2024
CommonLit 360 6-8

6th Grade - Gateway 3

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Note on review tool versions

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

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Gateway Ratings Summary

Usability

Gateway 3 - Meets Expectations
88%
Criterion 3.1: Teacher Supports
9 / 9
Criterion 3.2: Assessment
10 / 10
Criterion 3.3: Student Supports
3 / 6
Criterion 3.4: Intentional Design
Narrative Only

The materials meet the expectations for usability. The materials provide comprehensive teacher guidance and correlation information to the ELA standards. In addition, the materials include explanations of the instructional approaches and include and reference research-based strategies. 

There is a clear assessment system that provides multiple assessment opportunities to determine students’ learning. The standards assessed in each assessment are indicated, and the materials offer some accommodations for assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills.

The materials provide some strategies, supports, and resources for students in special populations. While general guidance is provided across special populations, lesson-specific guidance is lacking.

The materials integrate technology in ways that engage students in grade-level standards. The materials provide teacher guidance for using embedded technology in the Program Guide. The visual design of the materials supports learning. The design is not chaotic and easy to navigate, as student materials mimic teacher materials.

Criterion 3.1: Teacher Supports

9 / 9

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

The materials provide comprehensive teacher guidance and correlation information to the ELA standards. In addition, the materials include explanations of the instructional approaches and include and reference research-based strategies. The materials do not include strategies or suggestions for stakeholders to use to support student progress.

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Indicator 3a

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3a. 

Materials provide teacher guidance with useful annotations and suggestions for how to enact the student materials and ancillary materials to support students’ literacy development. The home page clarifies available resources to assist teachers with the variety of different lessons in each unit. Videos guiding teachers through the unit lessons and tasks are available in each unit. Unit guides break the unit into parts, guiding the teacher through each step and providing facilitation of lessons and suggestions for implementation. Lessons include Notes to the Teacher sections, and guidance within lessons provides suggestions for During Reading questions and Independent Practice addressing specific learning objectives. 

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

  • Materials provide teachers with overviews and highlight instructional supports and instructional routines. The home page provides an overview of what is available in the ELA curriculum, including reading and writing lessons, vocabulary and grammar lessons, and related media exploration. Materials also provide three PDFs and a video to assist teachers in presenting to students and ancillary materials. The PDFs include access to the Scope and Sequence, Program Guide, and Research-Based Evidence. The video provides navigation information and a tour of the curriculum units. 

  • Materials provide teachers with an About this Unit section. In this section, teachers can access a five-minute video that provides general information about the unit lessons and tasks. In addition, the culminating task is identified and outlined, a list of skills students should be able to do is outlined, and reasons students might love the unit are identified. 

  • Each unit provides a Unit Guide that reveals the unit at a glance. Teachers can find the unit’s essential question, pacing guide, unit texts, focus, writing, and language skills for each specific unit. Both the Arc of Reading Instruction and the Arc of Writing Instruction are detailed and explained in the unit guide, along with the Culminating task prompt, vocabulary, discussion, and grammar focus, which are all aligned with identified grade-level standards.

  • Each unit is broken down into reading, writing, vocabulary, related media exploration, discussion, and culminating task lessons. Pacing time allotment for each lesson is evident before opening each lesson. Upon opening the lesson, teachers have access to a description of the lesson. The material provides a Teacher Copy that demonstrates how each specific lesson fits in with the entire unit, outlines the skill focus, provides notes to the teacher, breaks down the lesson activities, and provides suggestions for facilitation of the lesson. 

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

  • Materials provide many useful annotations and suggestions within each lesson of each unit. One example is the Notes for Teachers component found in every lesson. For example, in Unit 5, Reading Lesson: “Adolescent Identity Development,” the Teacher Copy provides one of three teacher notes that states, “This lesson introduces students to key unit knowledge about identity. Students will learn the difference between self- and social identity and how internal and external factors contribute to identity.”

  • Materials provide annotations and suggestions found in the During Reading Questions within each reading lesson of every unit. For example, in Unit 5, Reading Lesson: “Adolescent Identity Development,” in blue italicized writing, directions to the teacher state, “Answers in blue. To help us ensure assessment security, please do not post or circulate these answers online.” Suggestions for During Reading Questions can be found in blue below the student question. Also, the Independent Practice section of the lesson provides guidance and states, “Note: To ensure test security, the following assessment items are viewable only on commonlit.org for verified teacher accounts. Navigate to the Answer Key tab on the text page to access it.”

Indicator 3b

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3b. 

Materials contain adult-level explanations and examples of the more complex grade/course-level concepts, such as resource-based instructional strategies found in the How-To Guidance section. The Program Guide provides implementation guidance for teachers, and the Professional Development Portal includes target lessons to improve students’ success. The materials provide concepts beyond the current course so that teachers can improve their own knowledge of the subject. Guides are provided that include content that challenges a wide range of readers. Videos are provided to engage in best practices, such as teaching digital writing lessons. Links to building classroom libraries and reading across contents can be accessed under Independent Reading and Book Club Resources. 

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

  • Every unit provides a How-To Guidance section found under the Professional Development tab. This section states, “These free resources provide teachers research-based instructional strategies and time-saving tips to get the most out of CommonLit 360 lessons.” Teachers can access multiple PDFs addressing four ELA categories: Reading, Writing and Research, Speaking and Listening, and Assessments. 

  • The 360 Program Guide provides implementation guidance for using the common program tools and for implementing the different types of lessons in each unit, such as Reading, Writing, Discussion, Vocabulary, and Related Media Exploration. 

  • On the home page, the materials provide a Professional Development Portal that provides 60+ self-paced training modules. One example module includes Target Lessons: Engaging and Scaffolding Lessons to Support Your Students.

