and automaticity. Teacher guidance for providing students with corrective feedback includes: “If students make mistakes with specific Phonics skill, then review the sound-spellings and guid in the blending of the sounds to read the word. If a student doesn't read the high-frequency words correctly, then work individually using the High-Frequency Word Cards to read the word, spell the word, and then read it again.”
Indicator 1Q
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 1q.
The materials provide multiple opportunities over the course of the year for students to read emergent-reader texts for purpose and understanding. The materials contain explicit directions and/or think-alouds for the teacher to use when modeling how to engage with a text and how to emphasize reading for purpose and understanding. Each Foldable Decodable Minilesson begins with a teacher think-aloud and/or discussion to engage students with text prior to reading.
Multiple opportunities are provided over the course of the year for students to read emergent-reader texts (K) for purpose and understanding. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Read emergent-reader texts with purpose and understanding.
In Module 3, Lesson 12, the teacher tells students that the text is an informational text about animals who are hungry and want to eat. The teacher explains that it includes photographs and is about real animals. Students read the Foldable Decodable Who Eats? to discover how hungry animals eat.
In Module 5, Lesson 24, the teacher asks students if they’ve ever been sad and what they can do to help someone who is sad. Students offer ideas, and the teacher explains that they will read a story about alien friends. Students read the text to find out how one friend helps another friend who is sad.
In Module 10, Lesson 47, the teacher tells students that in today’s story, they will read informational text about some of the fun things people can do outdoors when the weather is sunny. The teacher asks, “What do you like to do outside on a sunny day?” Students read the Foldable Decodable Quite Fine to learn about things people can do when the weather is nice.
Materials contain explicit directions and/or think-alouds for the teacher to model how to engage with a text to emphasize reading for purpose and understanding. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 16, the teacher engages students in a think-aloud by explaining that the Foldable Decodable Tap the Map is about a boy and his dad. The teacher engages students in a discussion and asks, “How do you think they will figure out how to get to the places the boys want to go?”
In Module 5, Lesson 21, the teacher engages students in a think-aloud by explaining that the Foldable Decodable Come to the City is about what to do in a city. The teacher engages students with the text prior to reading and facilitates a discussion about living in a city. The teacher points out that the text has real or true information, then guides students to talk about the cities they live in, know of, or have visited.
Overview of Gateway 2
Implementation, Support Materials & Assessment
Materials provide a Teacher Guide that includes a Scope and Sequence and Lesson Pacing Guide, along with instructional routines and lesson targets, in addition to offering two flexible pathways to support teaching and learning. Materials provide adult-level explanations for each of the foundational skills in the Research Base Guide, Articulation Guide, Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction document, and the Savvas Realize teacher training platform. Materials contain a clear, evidence-based explanation for the expected hierarchy for teaching phonological awareness skills and research based on The Science of Reading and Scarborough’s Reading Rope. Materials delineate a scope and sequence with a cohesive, intentional sequence of phonics instruction and practice to build toward application of skills, including a clear research-based explanation for the order of phonics instruction. Materials contain 32 Foldable Decodables aligned to the program’s scope and sequence. Each Foldable Decodable lesson is structured systematically for explicit instruction in decoding and fluency and includes repeated readings to secure phonics skills. Materials regularly and systematically provide various assessment opportunities for students to demonstrate progress toward mastery of print concepts, including a summative assessment for every module, formative daily assessments for phonological awareness in the form of Exit Tickets, and cumulative reviews. The assessment materials provide teachers with information concerning students’ level of understanding of word recognition and word analysis, and the materials give some general instructional suggestions for assessment-based steps to help students to progress toward mastery in word recognition and word analysis. The Common Core State Standards for each Lesson, summative Module Assessments, and formative assessment Exit tickets are noted in the Standards box on the digital platform. Materials also provide support for English Language Learners and Multilingual students. Materials are web-based, compatible with multiple internet browsers, platform-neutral, and follow a universal programming style. The digital materials enhance student learning through teacher resources, printable sound-spelling cards, Foldable Decodable and Passages, Articulation Videos, See and Sing Videos, and Interactive activities. The digital materials include opportunities for teachers to personalize learning for all students using adaptive or other technological innovations. Materials contain differentiation and extension opportunities for students, which allows for customization as needed for local context. The visual design of both the print and digital materials is not distracting or chaotic, and the materials support students in engaging thoughtfully with the material.
Criterion 2.1: Guidance for Implementation, Including Scope and Sequence
Materials provide a Teacher Guide that includes a Scope and Sequence and Lesson Pacing Guide, along with instructional routines and lesson targets, in addition to offering two flexible pathways to support teaching and learning. The Sequential Pathway is designed so teachers can use it systematically and sequentially to teach all foundational reading skills. The Differentiated Pathway is designed for teachers to reinforce specific strands as needed to support and extend core literacy instruction. Materials provide adult-level explanations for each of the foundational skills in the Research Base Guide, Articulation Guide, the Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction document, and the Savvas realize teacher training platform. Lessons offer models for teachers to use during lessons and provide detailed learning targets for each lesson. The Sequential Pathway contains ten Modules, and each module includes five lessons. Each lesson takes one full week, which means 50 weeks, or 250 days, are needed to complete the sequential curriculum within the regular school year. As a result, instruction may need some adjustment to be completed in a school year. Materials contain a clear, evidence-based explanation for the expected hierarchy for teaching phonological awareness skills. Materials cite research based on The Science of Reading and Scarborough’s Reading Rope and contain a more detailed explanation of the research base for phonological awareness by stating the research, then comparing it to the components present in the materials. Materials delineate a scope and sequence with a cohesive, intentional sequence of phonics instruction and practice to build toward application of skills. Materials provide a clear research-based explanation for the order of phonics instruction. The digital platform provides jargon-free resources and information to inform caregivers about foundational skills taught at school. The Family Engagement page provides information to build knowledge in Foundational Skills and provides activities that extend classroom learning into application-based activities parents can use with their students.
Indicator 2A
The materials provide a Teacher Guide that includes a Scope and Sequence and Lesson Pacing Guide, along with instructional routines and lesson targets. The materials offer two flexible pathways to support teaching and learning. The Sequential Pathway is designed so teachers can use it systematically and sequentially to teach all foundational reading skills. The Differentiated Pathway is designed for teachers to reinforce specific strands as needed to support and extend core literacy instruction. Materials provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning, including Interactive Play, Game on!, and an open response template in Practice Generator.
Materials provide a well-defined, teacher resource (teacher edition, manual) for content presentation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The materials include a well-defined Teacher Guide with detailed instructions for 10 modules/50 lessons for content presentation. Every module contains five lessons. The first four lessons within a module include a tear-out foldable decodable reader in the consumable Student Worktext. The fifth lesson in every module is a Review and Assess lesson, which provides a spiral, cumulative review of the foundational reading skills that students learned in that module.
The Teacher Resources tab includes a resource page for every module and lesson. Once the module and lesson are selected, there is another menu of resources based on skill. The platform includes a Teacher Resource page for Phonological Awareness, Phonics, High-Frequency Words, and Foldable Decodables.
The Teacher Guide is available in print and digital form and the Planning and Pacing Guide provides a daily breakdown of instruction for each module. Lesson Pacing shows the Differentiated Pathway and Sequential Pathway with suggested times allocated for each component of the program.
The teacher resource contains detailed information and instructional routines that help the teacher to effectively implement all foundational skills content (i.e., phonological awareness, print concepts, letters, phonics, HFW, word analysis, decoding). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Guide, Front Matter notes that each Minilesson contains explicit instruction, modeling, and guided practice for the targeted skill. A More section provides additional opportunities for students to practice a skill, and lessons end in a culminating assessment through Exit Tickets that provide information on students’ progress.
