The Best Common Core ELA Reading Materials | Using the Revised Publishers’
Criteria for the Common
Core State
Standards in English Language Arts and Literacy. | CCSS ELA Grades 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5
Selecting the Best Grade Level (1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) English Language Arts Curriculum to Prepare Students for The New Common Core English Language Arts and Literacy Standards.
A few question that I ask when evaluating a Reading Program!
Number 1: Scott Foresman: Reading Street Common Core Edition
My cursory selection for the best overall K-6 Common Core ELA curriculum is, "Scott Foresman: Reading Street ( Common Core Edition 2012 )". I reviewed many Common Core ELA Curriculum Editions and all of them met the criteria but one stood out above the rest. Scott Foresman: Reading Street is not the perfect set of boxed curriculum yet it is vastly better than the old vocabulary controlled basal readers of the past. I will write a complete review of the Reading Street curriculum when I have completed a more extensive tier 2 and 3 academic vocabulary analyses, spiral curriculum appraisal, examined the text differentiation quality, content of inspirational and motivational literature, and my overall opinions and conclusion. I will examine the frequency and use of higher order thinking questions and the breakdown of Blooms level questions stems as they relate to the text. I will evaluate correlations between the released PARCC ELA assessments and the Reading Street curriculum.
Most students need extra extended response questions practice to prepare for the PARCC assessments.
Scott Foresman: Reading Street: Meeting the Common Core ELA Curriculum Criteria
Selecting the Best Grade Level (1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) English Language Arts Curriculum to Prepare Students for The New Common Core English Language Arts and Literacy Standards.
A few question that I ask when evaluating a Reading Program!
- Do they measure and meet the highest levels of Blooms Taxonomy and Webb's DOK?
- Is the curriculum spiral in design, meaning concepts are introduced and repeated to maximize learning and memory?
- Are lesson plans designed to maximize declarative knowledge and retention of key ELA concepts?
- Are the students provided with higher order thinking question stems to create a erudite dialogue during reading instruction.
- Are the goals explicit and easily known to students and teachers before the lesson?
- What is the quantity of tier 2 and tier 3 vocabulary concepts in the curriculum.
- Are kids inspired and excited to read the literature provide in the readers.
- Can a "harried" teacher with an oversize class really use the materials?
- Are lessons designed to be taught in a cooperative learning structure?
Number 1: Scott Foresman: Reading Street Common Core Edition
Most students need extra extended response questions practice to prepare for the PARCC assessments.
Highlights of Scott Foresman: Reading Street Common Core Edition
The Envision It reference materials throughout the books are one reason I picked Scott Foresman: Reading Street ( Common Core Edition 2013 ). The Envision It books that are part of all the Readers as a supplemental reference at the front and back of each text book. The "Envision Books" are styled as a graphic comic that teachers the most difficult tier 3 academic ELA concepts.
The Envision It reference materials throughout the books are one reason I picked Scott Foresman: Reading Street ( Common Core Edition 2013 ). The Envision It books that are part of all the Readers as a supplemental reference at the front and back of each text book. The "Envision Books" are styled as a graphic comic that teachers the most difficult tier 3 academic ELA concepts.
- Integrated Cooperative Learning Structures
- Collection of Fluency Drills
- Giant collection of online and digital content
- Materials in English and Spanish
- Tier 3 Vocabulary Covered
- Teacher Scalable
- Online Tutorials of all Content and Comprehensive Teacher Training
- Lexile Reading Levels on All Reading Passages
- Great Collection of Literature
- Quality ELA Extensions
- Quality Test Prep
- Revised Blooms and Webb's Aligned Questions
- Pearson is Writing the Content for PARCC and Smarter Balanced
Areas that Need Improvement
- Overall Print and Graphics Quality
- Word Work Materials and Drills Need Work
- No Reading or Literacy Board Games
Scott Foresman: Reading Street: Meeting the Common Core ELA Curriculum Criteria
- Strongly disagree
- Disagree
- Agree
- Strongly agree
I. Key Criteria for
Text Selection My Rating 3 plus
II. Key Criteria for
Questions and Tasks My Rating 3
III. Key Criteria for
Academic Vocabulary My Rating 3 plus
Criteria Used For Evaluation
Revised Publishers’
Criteria for the Common
Core State
Standards in English Language Arts and Literacy, Grades 3–12
David Coleman • Susan Pimentel
INTRODUCTION
Developed by two of the lead authors of the Common Core
State Standards and revised through conversations with teachers, researchers,
and other stakeholders, these criteria are designed to guide publishers and
curriculum developers as they work to ensure alignment with the standards in
English language arts (ELA) and literacy for history/social studies, science,
and technical subjects. The standards are the product of a state-led effort —
coordinated by the National Governors Association Center for Best Practices and
the Council of Chief State School Officers — and were developed in
collaboration with teachers, school administrators, and experts to provide a
clear and consistent framework to prepare students for college and the
workforce.