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

  • Each unit provides a link to Guidance for Supplemental Text Sets. The materials explain the purpose of these texts, “Because the texts vary in complexity, teachers can use the texts to support and challenge a wide range of learners. The texts provide an opportunity for remediation and extension within each unit.” The guide also educates teachers on a variety of ways to use supplemental texts. 

  • Each unit provides self-paced training under the Professional Development tab. One section, 360 Best Practices, provides seven training videos. A few examples include Best Practices for Essential Reading Lessons, Scaffolding Instruction to Support All Readers, and Best Practices for Digital Writing Lessons.

  • Under Lesson and Materials, teachers can access Independent Reading and Book Club Resources for most units. Teachers are provided a guide to Best Practices for Independent Reading. The guide includes a link to “build your classroom library on the cheap.” The guide leads to other posts related to reading in the classroom. 

Indicator 3c

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3c. 

Materials include standards correlation information that explains the role of the standards in the context of the overall series. Correlation information is present for the ELA standards addressed throughout the grade level/series. The Scope and Sequence provides ELA standard focus skills tied to every unit at all grade levels. The Library provides specific reading standards correlated to over 1100 texts. Explanations of the role of specific grade-level/course-level ELA standards are present in the context of the series. Each Unit Guide for every grade level provides the focus standards in clear language correlating to specific standards across core ELA standards in Reading, Writing, Speaking and Listening, and Language. Reading, Writing, and Culminating Tasks across all units and grade levels explain the skills and tasks the students will focus on and the correlating standards associated with those skills and tasks. 

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

  • The Scope and Sequence can be accessed on the home page and also on each grade level tab. For every grade level and every unit, the Scope and Sequence provides the unit title. Essential questions and knowledge-building texts are tied to the focus skills and the ELA standards addressed. 

  • The Library, found under the Browse Content tab, contains over 1100 texts. The materials have a Reading Standard tab for information and literature. Users can click a specific reading standard to find text titles that contain specific reading standards across all grade levels.

  • The Reading lessons for each unit contain an Independent Practice section that includes multiple-choice and short-response questions that identify the assessed grade-level standard.

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

  • Each Unit provides a Unit Guide that explains the role of specific grade-level standards present in the context of the series. At the beginning of each guide, the Unit at a Glance provides the focus skills that are addressed throughout the unit in Reading, Writing, Language, and Speaking and Listening, along with the correlating ELA standard. The Skill Focus provided in the Unit Guide shows the correlation between the previous grade standard and the shift to the current grade standard. 

  • Each Reading, Writing, and Culminating Task lesson includes a skill focus section. The skill focus explains what the students will be doing and learning and directly indicates what standards those activities and learned skills address. 

Indicator 3d

Narrative Only

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

The materials do not provide strategies or suggestions for stakeholders to use to support student progress. The materials do include an FAQ section, and there is a section for parents/guardians. The FAQ section gives a brief overview of CommonLit but does not provide strategies or suggestions for how to help students progress.

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

  • In the FAQ section of the CommonLit Support Center, there is a section for Parents & Guardians. In this section, one question states, “I am a parent. What is CommonLIt 360?” The materials provide a quick explanation of CommonLit and how it began, as well as a short video titled “Welcome to CommonLIt 360.” This section also includes the question, “I am a parent. Can I create an account on CommonLit?” The response is that parents cannot create an account, but they may browse the library resources and learn about CommonLit. 

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

  • No evidence found.

Indicator 3e

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3e. 

The materials explain the instructional approaches to the program. In the Research and Evidence Base PDF, the materials list sections including, but not limited to text selection, knowledge building, repeated reading, annotation and note taking, on-demand and process writing, and academic discussions. In each of these sections, the materials provide the research that supports that strategy and then explain how CommonLit360 aligns with the research. The document cites the research throughout and includes a Works Cited page. Throughout the course of the year, the materials include these research-based strategies. Examples are given throughout the PDF so teachers know what the materials will look like.  

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

  • In the Research and Evidence Base PDF, the materials explain how their materials are research and evidence-based. For example, under text selection, the document says, “Research has shown that the ability to comprehend complex texts is a key factor in determining college readiness among students (ACT, 2006; Nelson et al., 2012).” The materials then state, “CommonLit360 immerses students in rich, engaging, grade-appropriate complex texts across a wide range of genres and modes.”

  • In the Research and Evidence Base PDF, the materials state the research behind text-centered questions and tasks. The materials state, “Teachers should adopt approaches that enhance academic rigor, such as asking targeted text-dependent questions that contribute to students’ comprehension (Fisher & Frey, 2012).” The materials then say, “Questioning makes up the heart of the CommonLit360 curriculum.”

  • In the Research and Evidence Base PDF, the materials state, “Studies have shown that specific feedback can significantly improve students’ writing quality and ability to revise their work. Graham and Hebert (2010) found that feedback that focuses on both the content and process of writing is most effective in helping students identify areas for improvement.” 

  • In the Research and Evidence Base PDF, the materials elaborate on the use of repeated reading. The materials state, “Through repeated engagement with complex sections of a text, close reading supports students in developing their vocabulary and analyzing text structure and sentence structure (Goff et al., 2005; Ericsson, 1993).”  

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

  • The materials include a Professional Development tab, which includes a How-To Guidance section. This includes a variety of topics, including, but not limited to, Checking for Understanding During  Reading Lessons, Using a Note-Taking Graphic Organizer Effectively, and Giving Meaningful Feedback. 

    • The materials provide suggestions for implementing this strategy in the Checking for Understanding During Reading Lessons PDF. One suggestion states, “Teach student fix-up strategies like Rewriting the question in their own words. Defining Key terms in the question.” 

    • In the Using a Note Taking Graphic Organizer Effectively PDF, the materials share why it is important and offer teacher tips. The materials also include a section titled “What the Research Says.” This section references Knipper & Duggan 2006 and says, “The act of writing content improves students’ abilities to process and comprehend new and complex ideas, and connect new information for prior knowledge and lived experiences.” 