The Teacher Resources feature High-Frequency Word Routine, Blend and Read Routine to decode words, and articulation videos that model sound articulation and build understanding. Instructional routines provide detailed information for teachers to implement content and provide remediation for students who need additional support.
The Teacher Landing page has quick options on the right hand side: Assignments, Students and Groups, Data, and Programs. The teacher can view upcoming assignments with the option to click on the assignment or View All. The teacher is able to monitor data to enhance student learning.
Any technology pieces included provide support and guidance for the teacher and do not create an additional layer of complication around the materials. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The technology included supports teacher access using folders and clickable photos. Teachers can click Activities, Assessment, Books/Readers, Games, Practice, Presentations, Program Resources, Teacher Support, or Video/Audio to quickly locate materials. Within each of those tabs, the teacher can search for resources using the search bar, filters, or standards, or they can scroll through the list. The Table of Contents menu is listed on the left-hand side for immediate access.
The technology supports include quick links to materials that can be navigated by grade or Teaching by Strand. Each strand (Concepts of Print, Phonological Awareness, Phonics, Fluency, High-Frequency Words, and Handwriting) has its own tab, which is broken down further into individual skills and a culminating Exit Ticket.
Indicator 2B
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2b.
The materials provide adult-level explanations for each of the foundational skills in the Research Base Guide, Articulation Guide, the Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction document, and the Savvas realize teacher training platform. Lessons offer models for teachers to use during lessons and provide detailed learning targets for each lesson.
Complete, detailed adult-level explanations are provided for each foundational skill taught at the grade level. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction states, “Phonological awareness is a broad term that means the awareness of sounds in spoken language. It includes the ability to recognize and manipulate words, syllables, onsets and rimes, and phonemes. Phonemic awareness is a subset of phonological awareness and it is the ability to identify and manipulate phonemes in oral language. Phonemes are the smallest meaningful units of sound in English, the smallest sounds that make a difference in the meaning of a word. For example, the word pin can be changed to a different word, tin, by changing one phoneme, /p/ to /t/.”
The Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction includes information that each learning target introduces the phonics generalization that will be the focus for the lesson. Lessons intentionally teach sound-spellings and generalizations clearly and generalization is explicitly taught and modeled in the Minilesson. An appropriate student-facing generalization is provided, for example, “The letter b usually spells the sound /b/.” The intent is to introduce common patterns so that learners can decode words. The aim is to help learners use their knowledge of common patterns to self-correct if they produce a nonword as they are blending sounds to decode a word.
The Teacher Guide explains that phonics lessons include explicit instruction for letter-sound correspondences (sound-spellings) that are taught systematically and sequentially and the Research base supports teachers understanding of Phonics instruction by explaining the focus on connecting each sound to one or more letters and guiding students to decode words with the target sound-spelling.
Detailed examples of the grade level foundational skill concepts are provided for the teacher. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 1, the teacher explains that, “the words bat and cat rhyme because they have the same ending sounds: /at/.” The teacher models recognizing and producing spoken rhyming words, and students apply the skills with nine word pairs. During the Spin and Rhyme game, students repeat the words and identify whether they rhyme. The teacher confirms that the words have the same ending sounds and continues the activity with words that rhyme and some that do not rhyme. The Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction defines phonological awareness skills as word awareness, rhyme, alliteration, and syllable awareness.
In Module 3, Lesson 11, the Learning Target is to Blend Syllables in Words. The teacher plan includes the guidance, “Words are made up of parts, or syllables. Listen to these syllables: mit (clap) ten (clap). Now I’ll blend the syllables, or put them together, to say the word: (slowly) mit (pause) ten; (more quickly) mit-ten; (quickly) mitten.”
Indicator 2C
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten partially meet the criteria for 2c.
The materials offer two pathways to support teaching and learning. The Sequential Pathway is designed so teachers can use it systematically and sequentially to teach all foundational reading skills. The Differentiated Pathway is designed to support and extend core literacy instruction. The materials contain lesson plans that utilize a research-based lesson plan design for early literacy instruction. The Sequential Pathway contains ten Modules, and each module includes five lessons. Each lesson takes one full week, which means 50 weeks, or 250 days, are needed to complete the sequential curriculum within the regular school year. As a result, instruction may need some adjustment to be completed in a school year.
Lesson plans utilize effective, research-based lesson plan design for early literacy instruction. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Teacher Guide Front Matter notes that the curriculum is aligned to the Science of Reading and includes instruction in concepts of print, phonological awareness, phonics, fluency, and the teaching of high-frequency words. The Three Step Instructional Design includes a Minilesson, More, and Assess components. The Minilesson includes a Teach, Model, and Guided Practice format with More practice opportunities that differentiate instruction for students.
The Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction document explains that the materials follow a gradual release of responsibility model, consisting of focused instruction, guided instruction, collaborative learning, and independent learning. During Teach, teachers provide explicit, direct, multisensory instruction in the target foundational reading skill to be learned. During Model, the routine repeats to ensure students understand what has been taught. During Guided Practice, teachers guide student practice of the skill. The More activities provide independent practice and are not optional. During Assess, teachers can use the Exit Tickets and the weekly Module Assessments as guidance for small group or individual support instruction.
The effective lesson design structure includes both whole group and small group instruction. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Materials include a Sequential and Differentiated Pathway. The Sequential Pathway is used to teach all grade-level foundational skills. The Differentiated Pathway is used to teach specific strands as needed to enhance core literacy instruction.
The Front Matter and the Savvas Teacher Training platform explain that the Differentiated Pathway should be used to teach or reteach a lesson based on the needs of the students in the classroom. Materials include a menu of activities to provide practice for whole group, partner practice, small group, and individual students.
The pacing of each component of daily lesson plans is clear and appropriate. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
Materials include a Lesson Pacing Guide for the Differentiated and Sequential Pathways that includes allotted times for each routine of the program. Concepts of Print Minilessons are five minutes, Phonological Awareness Minilessons are five minutes, Phonics Minilessons are ten minutes, High-Frequency Words are ten minutes, and Foldable Decodable are five minutes. The More lessons are five to fifteen minutes, and the Assess are five minutes.
The Guidance for Delivery of Instruction document and the Explore Savvas Essentials: Foundation Reading course, available to teachers, address lesson pacing, small group differentiation, and lesson customization.
The suggested amount of time and expectations for maximum student understanding of all foundational skill content (i.e., phonological awareness, print concepts, letters, phonics, HFW, word analysis, decoding) cannot reasonably be completed in one school year and would require modifications. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Kindergarten Planning and Pacing Guide indicates each lesson takes a five-day week meaning 50 weeks/250 days are needed to complete the curriculum following the sequential path.
There are 10 modules in Kindergarten that include 50 lessons. Each Module contains Concepts of Print, Phonological Awareness, Phonics, High-Frequency Words, and Foldable Decodable lessons. There are five lessons per Module; and the fith lesson is a Review and Assess lesson. For example, Module 6, Lesson 28 includes Isolating and Prounouncing Sounds (5 minutes), Consonant Gg, Vowel E (10 minutes), High Frequency Words big, red, get (10 minutes), and the application in the Foldable Decodable Get Set! Go! (5 minutes).
The Minilesson includes the explicit teaching of the skill, and More includes independent practice. Teachers choose the More activities that meet the needs of individual learners based on point-of-use formative assessment and insight into student needs.
For those materials on the borderline (e.g., approximately 130 days on the low end or 200 days on the high end), evidence clearly explains how students would be able to master ALL the grade level standards within one school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The materials do not explain how to complete the curriculum in under 250 days.