The criteria articulated below concentrate on the most
significant elements of the Common Core State Standards and lay out their
implications for aligning materials with the standards. These guidelines are
not meant to dictate classroom practice but rather to help ensure that teachers
receive effective tools. They are intended to guide teachers, curriculum
developers, and publishers to be purposeful and strategic in both what to
include and what to exclude in instructional materials. By underscoring what
matters most in the standards, the criteria illustrate what shifts must take
place in the next generation of curricula, including paring away elements that
distract or are at odds with the Common Core State Standards.
At the heart of these criteria are instructions for shifting
the focus of literacy instruction to center on careful examination of the text
itself. In aligned materials, work in reading and writing (as well as speaking
and listening) must center on the text under consideration. The standards focus
on students reading closely to draw evidence and knowledge from the text and
require students to read texts of adequate range and complexity. The criteria
outlined below therefore revolve around the texts that students read and the
kinds of questions students should address as they write and speak about them.
The standards and these criteria sharpen the focus on the
close connection between comprehension of text and acquisition of knowledge.
While the link between comprehension and knowledge in reading science and history
texts is clear, the same principle applies to all reading. The criteria make
plain that developing students’ prowess at drawing knowledge from the text
itself is the point of reading; reading well means gaining the maximum insight
or knowledge possible from each source. Student knowledge drawn from the text
is demonstrated when the student uses evidence from the text to support a claim
about the text. Hence evidence and knowledge link directly to the text.
DOCUMENT ORGANIZATION
This document has two parts: The first articulates criteria
for ELA materials in grades 3–12 and the second for history/social studies,
science, and technical materials in grades 6–12. Each part contains sections
discussing the following key criteria:
I. Key Criteria for
Text Selection
II. Key Criteria for
Questions and Tasks
III. Key Criteria for
Academic Vocabulary
IV. Key Criteria for Writing to Sources and Research Omitted
The criteria for ELA materials in grades 3–12 have one
additional section:
V. Additional Key Criteria for Student Reading, Writing,
Listening, and Speaking
ELA and Literacy Curricula, Grades 3-5; ELA Curricula,
Grades 6–12
I. Key Criteria for Text Selection
1. Text Complexity: The Common Core State Standards require
students to read increasingly complex texts with growing independence as they
progress toward career and college readiness.
A. Texts for each grade align with the complexity
requirements outlined in the standards. Reading Standard 10 outlines the level
of text complexity at which students need to demonstrate comprehension in each
grade. (Appendix A in the Common Core State Standards gives further information
on how text complexity can be measured and offers guidance to teachers and
curriculum developers on selecting the texts their students read.)1 Research
makes clear that the complexity levels of the texts students are presently
required to read are significantly below what is required to achieve college
and career readiness. The Common Core State Standards hinge on students
encountering appropriately complex texts at each grade level to develop the
mature language skills and the conceptual knowledge they need for success in
school and life. Instructional materials should also offer advanced texts to provide
students at every grade with the opportunity to read texts beyond their current
grade level to prepare them for the challenges of more complex text.
1 A working group has developed clear, common standards for
measuring text complexity that are consistent across different curricula and
publishers. These measures blend quantitative and qualitative factors and are
being widely shared and made available to publishers and curriculum developers.
The measures are based on the principles laid out in Appendix A and have been
further developed and refined. These criteria recognize the critical role that
teachers play in text selection.
B. All students (including those who are behind) have
extensive opportunities to encounter grade-level complex text. Far too often,
students who have fallen behind are only given less complex texts rather than
the support they need to read texts at the appropriate level of complexity.
