3rd-5th Grade - Gateway 1
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Gateway Ratings Summary
Alignment to Research-Based Practices
Alignment to Research-Based Practices and Standards for Foundational Skills InstructionGateway 1 (Fifth Grade) - Meets Expectations | 100% |
|---|---|
Criterion 1.1: Application of Foundational Skills for Word Reading | 24 / 24 |
Criterion 1.2: Word Recognition and Word Analysis | 12 / 12 |
Criterion 1.3: Fluency | 8 / 8 |
The myView materials meet expectations for Gateway 1 by providing a clear, research-based scope and sequence that systematically builds advanced word-reading, word recognition, word analysis, and fluency in Grade 5. Instruction explicitly supports multisyllabic decoding and morpheme analysis through a structured progression that reviews foundational patterns and advances to complex syllable types, division strategies, and morphological elements, emphasizing flexible application over rigid routines. Lessons integrate consistent teacher modeling, guided practice, corrective feedback, and scaffolded routines, guiding students to decode and encode multisyllabic words through structured word study, foldable readables, and core texts.
Word recognition and analysis instruction includes systematic teaching of spelling patterns, syllable structures, and Greek and Latin roots, with clear connections to pronunciation and meaning. Morphological analysis is embedded across literary, science, and social studies texts, reinforcing vocabulary development and deepening understanding of word structure in diverse contexts. Fluency is supported through repeated readings, partner reading, poetry routines, and small-group work, with teachers guided to model, provide feedback, and connect expressive oral reading to comprehension.
Assessment opportunities are systematically embedded throughout all components, including weekly checks, progress assessments, and Cold Reads that provide clear benchmarks and guidance for interpreting results and planning reteaching, enrichment, and grouping. Overall, the materials deliver comprehensive, explicit foundational skills instruction aligned to research-based practices and standards for developing fluent, meaningful reading in Grade 5.
Criterion 1.1: Application of Foundational Skills for Word Reading
This criterion is non-negotiable. Materials must achieve a specified minimum score in this criterion to advance to the next gateway.
Materials support students in applying advanced word-reading strategies–including multisyllabic decoding and morpheme analysis–to build accurate, automatic, and meaningful reading.
Note: Criterion 1.3 is non-negotiable. Instructional materials being reviewed must score Meet Expectations in this criterion to proceed to Gateway 3.
The myView materials meet expectations for Criterion 1.3 by providing explicit, systematic instruction that supports students in applying advanced word-reading strategies—including multisyllabic decoding and morpheme analysis—to build accurate and automatic reading. Instruction follows a structured progression that reviews foundational patterns and advances to more complex syllable types, division strategies, and morphological elements, with an emphasis on flexible application over rigid routines. Lessons integrate phoneme-grapheme correspondences and morphological structures, guiding students to decode and encode multisyllabic words through structured word study lessons, foldable readables, and core texts.
Materials include systematic modeling and guided practice of multisyllabic word reading strategies, with explicit teacher demonstrations using graphic organizers, syllable pattern analysis, and blending and segmenting activities. Dictation tasks reinforce decoding and encoding of multisyllabic words with embedded morphemes, supported by corrective feedback prompts such as “If…then” scaffolds and “Make It Easier” routines that help teachers address errors by revisiting prerequisite skills. Students engage in frequent, varied opportunities to decode and encode multisyllabic words with advanced patterns and affixes through word study routines, sentence writing, and text-based examples that connect decoding, spelling, and meaning.
Spelling instruction follows a logical progression aligned to grade-level expectations, integrating advanced syllable types, Greek and Latin roots, and derivational affixes, with clear explanations that connect spelling patterns to pronunciation and meaning. Students apply spelling generalizations across connected word study, decoding tasks, and sentence writing, supported by collaborative and independent routines. Assessments are systematically embedded through diagnostic and formative measures, including word study tasks, progress check-ups, and standards practice that evaluate multisyllabic word division and suffix application. Teachers receive clear guidance and digital tools for interpreting results and planning targeted instruction through grouping, reteaching, and differentiation. Overall, the materials deliver explicit, systematic instruction and practice that support the application of advanced word-reading strategies aligned to research-based expectations in Grade 5.
Indicator 1g
Materials support students in applying a range of evidence-based strategies to read and spell multisyllabic words in connected text, including syllable division, syllable types, and morpheme-based approaches.
The application of multisyllabic word reading strategies in myView meets the expectations for Indicator 1g. Materials include explicit, grade-appropriate instruction in syllable types, syllable division, and morpheme-based approaches, with repeated opportunities to apply these strategies in connected text. Word study lessons model decoding of multisyllabic words with patterns such as VCe, final stable syllables, and open/closed syllables. Students apply these patterns through integrated reading, writing, and spelling tasks, including foldable readables and core texts. Instruction emphasizes flexible application over rigid routines by prompting students to analyze word structure, affixes, and roots in context. Opportunities for teachers to reteach and reinforce prerequisite skills are embedded through informal monitoring and reteaching routines, supporting student progress toward accuracy and automaticity with grade-level word reading expectations.