Indicator 2D
Indicator 2D.i
Scope and sequence clearly delineate the sequence in which phonological awareness skills are to be taught, with a clear, evidence-based explanation for the expected hierarchy of phonemic awareness competence. (K-1)
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2d.i.
The materials contain a clear, evidence-based explanation for the expected hierarchy for teaching phonological awareness skills. The materials cite research based on The Science of Reading and Scarborough’s Reading Rope. The materials contain a more detailed explanation of the research base for phonological awareness by stating the research, then comparing it to the components present in the materials. The materials follow the expected hierarchy of phonological awareness skills, starting with rhyme, then progressing to sound comparison tasks, blending, segmenting, adding, deleting, and manipulating phonemes. The materials provide a Scope and Sequence checklist of phonological awareness skills, and the Planning and Pacing Guide clearly lays out the sequence in which phonological skills are to be taught by day and week.
Materials contain a clear, evidence-based explanation for the expected hierarchy for teaching phonological awareness skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Detailed Guidance for the Delivery of Instruction document states, “the most basic phonological awareness skills are word awareness, rhyme, alliteration, and syllable awareness. In Foundational Reading, the Grade K sequence of phonological awareness skills reflects this. Rhyme and alliteration are the first skills taught because most students can learn and enjoy them at ages 4–5. Sentence, word, and syllable awareness are taught after. When sequencing phonological awareness skills, the next skill should be onset and rime. The most advanced phonological awareness skills start with identifying, isolating, producing, and matching initial, medial, and final sounds in words, followed by blending and segmenting of sounds, and ending with manipulating sounds: adding, removing, changing, substituting sounds.”
The Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction states, “Phonological awareness is critical for learning to read any alphabetic writing system” (Ehri, 2004; Rath, 2001; Troia, 2004). The Detailed Guidance for Delivery of Instruction also states, “Many studies have shown that phonemic awareness can be taught and that when it is taught to young students, their later reading ability improves.” The National Reading Panel (2000) conducted a meta-analysis of 52 research studies on phonemic awareness and concluded, “Overall, the findings showed that teaching students to manipulate phonemes in words was highly effective under a variety of teaching conditions with a variety of learners across a range of grade and age levels and that teaching phonemic awareness to students significantly improves their reading more than instruction that lacks any attention to PA” (p. 7).
The Research base states that “Phonological awareness is a strong predictor of future reading achievement Instruction on phonological awareness and phonemic awareness helps ensure reading success” (Hiebert, Pearson, Taylor, Richardson & Paris, 2014).
Materials contain a phonemic awareness sequence of instruction and practice based on the expected hierarchy. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Detailed Guidance for the Delivery of Instruction document states there is a clear order in the phonemic awareness strand: count and identify words in sentences, recognize and produce rhyming words, identifying and using alliteration, count and pronounce syllables in words, blend- segment- delete-manipulate syllables in words, blend and segment onset and rime, isolate and pronounce initial sounds, isolate and pronounce medial sounds, isolate and pronounce final sounds, isolate and pronounce sounds, blend and segment phonemes, add and delete initial phonemes, add and delete final phonemes, substitute initial-final-medial phonemes, and recognize long or short vowel sounds.
In Module 1, Lesson 1, the teacher follows a Teach, Model, Practice lesson designed to explain how to recognize and produce spoken rhyming words.
In Module 2, Lesson 8, the teacher follows the Teach, Model, Practice lesson designed to explain how to count and pronounce syllables in spoken words.
In Module 5, Lesson 24, the teacher follows the Teach, Model, Practice lesson designed to explain how to isolate and pronounce medial phonemes.
In Module 10, Lesson 48, the teacher follows the Teach, Model, Practice lesson designed to explain how to distinguish long from short vowel sounds in words. The teacher reviews the sounds for all short and long vowels.
Materials have a cohesive sequence of phonemic awareness instruction based on the expected hierarchy to build toward students’ application of the skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Grade K Planning and Pacing Guide, phonemic awareness instruction is organized as follows:
Module 1: recognize rhyming words, produce rhyming words, identify and use alliteration, rhyming and alliteration
Module 2: count and identify words in sentences, count and pronounce syllables in words
Module 3: blend syllables in words, segment syllables in words, delete syllables in words, manipulate syllables in words, syllables
Module 4: blend onset and rime, segment onset and rime, blend and segment onset and rime
Module 5: isolate and pronounce initial sounds, isolate and pronounce medial sounds
Module 6: isolate and pronounce final sounds, isolate and pronounce sounds
Module 7: blend phonemes, segment phonemes, blend and segment phonemes
Module 8: add initial phonemes, delete initial phonemes, add final phonemes, delete final phonemes, initial and final phonemes
Module 9: substitute initial phonemes, substitute final phonemes
Module 10: substitute medial phonemes, recognize long or short vowel sounds, substitute phonemes: vowel sounds
Indicator 2D.ii
Scope and sequence clearly delineate an intentional sequence in which phonics skills are to be taught, with a clear explanation for the order of the sequence.
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2d.ii.
The materials delineate a scope and sequence with a cohesive, intentional sequence of phonics instruction and practice to build toward application of skills. The materials provide a clear research-based explanation for the order of phonics instruction. The Module at a Glance shows the phonics topics that are covered in each Module and the research base shows the rationale behind the Phonics program.
Materials clearly delineate a scope and sequence with a cohesive, intentional sequence of phonics instruction and practice to build toward application of skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Getting Started With Foundational Reading Implementation Guide, the Kindergarten Planning and Pacing Guide outlines the following instruction for each Module:
Module 3: Consonants m, t, s, b; Short a
Module 4: Consonants p, n; Word Families
Module 5: Consonants c, r, d; Word Families
Module 6: Consonants k, f, g; Short e; Word Families
Module 7: Consonants h, l, w; Short u; Word Families
Module 8: Consonants y, j, v, z, qu; Final x
Module 9: Consonant Blends; CV Syllable Pattern
Module 10: VCe: Long a, e, i, o, u
Materials have a clear research-based explanation for the order of the phonics sequence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Phonics Research Base states, “The aim of phonics instruction is to help children acquire alphabetic knowledge and use it to read and spell words (Ehri et al., 2001). Systematic phonics instruction produces significant benefits for students. The ability to read and spell words was enhanced in kindergartners who received systematic beginning phonics instruction. (NICHD, 2000).
The Research Base states, “Phonics instruction focuses on connecting each sound to one or more letters and guiding students to decode words with the target sound-spelling. Phonics instruction also serves as a memory aid to support students in their efforts to recall and apply rules and generalizations for matching sounds and letters (Rupley et al., 2009).” Complexity increases across the grades, moving students to more advanced phonics concepts, including morphology and the decoding of multisyllabic words. The clearly defined scope and sequence ensures that students engage with words that include only sound-spellings they have learned.”
Phonics instruction is based in high utility patterns and/or common phonics generalizations. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Grade K Planning and Pacing Guide states students are introduced to Phonics in Module 3: Consonants m, t, s, b, Short a; Module 4: Consonants p, n, Word Families; Module 5: Consonants c, r, d, Word Families; Module 6: Consonants k, f, g, Short e, Word Families; Module 7: Consonants h, l, w, Short u, Word Families; Module 8: Consonants y, j, v, z, qu, Final x; Module 9: Consonant Blends, CV Syllable Pattern; Module 10: VCe: Long a, e, i, o, u.