Complex text is a rich repository of ideas, information, and experience which
all readers should learn how to access, although some students will need more
scaffolding to do so. Curriculum developers and teachers have the flexibility
to build progressions of texts of increasing complexity within grade-level
bands that overlap to a limited degree with earlier bands (e.g., grades 4–5 and
grades 6–8).
Curriculum materials should provide extensive opportunities
for all students in a classroom to engage with complex text, although students
whose reading ability is developing at a slower rate also will need
supplementary opportunities to read text they can comprehend successfully
without extensive supports. These students may also need extra assistance with
fluency practice and vocabulary building. Students who need additional
assistance, however, must not miss out on essential practice and instruction
their classmates are receiving to help them read closely, think deeply about
texts, participate in thoughtful discussions, and gain knowledge of both words
and the world.
Some percentage of students will enter grade 3 or later
grades without a command of foundational reading skills such as decoding. It is
essential for these students to have age-appropriate materials to ensure that
they receive the extensive training and practice in the foundational reading
skills required to achieve fluency and comprehension. The K–2 publishers’
criteria more fully articulate the essential foundational skills all students
need to decode to become fluent readers and comprehend text.
C. Shorter, challenging texts that elicit close reading and
re-reading are provided regularly at each grade. The study of short texts is
particularly useful to enable students at a wide range of reading levels to
participate in the close analysis of more demanding text. The Common Core State
Standards place a high priority on the close, sustained reading of complex
text, beginning with Reading Standard 1. Such reading focuses on what lies
within the four corners of the text. It often requires compact, short,
self-contained texts that students can read and re-read deliberately and slowly
to probe and ponder the meanings of individual words, the order in which
sentences unfold, and the development of ideas over the course of the text. Reading in this manner
allows students to fully understand informational texts as well as analyze
works of literature effectively.
D. Novels, plays, and other extended full-length readings
are also provided with opportunities for close reading. Students should also be
required to read texts of a range of lengths — for a variety of purposes —
including several longer texts each year. Discussion of extended or longer
texts should span the entire text while also creating a series of questions
that demonstrate how careful attention to specific passages within the text
provide opportunities for close reading. Focusing on extended texts will enable
students to develop the stamina and persistence they need to read and extract
knowledge and insight from larger volumes of material. Not only do students
need to be able to read closely, but they also need to be able to read larger
volumes of text when necessary for research or other purposes.
E. Additional materials aim to increase regular independent
reading of texts that appeal to students’ interests while developing both their
knowledge base and joy in reading. These materials should ensure that all
students have daily opportunities to read texts of their choice on their own
during and outside of the school day. Students need access to a wide range of
materials on a variety of topics and genres both in their classrooms and in
their school libraries to ensure that they have opportunities to independently
read broadly and widely to build their knowledge, experience, and joy in
reading. Materials will need to include texts at students’ own reading level as
well as texts with complexity levels that will challenge and motivate students.
Texts should also vary in length and density, requiring students to slow down
or read more quickly depending on their purpose for reading. In alignment with
the standards and to acknowledge the range of students’ interests, these
materials should include informational texts and literary nonfiction as well as
literature. A variety of formats can also engage a wider range of students,
such as high-quality newspaper and magazine articles as well as
information-rich websites. Range and Quality of Texts: The Common Core State
Standards require a greater focus on informational text in elementary school
and literary nonfiction in ELA classes in grades 6–12.
A. In grades 3–5, literacy programs shift the balance of
texts and instructional time to include equal measures of literary and
informational texts. The standards call for elementary curriculum materials to
be recalibrated to reflect a mix of 50 percent literary and 50 percent
informational text, including reading in ELA, science, social studies, and the
arts. Achieving the appropriate balance between literary and informational text
in the next generation of materials requires a significant shift in early
literacy materials and instructional time so that scientific and historical
text are given the same time and weight as literary text. (See p. 31 of the
standards for details on how literature and informational texts are defined.)
In addition, to develop reading comprehension for all readers, as well as build
vocabulary, the selected informational texts should build a coherent body of
knowledge both within and across grades. (The sample series of texts regarding
“The Human Body” provided on p. 33 of the Common Core State Standards offers an
example of selecting texts that build knowledge coherently within and across
grades.)2
B. In grades 6–12, ELA programs shift the balance of texts
and instructional time towards reading substantially more literary nonfiction.