    • In the Giving Meaningful Feedback PDF, the material provides examples of one-dimensional feedback and meaningful feedback and what the potential student outcomes could be based on the feedback. The PDF provides a rubric example and sample feedback responses. 

Indicator 3f

1 / 1

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3f. 

The materials provide a list of materials for lessons throughout each unit. Each unit begins with a Unit Guide, which lists everything included in the unit. Each unit has a Lessons & Materials tab, which includes everything needed to complete the lessons within the unit. Most reading lessons do not include a materials list, but the materials needed are included within the assignment as students click through the resource. Most writing lessons include a “Materials Needed” section since they often use materials from previous lessons. 

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

  • In Unit 1, Unit Guide, the materials list what’s included in the unit. The list includes but is not limited to, A Unit Introduction Activity, 7 Reading lessons, A Writing Baseline Assessment, and 5 Writing Lessons. The materials then state, “All lessons can be accessed through the Lessons & Materials page.” 

  • In Unit 3, Related Media Exploration: Characteristics of a Dystopian Genre, the Teacher Copy provides a Lesson Overview that states how to facilitate this lesson. The materials state, “Use the paired slide deck to guide students through the handout. Videos are linked in the slide deck.” The materials then list the parts of the lesson and link the videos used throughout the lesson. 

  • In Unit 5, Writing Lesson: Transitions to Compare and Contrast, the Teacher Copy Lesson Overview provides a “Materials Needed” section. This section lists items “You will need” and items “Your student will need.” Under “You will need,” the materials list: This lesson handout, “Fish Cheeks” (Teacher Copy), and “Drum Dream Girl” (Teacher Copy). Under “Your students will need” the materials list: “Transitions to Compare and Contrast” (Student Copy), “Fish Cheeks” (Student Copy), and “Drum Dream Girl” (Student Copy).

Indicator 3g

Narrative Only

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Indicator 3h

Narrative Only

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Criterion 3.2: Assessment

10 / 10

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

The materials provide a clear assessment system that provides multiple assessment opportunities to determine students’ learning. Assessments include grammar and usage quizzes, vocabulary quizzes, independent in-class assessments, and final culminating unit assessments. Every unit contains a culminating task that incorporates reading, writing, and speaking and listening skills. The materials include a rubric for the teacher to use to grade the culminating tasks. Materials also include an Independent Practice component throughout each unit, typically with each reading lesson. This is similar to an exit ticket that allows the teacher to assess student understanding frequently over the course of the year. During Reading questions and tasks allow teachers to check in with students during the lessons. Throughout the program, the materials identify the standards and practices assessed in formal assessments. In addition, the materials offer some accommodations for assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills.

Narrative Only

Indicator 3i

2 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3i. 

The materials identify the standards and practices assessed in formal assessments throughout the program. Independent reading questions and culminating task prompts always have the standards addressed listed beside the question or the prompt. The grammar quizzes and vocabulary quizzes do not list the standards by the questions, but the standards are listed in the Unit Guide for teachers. 

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

  • Most units include a grammar quiz. The grammar quiz includes a scoring chart at the bottom to help determine a student’s score. The grammar instruction standards addressed for each unit are listed in the Unit Guide, and those are the standards addressed in the quiz. 

  • Each unit includes at least one vocabulary quiz. The Unit Guide lists the Vocabulary standards addressed within each unit, and the quiz addresses those same standards.

  • The culminating task for each unit includes the standard(s) addressed on the task prompt. Each culminating task also includes a rubric teachers can use to score the task. The rubrics used are a 4-3-2-1 scale, and each section contains clear expectations that students must include to receive that score. 

  • Independent Practice questions are included at the end of almost every reading lesson. Each question is marked with the corresponding standard or standards that the question addresses. 

Indicator 3j

4 / 4

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3j. 

The materials provide multiple opportunities for assessments. Every unit contains a culminating task that incorporates reading, writing, and speaking and listening skills. The materials include a rubric for the teacher to use to grade the culminating tasks. Materials also include an Independent Practice component throughout each unit, typically with each reading lesson. This is similar to an exit ticket that allows the teacher to assess student understanding frequently over the course of the year. During Reading questions and tasks allow teachers to check in with students during the lessons. The materials provide possible answers, as well as optional during reading questions the teacher can use if they choose. 

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

  • Each unit contains a multifaceted culminating task. Students typically include reading, writing, and speaking and listening skills to complete the culminating task. Each culminating task includes a rubric for the teacher to use to assess the students. The task for each unit differs to provide some variety over the course of the year. For example, the Unit 1 culminating task is a literary analysis essay, while the Unit 4 culminating task is an informational presentation. 

  • Independent Practice is a form of formative assessment used throughout each unit. Independent practice may include a short written response question, an application question, and multiple choice questions. 

  • The materials provide During Reading questions that allow the teacher to check in with students while reading. These questions may be Turn & Talk, highlight evidence, written response, or Think & Share. The Teacher Copy provides possible answers, as well as providing information on optional During Reading Questions that the teacher can choose to use. 

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

  • In the Program Guide, the materials state the following under the rubric section, “Rubrics enable teachers to provide constructive feedback that helps students recognize their strengths, identify areas for improvement, and set goals for future growth.” 

  • Formative assessments are included throughout the units within the Independent Practice sections of the lessons. The program guide states, “Teachers are able to monitor students’ comprehension, analysis, and skill building through frequent review of these formative assessments, allowing them to adjust their instructional practices and improve student learning outcomes.” 

Indicator 3k

4 / 4

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 meet the criteria for Indicator 3k. 

Materials provide opportunities for students to demonstrate the full intent of grade-level/course-level standards and shifts across the series through formative and summative assessments, such as grammar and usage quizzes, vocabulary quizzes, independent in-class assessments, and final culminating unit assessments. The assessment item types in the program are varied. 