Patterns and generalizations are carefully selected to provide a meaningful and manageable number of phonics patterns and common generalizations for students to learn deeply. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Phonics Scope and Sequence states that materials provide systematic and explicit alphabet knowledge and phonics instruction, including opportunities to practice phonics skills with words in isolation and with words in connected text (sentences and longer texts). Phonics instruction focuses on connecting each sound to one or more letters and guiding students to decode words with the target sound-spelling. Complexity increases across the grades, moving students to more advanced phonics concepts, including morphology and the decoding of multisyllabic words. Guided practice provides additional support in decoding words and dictation, which solidifies mastery by having students encode words. For each lesson, there are independent practice activities plus a Foldable Decodable text. The clearly defined scope and sequence ensures that students engage with words that include only sound-spellings they have learned.
Indicator 2E
The materials include a digital platform that provides jargon-free resources and information to inform caregivers about foundational skills taught at school. The Family Engagement page provides information to build knowledge in Foundational Skills and provides activities that extend classroom learning into application-based activities parents can use with their students.
Materials contain jargon-free resources and processes to inform all stakeholders about foundational skills taught at school. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Family Engagement page includes resources that provide information about Foundational Skills. The areas include: How Print Works, Listening for Sounds, and Word Work which build caregiver knowledge and provide activities to do with students to reinforce learning. Materials include digital access links to: I Am a Book, Concepts of Print See and Sing Videos, Phonics See and Sing Videos, the Spelling Voyage Game, the Word Adventure Game, Game On!, Spin for Sounds, Spin for Syllables, Spin and Rhyme, Sound Safari, and Javi’s Make and Takeaway Words. Additionally, there are links to Printable High-Frequency Word Cards, Letter Cards, and Foldable Decodables.
Materials provide stakeholders with strategies and activities for practicing phonological awareness, phonics and word recognition, fluency, and print concepts that will support students in progress towards and achievement of grade level foundational skills standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Family Engagement page, Word Work, a student can access the digital game Spelling Voyage and play it independently. Directions are spoken, “Set sail on a Spelling Voyage! Visit each island on the map. Pop the right bubbles to unlock a second level.” Students can have directions and letters repeated.
In the Family Engagement page, Word Work, the Let’s Practice guide recommends displaying high-frequency word cards and having the student practice reading them.
In the Family Engagement page, Word Work, materials include links to Spelling Voyage (phonics), Word Adventure (high-frequency words), Phonics See and Sing Videos, and Foldable Decodables.
In the Family Engagement page, Listening for Sounds, materials include links to family games Sound Safari, Spin for Sounds, and Spin and Rhyme.
Criterion 2.2: Decodable Texts
Materials contain 32 Foldable Decodables aligned to the program’s scope and sequence. The Module at a Glance notes the phonics lessons within the module and the alignment with the Foldable Decodable. Each Foldable Decodable lesson is structured systematically for explicit instruction in decoding and fluency and includes repeated readings to secure phonics skills. The materials contain 32 Foldable Decodable Readers that utilize high-frequency and irregularly spelled words that are aligned to the scope and sequence. All Phonics lessons include a Foldable Decodable that aligns with the Phonics focus lesson and incorporates the week’s high-frequency words. Detailed lesson plans include multiple readings.
Indicator 2F
Indicator 2F.i
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2f.i.
The materials contain 32 Foldable Decodables aligned to the program’s scope and sequence. The Module at a Glance notes the phonics lessons within the module and the alignment with the Foldable Decodable. Each Foldable Decodable lesson is structured systematically for explicit instruction in decoding and fluency and includes repeated readings to secure phonics skills.
Materials include decodable texts to address securing phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 14, the Foldable Decodable Bam! Bam! is connected to the Phonics lesson focus on Consonant Bb /b/ and includes the decodable words bam, bat, and Tab.
In Module 6, Lesson 28, the Foldable Decodable A Kit for Kim is connected to the Phonics lesson focus on Consonant Kk /k/ and includes the decodable words Kit, kid, kit, and Kip.
Decodable texts contain grade-level phonics skills aligned to the program’s scope and sequence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Planning and Pacing Guide indicates the phonics skills for each lesson and alignment with the Foldable Decodable in the lessons. The first Foldable Decodable is introduced in Module 3, Lesson 11, which aligns with the first Phonics lesson.
In Module 6, Lesson 27, the grade-level phonics skill addresses the sound of /f/. The Foldable Decodable Minilesson includes the words fat, fin, and fit.
Materials include detailed lesson plans for repeated readings of decodable texts to address securing phonics skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 16, the Foldable Decodable lesson plan includes the Engage, Practice, First Read, Second Read, and Additional Read lesson structure. The plan includes a teacher model read, student echo read, partner read, independent read, and home read.
In Module 10, Lesson 47, the Foldable Decodable lesson plan includes the Engage, Practice, First Read, Second Read, and Additional Read lesson structure. The plan includes a teacher model read, student echo read, partner, read, independent read, and home read.
Indicator 2F.ii
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2f.ii.
The materials contain 32 Foldable Decodable Readers that utilize high-frequency and irregularly spelled words that are aligned to the scope and sequence. All Phonics lessons include a Foldable Decodable that aligns with the Phonics focus lesson and incorporates the week’s high-frequency words. Detailed lesson plans include multiple readings.
Materials include decodable texts that utilize high-frequency/irregularly spelled words. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 5, Lesson 21, the Foldable Decodable, Come to the City, includes the high-frequency words come, you, and a.
In Module 7. Lesson 34, the Foldable Decodable, Ants, includes the high-frequency words look, little, a, is, and the.
Decodable texts contain grade-level high-frequency/irregularly spelled words aligned to the scope and sequence. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 11, students read the Foldable Decodable, You and I, which includes the high-frequency words I and you, which align to the scope and sequence.
In Module 8, Lesson 37, students read the Foldable Decodable, Fun Jobs, which includes the high-frequency/irregularly spelled words what, funny, the, have, and do, and is, which align to the scope and sequence.
Materials include detailed lesson plans for repeated readings of decodable texts to address securing reading high-frequency words/irregularly spelled words in context. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4. Lesson 17, the lesson plan includes the Engage, Practice, First Read, Second Read, and Additional read routine. During the First Read of the Foldable Decodable, The Napkin, the teacher models fluent reading as students follow along with their fingers and echo read. Students engage in word analysis of the phonics pattern and highlight the underline high-frequency words. During the Second Read, students read the text aloud one page at a time with a partner, and the teacher listens and provides corrective feedback regarding their fluency and decoding. During Additional Reads, students read the Foldable Decodable orally and independently to further develop automaticity. Students then take the book home to practice.
In Module 9, Lesson 43, the lesson plan includes the Engage, Practice, First Read, Second Read, and Additional read routine. During the First Read of the Foldable Decodable, What Cats Can Do, the teacher models fluent reading as students follow along with their fingers and echo read. Students engage in word analysis of the phonics pattern and highlight or underline high-frequency words. During the Second Read, students read the text aloud one page at a time with a partner, and the teacher listens and provides corrective feedback regarding their fluency and decoding. During Additional Reads, students read the Foldable Decodable orally and independently to further develop automaticity. Students then take the book home to practice.