The Common Core State Standards require aligned ELA curriculum materials in
grades 6–12 to include a blend of literature (fiction, poetry, and drama) and a
substantial sampling of literary nonfiction, including essays, speeches,
opinion pieces, biographies, journalism, and historical, scientific, or other
documents written for a broad audience. (See p. 57 of the standards for more
details.) Most ELA programs and materials designed for them will need to
increase substantially the amount of literary nonfiction they include. The
standards emphasize arguments (such as those in the U.S. foundational documents) and
other literary nonfiction that is built on informational text structures rather
than literary nonfiction that is structured as stories (such as memoirs or
biographies). Of course, literary nonfiction extends well beyond historical
documents to include the best of nonfiction written for a broad audience on a
wide variety of topics, such as science, contemporary events and ideas, nature,
and the arts. (Appendix B of the Common Core State Standards provides several
examples of high-quality literary nonfiction.)
2 The note on the range and content of student reading in
K–5 (p. 10) states: “By reading texts in history/social studies, science, and
other disciplines, students build a foundation of knowledge in these fields
that will also give them background knowledge to be better readers in all
content areas in later grades. Students can only gain this foundation when the
curriculum is intentionally and coherently structured to develop rich content
knowledge within and across grades.”
C. The quality of the suggested texts is high — they are
worth reading closely and exhibit exceptional craft and thought or provide
useful information. Given the emphasis of the Common Core State Standards on
close reading, many of the texts selected should be worthy of close attention and
careful re-reading for understanding. To become career and college ready,
students must grapple with a range of works that span many genres, cultures,
and eras and model the kinds of thinking and writing students should aspire to
in their own work. Also, there should be selections of sources that require
students to read and integrate a larger volume of material for research
purposes. (See Appendix B of the standards for grade-specific examples of
texts.)
D. Specific texts or text types named in the standards are
included. At specific points, the Common Core State Standards require certain
texts or types of texts. In grades 9–12, foundational documents from American
history, selections from American literature and world literature, a play by
Shakespeare, and an American drama are all required. In early grades, students
are required to study classic myths and stories, including works representing
diverse cultures. Aligned materials for grades 3–12 should set out a coherent
selection and sequence of texts (of sufficient complexity and quality) to give
students a well-developed sense of bodies of literature (like American
literature or classic myths and stories) as part of becoming college and career
ready.
E. Within a sequence or collection of texts, specific anchor
texts are selected for especially careful reading. Often in research and other
contexts, several texts will be read to explore a topic. It is essential that
such materials include a selected text or set of texts that can act as
cornerstone or anchor text(s) that make careful study worthwhile. The anchor
text(s) provide essential opportunities for students to spend the time and care
required for close reading and to demonstrate in-depth comprehension of a
specific source or sources. The additional research sources beyond the anchor
texts then enable students to demonstrate they can read widely as well as read
a specific source in depth.
II. Key Criteria for Questions and Tasks
1. High-Quality Text-Dependent Questions and Tasks: Among
the highest priorities of the Common Core State Standards is that students be
able to read closely and gain knowledge from texts.
A. A significant percentage of tasks and questions are text
dependent. The standards strongly focus on students gathering evidence,
knowledge, and insight from what they read and therefore require that a
majority of the questions and tasks that students ask and respond to be based
on the text under consideration. Rigorous text-dependent questions require
students to demonstrate that they not only can follow the details of what is
explicitly stated but also are able to make valid claims that square with all
the evidence in the text.
Text-dependent questions do not require information or
evidence from outside the text or texts; they establish what follows and what
does not follow from the text itself. Eighty to ninety percent of the Reading
Standards in each grade require text-dependent analysis; accordingly, aligned
curriculum materials should have a similar percentage of text-dependent
questions. When examining a complex text in depth, tasks should require careful
scrutiny of the text and specific references to evidence from the text itself
to support responses.