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

  • All grade-level units include a writing baseline assessment. This argumentative prompt connects to the major unit themes. Facilitation suggestions include instructions to “Use the Grade 6-10 Argumentative Writing Rubric to score student essays. Provide direct feedback to students on their essays using the Student Feedback Form. Have students reflect on their writing and set writing goals using the Writing Baseline Assessment Goal-Setting Tool. You may use this tool to kick off 1:1 conferences with students.” This writing baseline assessment is a constructed response. 

  • Each unit includes one to two Vocabulary quizzes that assess the “10 high-impact academic vocabulary words they will see in the texts they read.” Vocabulary quizzes are multiple-choice. 

  • Most units include one Grammar and Usage quiz that assesses students’ knowledge of the unit’s grammar skill that correlates directly to grade level language standards. Grammar and Usage quizzes vary in structure, including short answer and open-response. 

  • Each unit includes a culminating task with instructions that state the following: “To measure student understanding, each unit culminates in a task that assesses student understanding of core unit knowledge and skills. Throughout the unit, students engage in the writing process to refine this task so that they have a published product by the end of the unit.” Culminating tasks vary in structure, including process writing and presentations. 

  • Students are assessed using many different types of rubrics such as “Writing: informative, argumentative, narrative, literary analysis, Listening and speaking, and Presentation.” “Culminating tasks are assessed using the associated rubric, which allows teachers and students to track and understand how students are performing in relation to the focus standards in the unit.”

  • Formative Assessments found in many of the reading lessons include in-class Independent Practice activities that “require students to answer a short written response question, an application question, and/or multiple-choice assessment questions.” 

Indicator 3l

Narrative Only

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

The digital versions of Vocabulary, Grammar, and Usage Assessments and Culminating Unit Tasks provide some universal accommodations that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge and skills without changing the content of the assessment. Those accommodations include document translation to other languages and font size adjustments. No evidence was found that demonstrates guidance for teachers on the use of provided accommodations.

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

  • Materials offer accommodations that ensure all students can access the assessment without changing the content of the assessment. Students have access to document translation to other languages and font size adjustments.

  • Reading lessons for all units and grade levels provide a translate button and a read-aloud link. Translate allows access to the texts in 41 different languages. The Read-Aloud option reads the text back in English. 

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

  • No evidence found. 

Criterion 3.3: Student Supports

3 / 6

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

The materials provide some strategies, supports, and resources for students in special populations. While general guidance is provided across special populations, lesson-specific guidance is lacking. Some of the How-To Guidance PDFs provided for teachers in the materials provide guidance for helping students who are struggling, including examples and strategies to guide teachers. The materials provide some strategies and supports for students who read, write, and/or speak a language other than English. The Program Guides provide a list of supports for English Learners, including a list of teacher-led strategies and explanations for how CommonLit 360 tools and resources can be used to help. The materials provide some suggestions and strategies for using home language to support students in learning English Language Arts. The Program Guide suggests that teachers use the students’ first language skills to help them better understand vocabulary and comprehend text. There is guidance for grouping students in a variety of ways across each unit. Types of interactions among students include Whole Class Partner Work, including Think Share, Turn and Talk, Student-Led Discussions, Further Analysis responses, and Independent work. Materials provide varied approaches to learning tasks over time. Opportunities for students to demonstrate and monitor their learning are also varied.

The materials, including texts and assessments, depict characters and individuals of varying ages, genders, races, and ethnicities and typically present diversities in a positive light. The materials do not include teacher guidance on how to engage culturally diverse students in the learning of ELA.

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Indicator 3m

1 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3m. 

The materials provide some strategies, supports, and resources for students in special populations. The materials include PDFs under the How-To Guidance section within the professional development tab for each unit. These PDFs cover topics regarding reading, writing, research, speaking and listening, and assessments. Some of these PDFs provide guidance for helping students who are struggling, providing examples and strategies to guide teachers. The examples and strategies are general and not specific to particular lessons. Individual lessons include optional During Reading Questions that teachers can use, but lessons do not include specific guidance on strategies and supports to use with students in special populations. The materials provide a variety of texts for students to use during the Choice Board lessons, but there is no guidance for the teacher on how to use these to support special populations.

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

  • The materials provide How-To Guidance PDFs under the professional development tab for each unit. These PDFs provide suggestions for the teacher to use in a variety of situations, including, but not limited to, annotating effectively, checking for understanding during reading lessons, facilitating a productive discussion, and giving meaningful feedback. The PDFs typically provide suggestions for students who are struggling. For example, in the “Checking for Understanding During Reading Lessons” PDF, the materials provide suggestions for students who are struggling to comprehend the content. The materials state, “Teach students fix-up strategies like: 

    • Rereading

    • Breaking down the existing question

    • Asking an additional question.”

The materials provide an example for the teacher as well. 

  • In the Teacher Copy of Reading Lessons, the materials provide a suggested reading modality based on the amount of support students may need with the topic. The materials provide During Reading questions, but certain questions are optional. The materials state, “During Reading Questions that are marked with an asterisk (*) are optional questions. Teachers can choose to use the questions with students needing more support.”

  • In Unit 4, Choice Board: Texts, the Teacher Copy provides notes for teachers. Part of the notes state, “This lesson is designed to be an ‘Independent Research’ to provide students with additional research without releasing them to conduct their own research on the web. Students will not read all these texts; instead, they will read a grouping based on their chosen subject on ocean conservation for their culminating task presentation.” Although this task is designed as an Independent Research activity, the materials do not provide guidance for the teacher on how to assist students in special populations, or information regarding which grouping of texts might be best for students in special populations. 

Indicator 3n

1 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3n. 