Criterion 2.3: Assessment and Differentiation
Materials regularly and systematically provide a variety of assessment opportunities for students to demonstrate progress toward mastery of print concepts. Teachers assess print concepts, letter identification, and letter formation formatively through exit tickets, worktext pages, weekly reviews, and weekly assessments provided in the materials. Materials contain a summative assessment for every module, formative daily assessments for phonological awareness in the form of Exit Tickets, and cumulative reviews. Materials include weekly Module Assessments and daily checks for understanding, instruct teachers in scoring assessment results, and provide teachers with instructional next steps to help students progress toward mastery in phonics. Materials include assessments for high-frequency words in each module through Exit Tickets and Module Assessments. The assessment materials provide teachers with information concerning students’ level of understanding of word recognition and word analysis, and the materials give some general instructional suggestions for assessment-based steps to help students to progress toward mastery in word recognition and word analysis. Materials include an Item Analysis Chart that provides alignment documentation for each module and references the Strand, Skill, and Item Numbers. The Common Core State Standards for each Lesson, summative Module Assessments, and formative assessment Exit tickets are noted in the Standards box on the digital platform. Materials provide support for English Language Learners and Multilingual students. The Articulation Support Guide and Articulation Videos can be used for teaching sound articulation or for reteaching students who need additional support. Multilingual Learner Support statements are included within the Mini Lessons. Materials include two pathways called Sequential Pathway and Differentiated Pathway. The Sequential Pathway provides daily instruction in foundational skills that also includes a More section that provides students with opportunities for additional practice of the focus skills being taught. The More section also includes opportunities for Differentiation with an Extra Support Option. Materials provide opportunities for advanced students to investigate grade-level foundational skills at a greater depth. Most phonics lessons have suggestions for advanced students to complete more rigorous assignments.
Indicator 2G
Indicator 2G.i
Materials regularly and systematically offer assessment opportunities that measure student progress through mastery of print concepts (K-1), letter recognition (K only), and printing letters (as indicated by the program scope and sequence) (K-1).
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2g.i. (K-1)
The materials regularly and systematically provide a variety of assessment opportunities for students to demonstrate progress toward mastery of print concepts. Teachers assess print concepts, letter identification, and letter formation formatively through exit tickets, worktext pages, weekly reviews, and weekly assessments provided in the materials. The digital Data Tracker tracks assignments, tasks, teacher observational data notations and provides cumulative data concerning students’ skills/levels over the course of the year.
Materials regularly and systematically provide a variety of assessment opportunities over the course of the year to demonstrate students’ progress toward mastery and independence of print concepts, letter recognition, and letter formation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 2, Lesson 10, the assessment includes Letter Recognition Aa, Bb, Ee, Ff, Gg, Hh, Dd, Qq, Rr, Vv Ww, Xx, Zz. The digital tracker provides the teacher with a means to track students’ progress toward mastery and independence of Letter Recognition.
In Module 5, Lesson 25, the assessment includes Dictation. Teacher guidance includes, “Have the students write the following words so you can assess their Letter Formations and encoding of sound-spellings.” The digital tracker provides the teacher with a means to track students’ progress toward mastery and independence of Letter Formation.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, the teacher distributes copies of the little book I Am a Book and observes as students demonstrate understanding that words are separated by spaces in print. Students identify words and the spaces between words. The Exit Ticket formatively assesses the student’s ability to identify words. The digital tracker provides the teacher with a means to track students’ progress toward mastery and independence in Print Concepts.
Assessment materials provide teachers and students with information concerning students’ current skills/level of understanding of print concepts, letter recognition, and letter formation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 5, the assessment provides information on students’ current skills and level of understanding in Letter Recognition of Cc, Oo, Ss, Ll, Mm, Pp, Ii, Jj, Kk, Nn, Tt, Uu, Yy. The digital tracker provides the teacher a means to track student levels of understanding of Letter Recognition.
In Module 7, Lesson 35, the Review/Assess Phonics Lesson includes Dictation. Teacher guidance includes, “Have the students write the following words and sentences so you can assess their Letter Formations and encoding of sound-spellings.” The digital tracker provides the teacher with a means to track students’ progress toward mastery and independence of Letter Formation.
In Module 9, Lesson 41, the teacher distributes copies of the little book I Am a Book. The teacher observes as students track print from left to right, top to bottom, and page by page, with return sweep. The Exit Ticket formatively assesses the student’s ability to track print. The digital tracker provides the teacher with a means to track students’ progress toward mastery and independence in Print Concepts.
Materials support teachers with instructional suggestions for assessment-based steps to help students to progress toward mastery in print concepts, letter recognition, and letter formation. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 1, Lesson 5, the Item Analysis Chart provides corrective feedback and Instructional Next Steps suggestions. If a student is unable to name more than half of the letters in Letter recognition, next steps include reviewing the missed letters by using Letter Cards and directing the student to point to, trace, and say the letter names after the teacher.
In Module 2, Lesson 10, the Item Analysis Chart provides corrective feedback and Instructional Next Steps suggestions. If a student is unable to name more than half of the letters, guidance directs the teacher to give the student Letter Cards for the missed letters and work one-on-one with the child to trace each letter and say the letter name.
In Module 9, Lesson 41, the materials state that if students struggle to track print during the Practice activity, the teacher should review with cues in I Am a Book, pointing out green words to begin, direction arrows, and red words to stop.
Indicator 2G.ii
Materials regularly and systematically offer assessment opportunities that measure student progress of phonological awareness (as indicated by the program scope and sequence). (K-1)
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2g.ii.
The materials contain a summative assessment for every module, formative daily assessments for phonological awareness in the form of Exit Tickets, and cumulative reviews. The digital tracker system supports all areas of the curriculum. Teachers assign assessments and activities to students, and results can be uploaded into the student and class recording portal. Each Module assessment contains an Item Analysis Chart with “If/Then” statements for corrective feedback that teachers can use to reteach specific phonological awareness skills.
Materials regularly and systematically provide a variety of assessment opportunities over the course of the year to demonstrate students’ progress toward mastery and independence in phonological awareness. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Getting Started with Foundational Reading, Module Assessment, Grade K Item Analysis Chart, the fifth lesson in each module includes an assessment. Assessments are as follows: Module 1 Assessment: Recognizing and Producing Rhyming Words, Identifying and Using Alliteration; Module 2 Assessment: Count and Identify Words in a Sentence, Count and Pronounce Syllables in Words; Module 3 Assessment: Blend, Segment, Delete, Manipulate Syllables in Words; Module 4: Blend and Segment Onset and Rime; Module 5: Isolate and Pronounce Initial and Medial Sounds, Module 6: Isolate and Pronounce Initial, MediaFinall Sounds; Module 7: Blend and Segment Phonemes; Module 8: Add/Delete Initial and Final Phonemes; Module 9: Substitute Initial/Final Phonemes; Module 10: Substitute Medial Phonemes, Distinguish Long and Short Vowel Sounds.
In Module 1, Lesson 5, materials include an assessment for students to Recognize and Produce Rhyming Words, Identify and Use Alliteration.
In Module 5, Lesson 22, during the phonological awareness Exit Ticket, students say the picture name (bag) and draw a picture of a word that begins with the same sound. This assessment addresses isolating and pronouncing initial sounds.
In Module 9, Lesson 45, materials include an assessment for students to Count Syllables in Words and Pronounce Syllables in Words.
Assessment materials provide teachers and students with information concerning students’ current skills/level of understanding of phonological awareness. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Digital Data tracker tracks assessments, assignments, and tasks and provides cumulative data over the course of the year. The assessments and assignments can be viewed for the entire class or for a specific student. The Student View provides scores and levels, and teachers may add narrative notes in the comments area. The Data tab populates from the assignment tab and provides assignment results and mastery by the standard.
In Module 3, Lesson 15, the assessment includes a What Do I Do With This Information guide. Assessment guidance states, “Total the items that each student got correct. A score of 80% (i.e., 13 out of 16) is usually considered mastery. If you notice that a group of students had errors in a certain section, meet with them to reteach the skill. If there is a particular skill that seem[ed] difficult for many students, reteach the skill to the class.”
Materials support teachers with instructional suggestions for assessment-based steps to help students to progress toward mastery in phonological awareness. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 2, Lesson 10, the assessment provides the teacher with instructional suggestions. Assessment guidance states, “If… a student gets two or fewer items correct in Phonological Awareness, then… go back to the original instruction in Lessons 6–9 and guide the student to identify and count words and syllables using counters and Printable Elkonin boxes.”