High quality text dependent questions are more often text
specific rather than generic. That is, high quality questions should be
developed to address the specific text being read, in response to the demands
of that text. Good questions engage students to attend to the particular
dimensions, ideas, and specifics that illuminate each text. Though there is a
productive role for good general questions for teachers and students to have at
hand, materials should not over rely on "cookie-cutter" questions
that could be asked of any text, such as “What is the main idea? Provide three
supporting details.” Materials should develop sequences of individually crafted
questions that draw students and teachers into an exploration of the text or
texts at hand.
A text-dependent approach can and should be applied to
building knowledge from multiple sources as well as making connections among
texts and learned material, according to the principle that each source be read
and understood carefully. Gathering text evidence is equally crucial when
dealing with larger volumes of text for research or other purposes. Student
background knowledge and experiences can illuminate the reading but should not
replace attention to the text itself.
B. High-quality sequences of text-dependent questions elicit
sustained attention to the specifics of the text and their impact. The sequence
of questions should cultivate student mastery of the specific ideas and
illuminating particulars of the text. High-quality text-dependent questions
will often move beyond what is directly stated to require students to make
nontrivial inferences based on evidence in the text. Questions aligned with
Common Core State Standards should demand attention to the text to answer
fully. An effective set of discussion questions might begin with relatively
simple questions requiring attention to specific words, details, and arguments
and then move on to explore the impact of those specifics on the text as a
whole. Good questions will often linger over specific phrases and sentences to
ensure careful comprehension and also promote deep thinking and substantive
analysis of the text. Effective question sequences will build on each other to
ensure that students learn to stay focused on the text so they can learn fully
from it. Even when dealing with larger volumes of text, questions should be
designed to stimulate student attention to gaining specific knowledge and
insight from each source.
C. Questions and tasks require the use of textual evidence,
including supporting valid inferences from the text. The Common Core State
Standards require students to become more adept at drawing evidence from the
text and explaining that evidence orally and in writing. Aligned curriculum
materials should include explicit models of a range of high-quality
evidence-based answers to questions — samples of proficient student responses —
about specific texts from each grade. Questions should require students to
demonstrate that they follow the details of what is explicitly stated and are
able to make nontrivial inferences beyond what is explicitly stated in the text
regarding what logically follows from the evidence in the text. Evidence will
play a similarly crucial role in student writing, speaking, and listening, as
an increasing command of evidence in texts is essential to making progress in
reading as well as the other literacy strands.
D. Instructional design cultivates student interest and
engagement in reading rich texts carefully. A core part of the craft of
developing instructional materials is to construct questions and tasks that
motivate students to read inquisitively and carefully. Questions should reward
careful reading by focusing on illuminating specifics and ideas of the text
that “pay off” in a deeper understanding and insight. Often, a good question
will help students see something worthwhile that they would not have seen on a
more cursory reading. The sequence of questions should not be random but should
build toward more coherent understanding and analysis. Care should be taken
that initial questions are not so overly broad and general that they pull
students away from an in-depth encounter with the specific text or texts;
rather, strong questions will return students to the text to achieve greater
insight and understanding. The best questions will motivate students to dig in
and explore further — just as texts should be worth reading, so should
questions be worth answering.
E. Materials provide opportunities for students to build
knowledge through close reading of specific texts. Materials should design
opportunities for close reading of selected passages or texts and create a
series of questions that demonstrate how careful attention to those readings
allows students to gather evidence and build knowledge. This approach can and
should encourage the comparison and synthesis of multiple sources. Once each
source is read and understood carefully, attention should be given to
integrating what students have just read with what they have read and learned
previously. How does what they have just read compare to what they have learned
before? Drawing upon relevant prior knowledge, how does the text expand or
challenge that knowledge? As students apply knowledge and concepts gained
through reading to build a more coherent understanding of a subject, productive
connections and comparisons across texts and ideas should bring students back
to careful reading of specific texts. Students can and should make connections
between texts, but this activity should not supersede the close examination of
each specific text.
F. Questions and tasks attend to analyzing the arguments and
information at the heart of informational text. As previously stated, the
Common Core State Standards emphasize the reading of more informational text in
grades K–5 and more literary nonfiction in grades 6–12. This emphasis mirrors
the Writing Standards that focus on students’ abilities to marshal an argument
and write to inform or explain. The shift in both reading and writing constitutes
a significant change from the traditional focus in ELA classrooms on narrative
text or the narrative aspects of literary nonfiction (the characters and the
story) toward more in-depth engagement with the informational and argumentative
aspects of these texts. While the English teacher is not meant to be a content
expert in an area covered by particular texts, curriculum materials should
guide teachers and students to demonstrate careful understanding of the
information developed in the text. For example, in a narrative with a great
deal of science, teachers and students should be required to follow and
comprehend the scientific information as presented by the text. In a similar
fashion, it is just as essential for teachers and students to follow the details
of an argument and reasoning in literary nonfiction as it is for them to attend
to issues of style.