The materials provide some opportunities for advanced students to investigate grade-level content at a higher level of complexity. The materials contain a Beyond the Wall section in the Word Wall Teacher Guidance that provides a variety of activities that the teacher can incorporate for advanced students. The materials also provide Reading Responses for Advanced Analysis as options for the questions/responses in the Independent Reading and Book Club Resources. There are also opportunities for students to choose to read more challenging texts during choice text lessons. 

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

  • The materials provide a Word Wall Teacher Guidance document for the Vocabulary Activity Sets. This document provides best practices for using word walls, as well as a Beyond the Wall section. The Beyond the Wall section says, “Here are additional creative ways to support students to do higher-level thinking with target words. These activities can be beneficial for reinforcing key ideas and making cross-curricular connections.” One example activity is Word Relationships. The materials state, “In pairs, each student has a target word on a card. Sharing their words with each other, students discuss similarities between their words. Ask pairs to form groups of four to see if students can find similarities among the four words.” The teacher directions for this page state, “Here are additional creative ways to support students to do higher-level thinking with target words. These activities can be beneficial for reinforcing key ideas and making cross-curricular connections.” 

  • In Unit 5, the Additional Materials tab provides Independent Reading and Book Club Resources. The materials provide reading responses students can use for their independent reading log. The materials contain a section called Reading Responses for More Advanced Analysis. An example of a response is, “Significant Passage: Describe or quote from a passage that you feel is most important to the meaning of the whole text or a part of the text. Explain what makes this passage especially meaningful to the other parts of the text. Which words and phrases stand out as particularly important? Why might the author have chosen to include this passage, or particular words, phrases, and lines from the passage?” There are no clear teacher directions on when to use these questions.

Indicator 3o

Narrative Only

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

Materials provide varied approaches to learning tasks over time. Opportunities for students to demonstrate and monitor their learning are also varied. Research units and Related Media projects provide inquiry opportunities for students. Every unit ends with a culminating task that provides evidence of student thinking over time. Materials provide a variety of approaches for ongoing review, reflection, and feedback through During Reading questions, comprehension checks, rubrics, and peer review. Students monitor and set goals for their learning through Unit Introduction self-checks, beginning-of-the-unit writing assessments, and rubrics for culminating tasks. 

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

  • Every grade level has one assigned research unit in which students investigate and gather information to support a claim. Students “engage in a cyclical process of inquiry to explore important issues and topics and present their findings in various forms. The program provides students opportunities to engage in informal and formal research projects…” Related Media lessons provide opportunities for students to complete short inquiry-based research projects. These projects support students “in gathering and synthesizing information from various multimedia and multimodal texts (videos, podcasts, graphs, charts, and infographics) in order to present their learning through writing and/or speaking.”

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

  • Every unit ends with a culminating task in which “Students take their culminating tasks through the writing process, developing and refining their ideas, conveying them clearly, and showcasing their mastery of the unit’s content and skills.” One example of a task and prompt that requires students to demonstrate changes in thinking and apply understanding of new contexts is the Unit 2 culminating task, which asks, “What will it take to achieve success this school year? Prepare a presentation explaining how you will use the ingredients from the recipe for success to be successful this school year. Use examples from the texts and videos in this unit to support the information in your presentation. Your presentation must include a visual component to convey information.”

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

  • Materials offer a variety of formats and methods over time to deepen student understanding. Students participate in formats such as Teacher-Led that may entail reading modalities that are whole class, partner, or independent. Students participate in Independent work, which requires longer chunks of independent reading. Students participate in Student-Led small groups where students work in groups of three to five and “answer the During Reading Questions and alternate readers to read sections aloud.” Students also work with partners for Turn and Talk and Think and Share.

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

  • Materials provide opportunities for ongoing review. Reading lessons include During Reading questions, which provide review and practice while reading texts. Reading lessons also contain independent practice opportunities that assess comprehension of the text and standards taught in the lesson. 

  • Materials provide opportunities for self-reflection. In Unit 2, Related Media Exploration: What are the characteristics of effective practice?, students complete the lesson with Independent Reflection. For example, students are directed to “Think about how this exploration adds to your understanding of what it takes to achieve success.” All Related Media lessons contain an independent reflection opportunity. 

  • Materials include lessons for Peer Review for culminating tasks. These lessons include checklists for feedback and provide peer feedback based on the checklists that include required elements. 

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

  • Materials provide opportunities for students to monitor and set goals for their own learning. Unit Introduction lessons include opportunities for students to rate how they feel about unit themes and topics under Exploring the Unit’s Big Ideas. Students rate their confidence level in reading, writing, and speaking and listening skills. They rate themselves on their skills and monitor themselves as they complete tasks.

  • Materials provide access to student performance. Although the materials provide a limited exploration of the student performance tool, it appears that once students complete an assessment, they are able to view assignment averages, highest performance, and areas that need improvement. 

  • Materials provide rubrics for culminating and writing tasks. Students can use these rubrics to monitor and improve their culminating tasks and writing within the unit and throughout the year. 

Indicator 3p

Narrative Only

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

Materials provide grouping strategies for students. Materials provide for varied types of interaction among students. Types of interactions among students include Whole Class Partner Work, including Think Share, Turn and Talk, Student-Led Discussions, Further Analysis responses, and Independent work. Little guidance is found around how students might best interact when paired or working in small groups. Materials provide guidance for teachers in Reading and Related Media lessons that suggest grouping strategies and explain why the strategy was chosen for the specific lesson. Teachers find guidance under the Notes for Teachers and How do I facilitate this lesson? Sections. 

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

  • The materials provide a variety of grouping strategies for reading and discussion. Whole class reading involves all students receiving shared guidance on the same text. Collaborative reading includes student-led partner or small group reading. Two or more students work together on the same text and share task responsibilities. Independent reading involves no support from peers or teachers. During Reading grouping strategies include Think and Share and Turn and Talk in order to clarify understanding and establish new ideas. 