In Module 6, the assessment provides the teacher with instructional suggestions. Assessment guidance states, “If …a student gets one or more items incorrect in Phonological Awareness, then… go back to the original instruction in Lessons 26–29 and practice with the student individually using the Quick List words, focusing on initial phonemes only, and adding medial, and then final phonemes once the child develops mastery.”
Indicator 2G.iii
Materials regularly and systematically offer assessment opportunities that measure student progress of phonics in- and out-of-context (as indicated by the program scope and sequence). (K-2)
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2g.iii.
Materials include weekly Module Assessments and daily checks for understanding. The materials instruct teachers in scoring assessment results and provide teachers with instructional next steps to help students progress toward mastery in phonics. The Getting Started With Foundational Reading Module Assessment Item Analysis Chart lists the phonics strand skills in the order in which they are assessed. A Cumulative Review Document provides a detailed overview of the assessment of previously taught skills.
Materials provide resources and tools to collect ongoing data about students’ progress in phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Digital Data tracker tracks assessments, assignments, and tasks and provides cumulative data over the course of the year. The assessments and assignments can be viewed for the entire class or for a specific student. The Student View provides scores and levels, and teachers may add narrative notes in the comments area. The Data tab populates from the assignment tab and provides assignment results and mastery by the standard.
Materials offer assessment opportunities to determine students’ progress in phonics that are implemented systematically. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Grade K Item Analysis Chart, beginning with Module 3, the fifth lesson in each module includes a phonics assessment included. Assessments are as follows: Module 3 Assessment: Consonants Mm /m/, Tt /t/, Ss /s/, Bb /b/, Vowel Aa /a/; Module 4: Consonants Pp /p/, Nn /n/, Vowel Ii /i/, Word Families -at, -an, -it, -in; Module 5: Consonants Cc /k/, Rr /r/, Dd /d/, Vowel Oo /o/, Word Families -op, -ip, -ot; Module 6: Consonants Kk /k/, Ff /f/, Gg /g/, Vowel Ee /e/, Word Families -en, -et; Module 7: Consonants Hh /h/, Ll /l/, Ww /w/, Vowel Uu /u/, Word Families -ug, -ig, -og; Module 8: Consonants Yy /y/, Jj /j/, Vv /v/, Zz /z/, Qu, qu /kw/, Final Xx /x/; Module 9: Initial Consonant Blends, Final Consonant Blends, Similarly Spelled Words, CV Syllable Pattern; Module 10: VCe for Long a, i, o, u, e.
Multiple assessment opportunities are provided regularly for students to demonstrate progress toward mastery and independence with phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 4, Lesson 17, students complete a phonics lesson on Consonant Nn /n/, Vowel Ii /i/, and complete Exit Ticket 17. Students say the picture name for the words nose, igloo, nut, and nurse and choose the correct letter that spells the beginning sound in each picture name. Finally, students color the letter that they choose. The data provides information about students’ progress toward mastery and independence in phonics.
In Module 5, Lesson 25, students complete a lesson Review and Assessment in Phonics on Consonants c, r, d; Short o; and Word Families. In the More, Practice section of the lesson, students complete Worktext page 91 and circle the letter that spells the sound at the beginning of each picture name (cow, ring, olive, desk, cake, dad, octopus, red).
In Module 7, Lesson 35, student data is collected from the Review and Assessment on Phonics and HIgh-Frequency Words. Students read five sentences, one at a time. The words printed in bold represent a targeted phonics skill for the lesson. The targeted skills are Consonants Hh /h/, Ll /l/, Ww /w/; Short Vowel Uu /u/; and Word Families -ug, -ig, -og.
Assessment materials provide teachers and students with information about students’ current skills/level of understanding of phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Digital Data tracker tracks assignments or tasks and provides teachers and students cumulative data over the course of the year. The assignments can be viewed for the entire class or for a specific student. The Student View provides scores and levels, and the teacher comments area is available for entering narrative notes. The Data tab populates from the assignment tab and provides assignment results and mastery by standard data. The data provides information about students’ current skills/level of understanding in phonics.
In Module 3, Lesson 15, during the assessment, students read words independently to assess mastery of reading the sounds /m/, /t/, /s/, /b/, or /a/. The words are bat, tam, sat, tab, mat, and Sam. The teacher puts a check mark if the word is read correctly. The teacher may add comments in the data tracker concerning individual student progress. The data provides information about students’ current skills/level of understanding in phonics.
In Module 9, Lesson 41, the teacher records student progress data from the phonics Exit Ticket that addresses initial consonant blends.
Materials genuinely measure students’ progress to support teachers with instructional adjustments to help students make progress toward mastery in phonics. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 12, materials state, “If a student has difficulty connecting the sound /t/ to letters T and t, then provide students with Letter Cards for T and t. Point to the cards as you say /t/. The sound /t/ is spelled t. Have students trace T and t on the cards as they repeat words that begin with /t/ spelled t: top, tan, tuck, ten.”
In Module 4, Lesson 20, materials state, “If a student decodes the wrong sounds in the -at, -an, -in, -it word families, then focus on one sound-spelling or word family at a time to ensure understanding.”
In Module 8, Lesson 38, materials state, “If a student decodes the wrong sounds in the one-syllable words using letter-sound correspondences with consonants Vv /v/, Zz /z/ then provide the student with Letter Card v. Together, say: v spells the sound /v/as the students traces the letter. Then display van, vet, and vat and have the student say with you: v spells /v/ in van, V_A_N, van. Repeat for vet and vat and continent the routine for letter z and zip, zap, zag.”
Indicator 2G.iv
Materials regularly and systematically offer assessment opportunities that measure student progress of word recognition and analysis (as indicated by the program scope and sequence). (K-2)
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2g.iv.
The materials include assessments for high-frequency words in each module through Exit Tickets and Module Assessments. The assessment materials provide teachers with information concerning students’ level of understanding of word recognition and word analysis, and the materials give some general instructional suggestions for assessment-based steps to help students to progress toward mastery in word recognition and word analysis.
Materials regularly and systematically provide a variety of assessment opportunities over the course of the year to demonstrate students’ progress toward mastery and independence of word recognition (high-frequency words or irregularly spelled words) and analysis. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3 Assessment, Reading High-Frequency Words, students are assessed on their ability to read the words I, a, and, the, you, and was. The teacher says, “Start at the first word, number one, and read each word to me.” The teacher puts a check on the line of the recording sheet if the student reads the word correctly. There are a total of six points on this portion of the assessment.
In Module 5, Lesson 22, during the Exit Ticket, students demonstrate knowledge of the high-frequency word ran by writing the word, completing a sentence with the word, then filling in missing letters to write the word.
In Module 9, Lesson 45, during the Module assessment, students read six sentences to the teacher. The italicized words in the sentences are the high-frequency words taught in the module. Students read each sentence, and the teacher puts a slash through any word read incorrectly. The module high-frequency words in the sentences are three, he, be, go, me, this, so, must, there, and where. Previously-learned high-frequency words are said, to, is, the, I, see, a, and on.
Assessment materials provide teachers and students with information concerning students’ current skills/level of understanding of word recognition and word analysis. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Data Tracker, Digital Savvas Realize page, the teacher can record and view class assignment results by assignment and mastery by standard. Teachers can assign prompts to students.
In Module 8 Assessment, Lesson 40, students are assessed on high-frequency words what, do, have, yellow, she, funny. There are eight points possible for phonics, six points possible for high-frequency words. The bottom of the teacher assessment page includes a caption entitled “What do I do with this information?” The caption includes the following guidance, “Total the items that each child got correct. A score of 80% (i.e., 14 out of 18) is usually considered mastery. If you notice that a group of students had errors on a certain part or skill, meet with them to reteach the skill. If a particular skill seem[s] difficult for many students, reteach the skill to the class.”