2. Cultivating Students’ Ability To Read Complex Texts
Independently: Another key priority of the Common Core State Standards is a
requirement that students be able to demonstrate their independent capacity to
read at the appropriate level of complexity and depth.
A. Scaffolds enable all students to experience rather than
avoid the complexity of the text. Many students will need careful instruction —
including effective scaffolding — to enable them to read at the level of text
complexity required by the Common Core State Standards. However, the
scaffolding should not preempt or replace the text by translating its contents
for students or telling students what they are going to learn in advance of
reading the text; the scaffolding should not become an alternate, simpler
source of information that diminishes the need for students to read the text
itself carefully. Effective scaffolding aligned with the standards should
result in the reader encountering the text on its own terms, with instructions
providing helpful directions that focus students on the text. Follow-up support
should guide the reader when encountering places in the text where he or she
might struggle. Aligned curriculum materials therefore should explicitly direct
students to re-read challenging portions of the text and offer instructors
clear guidance about an array of text-based scaffolds. When productive struggle
with the text is exhausted, questions rather than explanations can help focus
the student’s attention on key phrases and statements in the text or on the
organization of ideas in the paragraph.
When necessary, extra textual scaffolding prior to and during
the first read should focus on words and concepts that are essential to a basic
understanding and that students are not likely to know or be able to determine
from context. Supports should be designed to serve a wide range of readers,
including those English language learners and other students who are especially
challenged by the complex text before them. Texts and the discussion questions
should be selected and ordered so that they bootstrap onto each other and
promote deep thinking and substantive engagement with the text.
B. Reading strategies support comprehension of specific
texts and the focus on building knowledge and insight. Close reading and
gathering knowledge from specific texts should be at the heart of classroom
activities and not be consigned to the margins when completing assignments. Reading strategies should
work in the service of reading comprehension (rather than an end unto
themselves) and assist students in building knowledge and insight from specific
texts. To be effective, instruction on specific reading techniques should occur
when they illuminate specific aspects of a text. Students need to build an
infrastructure of skills, habits, knowledge, dispositions, and experience that
enables them to approach new challenging texts with confidence and stamina. As
much as possible, this training should be embedded in the activity of reading
the text rather than being taught as a separate body of material. Additionally,
care should be taken that introducing broad themes and questions in advance of
reading does not prompt overly general conversations rather than focusing
reading on the specific ideas and details, drawing evidence from the text, and
gleaning meaning and knowledge from it.
C. Design for whole-group, small-group, and individual
instruction cultivates student responsibility and independence. It is essential
that questions, tasks, and activities be designed to ensure that all students
are actively engaged in reading. Materials should provide opportunities for
students to participate in real, substantive discussions that require them to
respond directly to the ideas of their peers. Teachers can begin by asking the
kind and level of questions appropriate to the reading and then students should
be prompted to ask high-quality questions about what they are reading to one
another for further comprehension and analysis. Writing about text is also an
effective way to elicit this active engagement. Students should have
opportunities to use writing to clarify, examine, and organize their own
thinking, so reading materials should provide effective ongoing prompts for
students to analyze texts in writing. Instructional materials should be
designed to devote sufficient time in class to students encountering text
without scaffolding, as they often will in college- and career-ready
environments. A significant portion of the time spent with each text should
provide opportunities for students to work independently on analyzing
grade-level text because this independent analysis is required by the
standards.
D. Questions and tasks require careful comprehension of the
text before asking for further evaluation or interpretation. The Common Core
State Standards call for students to demonstrate a careful understanding of
what they read before engaging their opinions, appraisals, or interpretations.