  • In Unit 4, Reading Lesson: “Plenty of Fish in the Sea? Maybe Not,” students begin the lesson with whole class reading. While reading, students turn to a partner for Think and Share to respond to questions for paragraphs 1-3. For example, instructions state the following: “Think & Share: How did refrigeration affect the amount of fish that humans consume?” In the same lesson, students engage in a student-led discussion with a partner, responding to three questions with one example asking, “Do you find it surprising that, in 30 years, we could have a world without seafood? How do you think that humans could adapt to this drastic change?”

  • In Unit 6, Related Media Exploration 2: “What does the perfect recess look like?” students engage in Partner Exploration. The lesson requires students to “collaboratively engage with videos, images, and an infographic, reflect on different types of recess, and discuss what they’ve learned.” Throughout the lesson, students engage in Turn and Talk and respond to questions such as, “What planning might be required to have a recess like this?”

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

  • Two areas in Reading and Related Media lessons provide guidance for grouping consistently across units and grade levels. Each of these lessons provides Notes to Teachers, which outlines how to group students for each particular lesson. Each of these lessons includes a How do I Facilitate this lesson? Section, which provides three options for grouping students for that particular lesson. 

  • In Unit 1, Reading Lesson: “Do People Really Change?,” guidance on grouping is found in the Notes to Teachers section. Guidance suggests, “This lesson is designed to be a whole class lesson because it introduces the thematic focus of character change, which students will further develop in the following reading lesson. Use the recommended reading modalities (whole class, partner, independent) and the During Reading Questions.”

  • In Unit 1, Reading Lesson: “Do People Really Change?,” teachers are provided three options under the How to Facilitate the lesson section. The recommended option is teacher-led, scaffolded, and supportive, with guidance that states, “Use the recommended reading modalities (whole class, partner, independent).” Option two suggests Independent work and provides suggestions for facilitation. Option three suggests a group activity and provides suggestions for facilitation.

Indicator 3q

1 / 2

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

The materials reviewed for Grade 6 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 3q. 

The materials provide some strategies and supports for students who read, write, and/or speak a language other than English. The Program Guides provide a list of supports for English Learners. The Program Guides also provide a list of teacher-led strategies and explanations for how CommonLit 360 tools and resources can be used to help. The materials include resources in written and audible modes and provide many During Reading questions teachers can use to check for understanding. Discussion stems are also provided for all discussion lessons. While the materials provide some strategies and materials, they do not provide information within the lessons to help teachers utilize those resources to help English Language Learners. All guidance is provided for the teachers in the Program Guide and is not specific for each unit or lesson.  

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

  • The Program Guide contains a section titled Support for English Learners. The guide lists the practices that the materials include. The practices include Use Background Knowledge, Engage in Meaningful and Intellectually Challenging Interactions, Build Academic English and Content Knowledge, Utilize Scaffolds, and Accommodations for English Learners. 

    • Under Accommodations for English Learners, the strategies include, but are not limited to, “pointing out cognates to key vocabulary to leverage first-language skills,” “breaking down routine and directions into shorter, more manageable segments,” and “using flexible grouping by strategically grouping students according to home language.” 

    • Under Use Background Knowledge, the materials state, “At the beginning of each unit, teachers are provided with unit introductions, which create opportunities to connect students’ prior knowledge to the new content in order to leverage students’ languages, literacy, culture, and other experiences…” There are no further teacher prompts or directions in the Unit introductions on how to utilize the introductions to support English Language Learners. 

  • In Unit 1, Discussion Lesson, the materials provide a Discussion Preparation Student Copy document. This document includes a list of Discussion Sentence Starters. This list includes: 

    • “An Idea I have is… 

    • I noticed that…

    • I can’t stop thinking…

    • I’m wondering…

    • A thought I’m developing is…”

The Program Guide states, “Carefully constructed questions promote extended discussion about academic content using supports such as sentence stems.” There is no further guidance for the teacher within the discussion lesson on how to help English Language Learners. 

Indicator 3r

Narrative Only

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

Materials, including texts and assessments, depict characters and individuals of varying ages, genders, races, and ethnicities. Materials typically present diversities in a positive light. Materials do not include images that contain people of various demographics or people of various physical characteristics. Depictions include, but are not limited to, cultural acceptance of a Sioux grandfather and the positive aspects of failure, as expressed by Michael Jordan. Materials avoid stereotypes and offensive language, celebrate cultural differences and share a fictional setting of a gender-free society. 

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

  • In Unit 1, Planning the Culminating Task: Literary Analysis Essay, students write an essay and cite evidence from the text, determining and stating the theme of “The Medicine Bag” by Virginia Hawk Sneve. The author, a member of the Rosebud Sioux tribe, focuses her stories on Native Americans. The main character, a young boy of ten, grapples with his Sioux grandfather’s culture and traditions as he accepts a medicine bag and the tradition that comes with it. 

  • In Unit 2, students plan for an informational presentation as they gain knowledge from unit texts about the recipe for success in life. These texts include depictions of different genders, races, and ethnicities, such as “Michael Jordan: A Profile in Failure,” which tells the story of a legendary African American basketball player who must fail to succeed. Another text used for this assessment is “Life’s Work: An Interview with Yo-Yo Ma.” Yo-Yo Ma is an American Cellist born to Chinese parents. The reader learns about the habits of a successful string musician of a different ethnicity. “Spelling Their Way to Access” expresses the success of immigrants in the United States in the Scripps National Spelling Bee. The text states, “Dr. Natarajan, who hailed from Bolingbrook, Ill., was the first South Asian-American to win the contest. He was 13, and it was his third appearance at the national bee.”

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

  • In Unit 1, Planning the Culminating Task: Literary Analysis Essay, students read “The Medicine Bag” by Virginia Hawk Sneve, which highlights the differences between the American and Sioux Tribe cultures. The grandfather dresses differently than the main character’s culture, yet the short story portrays the boy’s understanding of his ancestry and longing to carry out the traditions. 