Materials support teachers with instructional suggestions for assessment-based steps to help students to progress toward mastery in word recognition and word analysis. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Teacher Guide, Module 4 Assessment, students are assessed on high-frequency words is, are, of, for, said, and to. There are six points possible for high-frequency words. The bottom of the teacher assessment page includes a caption entitled “What do I do with this information?” The caption includes the following guidance, “Total the items that each child got correct. A score of 80% (i.e. 11 out of 14) is usually considered mastery. If you notice that a group of students had errors on a certain part or skill, meet with them to reteach the skill. If a particular skill seem[s] difficult for many students, reteach the skill to the class.”
In Module, 5, Lesson 25, the Corrective Feedback assessment guidance includes, “If… a student doesn’t get all of the High-Frequency Words questions correct, then… work with the student individually with flashcards. Focus on a couple of decodable words at a time to develop confidence and mastery before adding more words, including nondecodable words. Connect with the student’s caregiver to increase practice at home, too.”
Indicator 2H
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2h.
The materials include an Item Analysis Chart that provides alignment documentation for each module and references the Strand, Skill, and Item Numbers. The Common Core State Standards for each Lesson, summative Module Assessments, and formative assessment Exit tickets are noted in the Standards box on the digital platform. Using the Digital Data Tracker, teachers can sort class assignments by standard.
Materials include denotations of the standards being assessed in the formative assessments. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 12, the Phonics assessment indicates the standard is to “demonstrate knowledge of one-to-one letter-sound correspondences.” The Exit Ticket asks students to “write t if the picture name begins with the sound for t.” The pictures include rattle, tiger, towel. The materials list standard RF.K.3a next to all of the learning targets for phonics in the digital guide.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, the Phonological Awareness assessment denotes the standard RF.K.2d “isolate and pronounce final phonemes.” The Exit Ticket asks students to circle yes/no “if the two picture names end with the same sound.”
Materials include denotations of standards being assessed in the summative assessments. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Modules 1–10, the Kindergarten Item Analysis Chart provides the Common Core State Standards including the Strand, Skill, and Item Numbers, for each summative assessment in the Module Assessment. For example: Module 1 Assessment, Recognize Rhyming Words, Item 1, page 23, RF.K.2a
In Module 9, Lesson 45, the Item Analysis Chart includes strands and skills for each assessment item. For this assessment, the Item Analysis Chart lists the following standards being addressed in this lesson: Phonemic Awareness—RF.K.2e, Phonics—RF.K.3d, RF.K.3b, RF.K.3, and High-Frequency Words—RF.K.3c.
Alignment documentation is provided for all tasks, questions, and assessment items. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Modules 1–10, the digital platform provides a drop-down menu of the Kindergarten standards. After clicking on the standard, the teacher can find a link to an assessment.
In Module 1–10, the Item Analysis Chart indicates the standards being assessed in each module assessment and the online platform includes strands and skills for each assessment item.
Alignment documentation contains specific standards correlated to specific lessons. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Modules 1–10, the Item Analysis Chart correlates with lessons and each lesson on the platform includes the Standards pop-out box.
The online access Standards feature allows teachers to search the materials via grade level and standard to find tasks, lessons, materials, and assessments for a specific standard.
Indicator 2I
Differentiation for Instruction: Materials provide teachers with strategies for meeting the needs of a range of learners so the content is accessible to all learners and supports them in meeting or exceeding grade-level standards.
Indicator 2I.i
Materials regularly provide all students, including those who read, write, speak, or listen in a language other than English with extensive opportunities for reteaching to meet or exceed grade-level standards.
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2i.i.
The materials provide support for English Language Learners and Multilingual students. The Articulation Support Guide and Articulation Videos can be used for teaching sound articulation or for reteaching students who need additional support. Multilingual Learner Support statements are included within the Mini Lessons. All information about strategies for ELL students or Multilingual Learners are located at the point of use in Phonics lessons and in the the Support for Multilingual Students guide.
Materials provide support for English Language Learner (ELL) students. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Support for Multilingual Learners Guide provides resources for teachers including English Language Proficiency Level and guidance for modifying instruction based on the language proficiency level of the learner. The Introduction to LInguistics provides information about learning languages. The Common First Languages guide provides details about learning English based on the students' home language. The Linguistic Contrastive Analysis Chart provides a quick reference for comparing English sounds to those of other languages.
In Module 3, Lesson 11, the Multilingual Learner Support teacher guidance states, “Speakers of other languages, such as Spanish, do not use the word name as a synonym for the title of a book. Point out that English uses both words, but that the vocabulary word title (Spanish cognate título) is the better word.”
In Module 9, Lesson 43, the Multilingual Learner Support teacher guidance states, “For many speakers of other languages, the sound /th/ is unfamiliar.” The teacher demonstrates the sound /th/, noting that the tongue sticks out between the teeth. Students say the sound /th/ several times. The teacher displays the word three and has students read it with them.
In Module 10, Lesson 49, as a multilingual learner support, the teacher displays the word pairs cute/tune and mule/flute, reads the words aloud, and has students repeat the word pairs. The teacher emphasizes the two different sounds of long u. The teacher clarifies meanings, as needed, with images, gestures, or short definitions. The teacher asks questions or gives directions to give students practice with meaning.
General statements about ELL students or strategies are noted at the beginning of a unit or at one place in the Teacher Edition are then implemented by the materials throughout the lessons. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Guide, Front Matter, the Differentiated Instruction guidance states, “Lessons include differentiated support that takes into account the diverse needs of your students. You will have the tools you need to provide tailored instruction for Multilingual Learner Support…”
In the Teacher Guide, Foundational Reading Overview, the Program Overview states, “Suggestions, including support for multilingual learners, are provided at point of use.”
All information about strategies for ELL students or Multilingual Learners are noted at the point of use in the lesson feed in the Differentiated Instruction portion of the Phonics and Letter Recognition Minilessons.
Indicator 2I.ii
Materials regularly provide all students, including those who read, write, speak, or listen below grade-level with extensive opportunities for reteaching to meet or exceed grade-level standards.
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2i.ii.
The materials include two pathways called Sequential Pathway and Differentiated Pathway. The Sequential Pathway provides daily instruction in foundational skills that also includes a More section that provides students with opportunities for additional practice of the focus skills being taught. The More section also includes opportunities for Differentiation with an Extra Support Option. The teacher can use information from the daily Exit TIcket to guide reteaching opportunities in small group instruction or individual instruction. The Differentiated Pathway is designed to enhance core instruction and includes targeted reteaching opportunities for students who need additional practice on a skill, which can be used for one-on-one reteaching or small group instruction.
Materials provide opportunities for small group reteaching. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher Guide, Front Matter, the Lesson Pacing section provides a chart that suggests that the daily lesson schedule for the Sequential Pathway should include the Minilesson, More activity (differentiated as needed), and Assess activity. The time allotted for More activities, including options for Differentiated Instruction, which could be used for small group instruction, ranges from 5-15 minutes for each lesson strand.
In Module 1, Lesson 4, during Extra Support, the teacher displays the Sound-Spelling Cards and reviews the names of the letters. Then the teacher says the name of the pictures on the card, and students repeat the word and letter as the teacher points to them. Example: Tomato, t, tomato, t.
In Module 9, Lesson 41, during Extra Support, the teacher displays the letter cards c, l, a, and p, touches each letter, says each sound, blends each sound, and asks students to blend the sounds together and independently.