Aligned materials should therefore require students to demonstrate that they
have followed the details and logic of an author’s argument before they are
asked to evaluate the thesis or compare the thesis to others. When engaging in
critique, materials should require students to return to the text to check the
quality and accuracy of their evaluations and interpretations. Often, curricula
surrounding texts leap too quickly into broad and wide-open questions of
interpretation before cultivating command of the details and specific ideas in
the text.
E. Materials make the text the focus of instruction by
avoiding features that distract from the text. Teachers’ guides or students’
editions of curriculum materials should highlight the reading selections.
Everything included in the surrounding materials should be thoughtfully
considered and justified before being included. The text should be central, and
surrounding materials should be included only when necessary, so as not to distract
from the text itself. Instructional support materials should focus on questions
that engage students in becoming interested in the text. Rather than being
consigned to the margins when completing assignments, close and careful reading
should be at the center of classroom activities. Given the focus of the Common
Core State Standards, publishers should be extremely sparing in offering
activities that are not text based. Existing curricula will need to be revised
substantially to focus classroom time on students and teachers practicing
reading, writing, speaking, and listening in direct response to high-quality
text.
F. Materials offer assessment opportunities that genuinely
measure progress. Aligned materials should guide teachers to provide scaffolding
but also gradually remove those supports by including tasks that require
students to demonstrate their independent capacity to read and write in every
domain at the appropriate level of complexity and sophistication. Activities
used for assessment should clearly denote what standards and texts are being
emphasized, and materials should offer frequent and easily implemented
assessments, including systems for record keeping and follow-up.
III. Key Criteria for Academic Vocabulary
Materials focus on academic vocabulary prevalent in complex
texts throughout reading, writing, listening, and speaking instruction.
Academic vocabulary (described in more detail as Tier 2 words in Appendix A of
the Common Core State Standards) includes those words that readers will find in
all types of complex texts from different disciplines.
Sometimes curricula ignore these words and pay attention
only to the technical words that are unique to a discipline. Materials aligned
with the Common Core State Standards should help students acquire knowledge of
general academic vocabulary because these are the words that will help them
access a wide range of complex texts.
Aligned materials should guide students to gather as much as
they can about the meaning of these words from the context of how they are
being used in the text, while offering support for vocabulary when students are
not likely to be able to figure out their meanings from the text alone. As the
meanings of words vary with the context, the more varied the context provided
to teach the meaning of a word is, the more effective the results will be
(e.g., a state was admitted to the Union; he
admitted his errors; admission was too expensive). In alignment with the
standards, materials should also require students to explain the impact of
specific word choices on the text. Materials and activities should also provide
ample opportunities for students to practice the use of academic vocabulary in
their speaking and writing.
Some students, including some English language learners,
will also need support in mastering high-frequency words that are not Tier 2
words but are essential to reading grade-level text. Materials should therefore
offer the resources necessary for supporting students who are developing
knowledge of high-frequency words. Since teachers will often not have the time
to teach explicitly all of the high-frequency words required, materials should
make it possible for students to learn the words’ meanings on their own,
providing such things as student-friendly definitions for high-frequency words
whose meanings cannot be inferred from the context. It also can be useful for
English language learners to highlight explicitly and link cognates of key
words with other languages.
IV. Key Criteria for Writing to Sources and Research
1. Materials portray writing to sources as a key task. The
Common Core State Standards require students not only to show that they can
analyze and synthesize sources but also to present careful analysis,
well-defended claims, and clear information through their writing. Several of
the Writing Standards, including most explicitly Standard 9, require students
to draw evidence from a text or texts to support analysis, reflection, or
research. Materials aligned with the Common Core State Standards should give
students extensive opportunities to write in response to sources throughout
grade-level materials. Model rubrics for the writing assignments as well as
high-quality student samples should also be provided as guidance to teachers.
2. Materials focus on forming arguments as well as
informative writing. While narrative writing is given prominence in early
grades, as students progress through the grades the Common Core State Standards
increasingly ask students to write arguments or informational reports from
sources. As a consequence, less classroom time should be spent in later grades
on personal writing in response to decontextualized prompts that ask students
to detail personal experiences or opinions. The Common Core State Standards
require that the balance of writing students are asked to do parallel the
balance assessed on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP):
• In elementary school, 30 percent of student writing should
be to argue, 35 percent should be to explain/inform, and 35 percent should be
narrative.