  • In Unit 2, students read texts that address the trials and tribulations of different ethnicities, ages, and genders. The message is the same throughout the unit, addressing how failure may lead to success and that everyone, no matter age, race, or gender, can achieve success and learn the recipe to success. 

  • In Unit 3, Planning the Culminating Task: Literary Analysis Essay, students respond to, “How does Jonas’s understanding of his community change from the beginning to the end of The Giver by Lois Lowry?” The Giver, by Lois Lowry, creates a society that is described as gender-free and post-gender. Male and female characters are portrayed as equals, breaking the gender barrier. 

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

  • Photos do not depict people throughout all grade levels. Most often, photos represent hands or feet or distant photos that cannot be analyzed beyond the vague depiction. Students do view videos that depict diversity in the Related Media Lessons throughout each grade level.

Indicator 3s

Narrative Only

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

The materials provide some suggestions and strategies for using home language to support students in learning English Language Arts. The Program Guide suggests that teachers use the students’ first language skills to help them better understand vocabulary and comprehend text. There are no specific examples within the materials on how teachers can facilitate this. The materials, including text, directions, and questions/prompts, can be translated into a wide variety of languages. The Program Guide provides research that shows the benefits of building on students’ cultural and language diversity; however, there are no specific directions and examples on how to use this within the materials. 

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

  • The Program Guide contains a section titled Support for English Learners. Some of the suggestions include:

    • “pointing out cognates to key vocabulary to leverage first-language skills.

    • encouraging students to leverage cognates in their native language to facilitate comprehension of text.”

  • The online materials will translate directions, texts, and questions/prompts into a wide variety of languages. This feature is available on the student view for students to utilize. 

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

  • The Program Guide contains a section titled Support for English Learners. In this section, the materials state, “English Learners benefit from access to language development in an environment that values their linguistic and cultural diversity as they engage in content work at grade-level expectations.” 

  • The Research and Evidence Base document states the following about English Learners: “Teachers benefit from being trained on best practices for teaching ELs, including strategies for building on students’ prior knowledge and designing language learning with attention to the sociocultural context. (Valdés, Bunch et al., 2005; Lucas & Villegas, 2011; Bunch et al., 2012; Walqui & Heritage, 2012; Gandara & Santibanez, 2016).”

Indicator 3t

Narrative Only

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

The materials do not include teacher guidance on how to engage culturally diverse students in the learning of ELA. The materials do not include equity guidance and opportunities. Materials do not include prompts that allow students to share personal experiences. The materials provide the ability to translate reading lesson texts into other languages. 

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

  • No evidence found

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

  • No evidence found

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

  • No evidence found

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

  • The digital reading lessons have a drop down menu allowing the text to be translated into other languages.

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

  • No evidence found

Indicator 3u

Narrative Only

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Indicator 3v

Narrative Only

This is not an assessed indicator in ELA.

Criterion 3.4: Intentional Design

Narrative Only

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

The materials integrate technology in ways that engage students in grade-level standards. Materials include digital technology and interactive tools like annotation, highlighting, increased and decreased font size, text and question translation, and text and question read-aloud options. Graphic organizers, worksheets, or other documents that students fill in are Google Docs, allowing for customization as needed. Opportunities for collaboration are possible in the Google Doc format.

The materials provide teacher guidance for using embedded technology in the Program Guide. The Program Guide explains how lessons can be assigned and how some lessons provide the option to download a PDF or a Google Doc. The Program Guide provides guidance for sharing multimedia resources linked through an external website.

Materials have a visual design that supports learning. The design is not chaotic, nor does it distract from student learning. The layout and structure of the teacher materials make navigating units and lessons easy. Student handouts and materials mimic Teacher versions.

Narrative Only
Narrative Only
Narrative Only
Narrative Only

Indicator 3w

Narrative Only

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

Materials include digital technology and interactive tools like annotation, highlighting, increased and decreased font size, text and question translation, and text and question read-aloud options. Students can access During Reading questions and tasks by clicking on icons within the text, or accessing them at the bottom of the page. Related Media Explorations provide engaging videos and content within the materials. Graphic organizers, worksheets, or other documents that students fill in are Google Docs, allowing for customization as needed. 

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

  • The Student View for most of the lessons includes a Read Aloud feature, where students can have all parts of the text and questions read aloud to them. The materials also provide a translate feature that translates the texts and questions to a variety of different languages. Students can also change the font size between small, medium, large, and extra large. 

  • The Student View has activities listed in a button after each paragraph or groups of paragraphs where students can click to see the questions or tasks. Students can also click on a tab at the bottom of the page to see all the questions and activities. 

  • The Student View includes an annotate feature on some lessons, such as writing lessons. According to the materials, “Students can either import previous annotations from texts they’ve been assigned or add new annotations.” 

  • The My Classes tab includes an opportunity for teachers to view student performance. Teachers may view student data collected through the materials. This includes submitted assignments, assignment performance by standard, and individual standard analysis.

Digital tools support student engagement in ELA. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • The materials include all mentor texts (other than novel sets) in an interactive online setting. Reading passages contain notes at the bottom, often to provide definitions and other footnotes. 

  • During Reading questions and tasks can be accessed throughout the text or at the bottom of the page. Students can type their responses to questions in the boxes provided. Students can also highlight sections of the text and annotate the text to help with answering questions and responding to tasks. 

  • Slide decks are included in many lessons to introduce the topic and provide explanations. For example, Related Media Exploration lessons include slide decks with videos included in the slide deck for students to access.

Digital materials can be customized for local use (i.e., student and/or community interests). Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Most documents that ask for students to type in can be opened as a Google Doc or Google Slide. This allows the teacher to edit the documents as needed to customize them. 

Indicator 3x

Narrative Only

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

Materials include digital technology throughout the unit. Digital collaboration is not clear. Opportunities for collaboration are possible in the Google Doc format; however, no reference or guidance is suggested in the materials besides indirectly in the Student-Led Discussions found in some reading lessons. 