Materials provide guidance to teachers for scaffolding and adapting lessons and activities to support students who read, write, speak, or listen below grade level in extensive opportunities to learn foundational skills at the grade-level standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 11, the Extra Support teacher guidance states that the teacher should continue the Blend and Read routine in the lesson with four additional words for students who need additional support.
In Module 6, Lesson 26, the Extra Support guidance directs the teacher to display and say each word while emphasizing the sound /k/. Students step forward if the word starts with the letter k and step back if it starts with a different letter. Words used in the activity are kid, got, kit, lid, gab, and bat.
In Module 7, Lesson 33, the Extra Support guidance directs the teacher to display the word hug. The teacher points to each letter as they say the sound and read the word. The teacher asks students which letter spells the sound /u/. The teacher repeats the process using the words gum, cut, up, bud, and tug.
Indicator 2I.iii
Materials regularly provide extensions and/or more advanced opportunities for students who read, write, speak, or listen above grade-level.
The materials reviewed for Kindergarten meet the criteria for 2i.iii.
The materials provide opportunities for advanced students to investigate grade-level foundational skills at a greater depth. Most phonics lessons have suggestions for advanced students to complete more rigorous assignments. There are no instances of advanced students simply doing more assignments than their classmates in the Extra Support group.
Materials provide multiple opportunities for advanced students to investigate grade-level foundational skills at a greater depth. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In the Teacher’s Guide, Differentiated Instruction, 18 Extend activities are provided in Phonics, two Extend activities for Phonological Awareness, and eight activities for Letter Recognition.
In Module 2, Lesson 6, during Extend, students write letters on blank sticky notes (A, a, B, b, E, e). Then students locate the letters on environmental print in the classroom and put their sticky notes on the letters that match.
In Module 8, Lesson 38, during Extend, the teacher asks students to name a color that begins with y (yellow). Students draw a picture of a word they know that begins with /y/ and label it.
There are no instances of advanced students simply doing more assignments than their classmates. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
In Module 3, Lesson 13, during Extend, the teacher writes An ant can ___ on the board. Students read the sentence and identify the sound /a/ in each word. Students then complete the sentence with a word or picture. In the Extra Support activity, students stand up when they hear the beginning sound /s/ as the teacher points to words and says them aloud. The words used in the activity are sack, pan, sap, pass, sad, and sag.
In Module 4, Lesson 17, during Extend, students use their knowledge of n and i to read tongue twisters such as Nurse Ned is not napping. In the Extra Support activity, students stand when they hear /n/ as the teacher reads pairs of words with /n/. Words used in the activity are nip/pat, nod/cod, pin/pit, pot/not, and in/it.
Criterion 2.4: Effective Technology Use and Visual Design
Materials are web-based, compatible with multiple internet browsers, platform-neutral, and follow a universal programming style. The digital materials enhance student learning through teacher resources, printable sound-spelling cards, Foldable Decodable and Passages, Articulation Videos, See and Sing Videos, and Interactive activities. The digital materials include exact replicas of the pages in the print Student Worktext and readers. Digital Decodable Texts include a phonics, high frequency word, and making meaning quiz. The digital materials include opportunities for teachers to personalize learning for all students, using adaptive or other technological innovations. Using the Practice Generator, teachers are able to construct differentiated learning experiences for students. Teachers can choose which assessments, assignments, or activities to assign to each student in order to provide personalized practice of previously completed and optional activities available in the Sequential or Differentiated Pathway. The materials contain differentiation and extension opportunities for students, which allows for customization as needed for local context. The materials contain a Sequential Pathway designed for whole group instruction and a Differentiated Pathway designed to support small group and individual instruction, which allows for customization of the materials. The visual design of both the print and digital materials is not distracting or chaotic, and the materials support students in engaging thoughtfully with the material.
Indicator 2J
The materials are web-based and compatible with multiple internet browsers. The digital materials are platform-neutral and follow a universal programming style.
Examples of evidence include, but are not limited to, the following:
Devices tested: HP desktop, HP Chromebook, Samsung Galaxy S9+ phone, Apple iPhone, Apple iPad, Apple MacBook
Browsers tested: Google Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge
Both the teacher and the student editions can be accessed on Windows.
Student/Class Recording sheets are available digitally; teachers can print the sheets by exporting the CSV files to Excel or another spreadsheet program.
Digital materials include Teacher Guides, Program Supports, Assessments, Data Tracking, Digital Activities such as spinners, poem/chant videos, Articulation Videos, and Interactive Practice.
Indicator 2K
The digital materials enhance student learning through teacher resources, printable sound-spelling cards, Foldable Decodable and Passages, Articulation Videos, See and Sing Videos, Interactive activities such as Spelling Voyage, Spin and Rhyme, Sound Safari, Jovi’s Make and Takeaway Words, Interactive Practice, Interactive Play, and other Games. The digital materials include exact replicas of the pages in the print Student Worktext and readers. Digital Decodable Texts include a phonics, high frequency word, and making meaning quiz.
Examples of evidence include, but are not limited to, the following:
The following materials are available on the digital platform:
Articulation Videos
Printable Materials (Foldable Decodable, Letter Cards, High-Frequency Word Cards, Student Worktext
Practice Generator
Interactive Practice
Digital Books
Presentations
Concepts of Print Digital Book
Getting Started with Foundational Reading
Indicator 2L
The digital materials include opportunities for teachers to personalize learning for all students, using adaptive or other technological innovations. Using the Practice Generator, teachers are able to construct differentiated learning experiences for students. Teachers can choose which assessments, assignments, or activities to assign to each student in order to provide personalized practice of previously completed and optional activities available in the Sequential or Differentiated Pathway.
Examples of evidence include, but are not limited to, the following:
Digital templates are available for teachers to create printables for activities such as Crossword Puzzle, Draw and Write, Fill-in-the-Blank, Flashcards, Handwriting, Matching, Multiple Choice, Open Response, Reading Passage, and Word Search.
Activities available for assignment include Worktext, games, videos, and word cards. The Digital Data tracker allows teachers to assign activities for the entire classroom or individual students.
Teachers may assign multiple digital activities such as Student Worktexts, Interactive Practice, See and Sing Videos, Articulation Videos, Learning Games, and Spelling Voyage to students’ digital classroom accounts.
Indicator 2M
The materials contain differentiation and extension opportunities for students, which allows for customization as needed for local context. The materials contain a Sequential Pathway designed for whole group instruction and a Differentiated Pathway designed to support small group and individual instruction, which allows for customization of the materials. The materials are offered in digital and/or digital and print blended format. The Digital Data Tracker allows teachers to assign and display class or individual assignment and assessment information. The practice generator allows teachers to customize templates for local use.
Examples of evidence include, but are not limited to, the following:
Teachers can use digital materials to view and assign the whole class, small group, or individualized assignments and assessments using resources provided in the Sequential and Differentiated Pathways. The Extend and Extra Support sections of lessons allow teachers to customize learning experiences for their students.
Teachers can customize instruction by using the Practice Generator to create handwriting worksheets, flash cards, reading passages, and insert titles, instructions, and instruction captions.
Indicator 2N
The visual design of both the print and digital materials is not distracting or chaotic, and the materials support students in engaging thoughtfully with the material.
Examples of evidence include, but are not limited to, the following:
The Build-a-Word activity has a purposeful design that engages in word building using letter tiles and Elkonin boxes so that students are able to develop strong phonological awareness skills
The Student Worktext includes Foldable Decodable texts with simple illustrations and short sentences with appropriate spacing between lines to support student engagement and learning. Digital text is displayed across two pages like a real book.
The Minilesson sections are clearly titled in bold text and the Concept and Strand is written at the top of each page.
The Sound-Spelling Cards have one image and are not chaotic and the Activities and Games contain colorful graphics that are not chaotic or distracting.