• In middle school, 35 percent of student writing should be
to write arguments, 35 percent should be to explain/inform, and 30 percent
should be narrative.
• In high school, 40 percent of student writing should be to
write arguments, 40 percent should be to explain/inform, and 20 percent should
be narrative.
These forms of writing are not strictly independent; for
example, arguments and explanations often include narrative elements, and both
informing and arguing rely on using information or evidence drawn from texts.
3. Materials make it clear that student writing should be
responsive to the needs of the audience and the particulars of the text in
question. As the standards are silent on length and structure, student writing
should not be evaluated by whether it follows a particular format or formula
(e.g., the five paragraph essay). Instead, the Common Core State Standards have
been carefully designed to focus on the elements or characteristics of good
writing including drawing sufficient evidence from texts, writing coherently
with well-developed ideas, and writing clearly with sufficient command of
standard English.
4. Students are given extensive practice with short, focused
research projects. Writing Standard 7 emphasizes that students should conduct
several short research projects in addition to more sustained research efforts.
Materials should require several of these short research projects annually to
enable students to repeat the research process many times and develop the
expertise needed to conduct research independently. A progression of shorter
research projects also encourages students to develop expertise in one area by
confronting and analyzing different aspects of the same topic as well as other
texts and source materials on that topic.
V. Additional Key Criteria for Student Reading, Writing,
Listening, and Speaking
1. Materials provide systematic opportunities for students
to read complex text with fluency. Fluency describes the pace and accuracy with
which students read — the extent to which students adjust the pace, stress, and
tone of their reading to respond to the words in the text. Often, students who
are behind face fluency challenges and need more practice reading sufficiently
complex text. Materials aligned with the Common Core State Standards should
draw on the connections between the Speaking and Listening Standards and the
Reading Standards on fluency to provide opportunities for students to develop
this important skill (e.g., rehearsing an oral performance of a written piece
has the built-in benefit of promoting reading fluency).
2. Materials help teachers plan substantive academic
discussions. In accordance with the Speaking and Listening Standards, materials
aligned with the Common Core State Standards should show teachers how to plan
engaging discussions around grade-level topics and texts that students have
studied and researched in advance. Speaking and Listening prompts and questions
should offer opportunities for students to share preparation, evidence, and
research — real, substantive discussions that require students to respond
directly to the ideas of their peers. Materials should highlight strengthening
students’ listening skills as well as their ability to respond to and challenge
their peers with relevant follow-up questions and evidence.
3. Materials use multimedia and technology to deepen
attention to evidence and texts. The Common Core State Standards require
students to compare the knowledge they gain from reading texts to the knowledge
they gain from other multimedia sources, such as video. The Standards for
Reading Literature specifically require students to observe different
productions of the same play to assess how each production interprets evidence
from the script. Materials aligned with the Common Core State Standards
therefore should use multimedia and technology in a way that engages students
in absorbing or expressing details of the text rather than becoming a
distraction or replacement for engaging with the text.
4. Materials embrace the most significant grammar and
language conventions. The Language Standards provide a focus for instruction
each year to ensure that students gain adequate mastery of the essential
“rules” of standard written and spoken English. They also push students to
learn how to approach language as a matter of craft so they can communicate
clearly and powerfully. In addition to meeting each year’s grade-specific
standards, students are expected to retain and further develop skills and
understandings mastered in preceding grades. Thus, aligned materials should demonstrate
that they explicitly and effectively support student mastery of the full range
of grammar and conventions as they are applied in increasingly sophisticated
contexts. The materials should also indicate when students should adhere to
formal conventions and when they are speaking and writing for a less formal
purpose.
CONCLUSION: EFFICACY OF ALIGNED MATERIALS
Curriculum materials must have a clear and documented
research base. The most important evidence is that the curriculum accelerates
student progress toward career and college readiness. It can be surprising
which questions, tasks, and instructions provoke the most productive engagement
with text, accelerate student growth, and deepen instructor facility with the
materials. A great deal of the material designed for the standards will by
necessity be new, but as much as possible the work should be based on research
and developed and refined through actual testing in classrooms. Publishers
should provide a clear research plan for how the efficacy of their materials
will be assessed and improved over time. Revisions should be based on evidence
of actual use and results with a wide range of students, including English
language learners.