Materials include or reference digital technology that provides opportunities for teachers and/or students to collaborate with each other, when applicable. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Materials include digital student copies they can use to collaborate. Many of the lessons include Student-Led discussions. Directions state, “Discuss the questions with a partner. Record both of your answers to the questions. Practice speaking with academic language by using the discussion sentence starters.”

  • Students and teachers use digital materials in every lesson. Although digital technology collaboration is not specifically referenced, students have opportunities to use their digital copies to collaborate with their peers. Digital copies are also submitted to teachers.

Indicator 3y

Narrative Only

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

Materials have a visual design that supports learning. The design is not chaotic, nor does it distract from student learning. The layout and structure of the teacher materials make navigating units and lessons easy. Student handouts and materials mimic Teacher versions. One page smoothly links to the next, starting with the overview of the grade down to the individual lessons of units. Materials appear to be free from errors.

Images, graphics, and models support student learning and engagement without being visually distracting. Images, graphics, and models clearly communicate information or support student understanding of topics, texts, or concepts. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Teacher materials use icons to identify instructional approaches such as Teacher-Led, Independent Work, and Group Activity. Other icons, such as a computer screen, pencil, desk, and speech bubbles, indicate the type of activity students will engage in for each part of the lesson. 

  • Student materials include green information and access buttons, arrows with labels, a world icon for language access, and a volume icon for read-aloud access. There may be more features available as evidence is based on access to one reading lesson.

  • The digital facing of the Teacher materials for each grade level includes a small, colorful image that ties to the theme/concept of each unit. Six units are simply represented with unit title and number, image, type of unit, and length of unit. 

  • Each unit is simply identified by lesson number and title of the lesson, allowing easy navigation throughout the unit. All units begin with a Unit Introduction lesson that includes a slide deck that “introduces students to the unit’s topics and texts through engaging discussion!” 

Teacher and student materials are consistent in layout and structure across lessons/modules/units. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Materials appear to be consistent between teacher and student materials. The student materials are assigned by the teacher. Students view assigned lessons, completing them one part at a time. The student view mirrors the components found in the teacher’s student copy lessons. Students do not see the entire lesson at one time as viewed in the Teacher Copy but instead view the lesson one task at a time. 

  • Most lessons provide a student and teacher digital copy. Those digital copies are identical in layout and design. Students do not view the same copy as the teacher but instead view the lesson part by part. The teacher copy differs in that it provides information about the lesson and how it ties into the entire unit, standard information, guidance for facilitating, and possible answers to During Reading questions and other independent and paired student tasks. 

  • The overview page for the entire curriculum allows access to all grade levels by clicking on the grade level tab. A brief summary of all that is included in the ELA curriculum can be found here. Curriculum essentials such as Scope and Sequence PDF, Introductory Webinar, Program Guide PDF, and Research and Evidence PDF are linked on this page. 

  • Each grade level page contains digital access to all six units divided in rectangles with information for each unit that includes Unit number and title, type of unit, and suggested pacing for unit. There is another link on this page to Scope and Sequence. 

  • Unit pages provide access to separate page tabs, such as Unit Overview. This tab provides access to three links: About this Unit, Text Lists, and Writing Lessons At-A-Glance. Unit Overview provides a Unit Introduction video, a description of the Culminating Unit task, a checklist of what students will be able to do at the end of the unit, and a checklist as to why students will love this unit. The Text list lists all the text titles, authors, Lexiles, and descriptions of the text. Writing Lessons-At-A-Glance lists the writing lessons and describes the lesson focus. The materials do not provide a student view of the entire student text. 

  • Lessons and Materials provides a vertical list of lessons that includes estimated time frames to facilitate the lesson and a drop-down show more tab. The drop-down list leads to a description of the lesson and a link to preview or assign the lesson. This link opens up a new window that allows downloading of the teacher and student copy of the lesson. The materials do not provide a clear view of what students see beyond the lesson assigned. 

  • Professional Development has two links: Self-Paced Training and How-To-Guidance. Self-paced training provides a PDF and slideshow that is not accessible without a paywall. The How-To-Guidance section includes access to free resources that “provide teachers research-based instructional strategies and time-saving tips to get the most out of CommonLit 360.”

Organizational features (Table of Contents, glossary, index, internal references, table headers, captions, etc.) in the materials are clear, accurate, and error-free. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Materials appear to be free from errors. Some links are not accessible to review without a paywall. A full unit view was not found in the student version. 

Indicator 3z

Narrative Only

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

The materials provide teacher guidance for using embedded technology in the Program Guide. The Program Guide explains how lessons can be assigned and how some lessons provide the option to download a PDF or a Google Doc. The Program Guide provides guidance for sharing multimedia resources linked through an external website.

Materials provide teacher guidance for the use of embedded technology to support and enhance student learning, when applicable. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • In the Program Guide, under the section titled Lessons and Materials in 360 Units, the materials state, “All texts can be assigned digitally, and most can be downloaded as a PDF or used as part of a hybrid lesson (combined digital and PDF).” 

  • In the Program Guide, under the section titled Lessons and Materials in 360 Units, the materials state the following about multimedia resources that are linked through an external website: “When assigning such materials, teachers should review each source and its associated website beforehand to evaluate its content for their students. Teachers can make instructional decisions based on their students’ needs and backgrounds.” 

  • In the Program Guide, under CommonLit360 Implementation Guidance, the materials provide suggestions for implementing the materials, including how to use the digital resource. One example under Annotation Tasks states, “On the Digital Platform: CommonLit’s digital platform contains an annotation tool that students can use to highlight text and make notes as they read. You may wish to model the use of this tool using a smartboard or projector before releasing your students to independent work. Please note that teachers can also review and respond to student annotations through the digital platform.”