Materials emphasize flexible application over fixed sequences, with supports for targeted review of prerequisite skills as needed.
In Unit 4, Week 1, Lesson 2, materials emphasize flexible application of morpheme knowledge through analysis of word parts and related words. In the Word Study lesson, the teacher introduces the prefixes pro-, com-, and con- using the word community from Keeping Mr. John Holton Alive by Christopher Paul Curtis. Students discuss how the prefix com- relates to the idea of togetherness and how word structure conveys meaning. In the Academic Vocabulary lesson, students explore related words derived from favor, including favorite and disfavor, using dictionaries and context to determine meaning and grammatical function. These tasks support strategic, meaning-based application of word-reading knowledge in connected text.
In Unit 3, Week 1, Lesson 2, Word Study: Latin Roots, materials support flexible application of morpheme knowledge by prompting students to analyze the Latin root mem in the word memories from paragraph 38 of Love, Amalia by Alma Flor Ada and Gabriel M. Zubizarreta. The teacher explains that mem means “remember,” then guides students in brainstorming related words such as memorize, memoir, memento, and commemorate. Volunteers explain how the root meaning connects to each word, reinforcing strategic analysis of word parts and supporting transfer of knowledge to unfamiliar multisyllabic words.
Materials include explicit, grade-appropriate instruction for applying multisyllabic word reading strategies, including syllable types, syllable division, and morpheme-based approaches.
In Unit 1, Week 5, Lesson 3, Word Study: VCe Syllables, materials include explicit, grade-appropriate instruction in applying the VCe syllable pattern to decode multisyllabic words. The teacher models how silent e signals long vowel sounds in words such as lemonade, bedside, and rewrote, while also addressing exceptions like love and give. Students decode additional words including exercise and multitude, practicing flexible pronunciation of vowel sounds within VCe syllables. Instruction concludes with integrated reading, writing, and spelling tasks using the online word study slide to reinforce decoding accuracy and syllable knowledge.
In Unit 2, Week 3, Lesson 4, Word Study: Final Stable Syllables, the teacher provides explicit instruction in decoding multisyllabic words with -le, -tion, and -sion syllable types. The lesson begins with a review of final stable syllables and their consistent sound-spelling patterns. Students use a graphic organizer to record words such as bundle, position, and television, underlining the final syllable in each. The teacher models syllable division (e.g., bun/dle) and pronunciation, guiding students to decode and spell words using these patterns.
Materials provide structured, embedded opportunities for students to decode and encode multisyllabic words in connected text, with instructional goals aligned to grade-level expectations for fluent word reading.
In Unit 1, Week 5, Lesson 3, materials provide structured, embedded opportunities for students to decode multisyllabic words using VCe syllable patterns. The teacher models how to decode words such as exercise, multitude, unbroken, and awoken, guiding students to identify vowel sounds and recognize how suffixes may alter word structure without changing pronunciation. Students apply this knowledge in integrated reading, writing, and spelling tasks using the online word study slide. The foldable readable Earthquake Search and Rescue Heroes reinforces this instruction by prompting students to circle words with long a and long e spelled VCe, read them aloud, and sort by syllable count. These tasks support grade-level decoding and fluency goals by embedding syllable analysis within connected text.
In Unit 2, Week 2, Lesson 3, materials provide structured, embedded opportunities for students to decode and encode multisyllabic words with final stable syllables. The teacher models how to divide and analyze words such as position and reliable, prompting students to identify the final stable syllables -tion and -ble and to spell and pronounce each syllable. Students then extend this practice using the online word study slide for integrated reading, writing, and spelling. In the foldable reading The Shot Heard Round the World, students circle words ending in -le, underline those ending in -tion, and box those ending in -sion. They analyze pronunciation patterns and respond to a comprehension question, reinforcing fluency goals by applying syllable analysis within connected text.
Materials include guidance and supports for reviewing prerequisite foundational skills or identifying students who may require targeted intervention, and monitoring progress toward accuracy and automaticity through informal and embedded assessment opportunities.
In Unit 2, Week 1, Lesson 5, Word Study: Open and Closed Syllables (V/CV and VC/V), materials include guidance for monitoring student progress and reteaching prerequisite decoding strategies. Teachers are prompted to revisit syllable types if students cannot correctly form, use, or spell words with these patterns. The reteaching routine reinforces that open syllables end in a vowel with a Long sound (e.g., do/na/tion) and closed syllables end in a consonant with a Short vowel sound (e.g., met/a/phor). The guidance supports instructional decision-making and helps build accuracy and automaticity with multisyllabic word reading.
Similar review and monitoring routines recur across units, with weekly Word Study lessons providing consistent opportunities for teachers to assess decoding accuracy and reteach foundational syllable patterns as needed. These supports help ensure students build fluency with multisyllabic word reading through targeted intervention and skill reinforcement.
Indicator 1h
Materials are absent of the three-cueing system.
The materials’ exclusion of three-cueing strategies meets expectations for indicator 1h. Materials do not include instructional language or routines that rely on the three-cueing system. Lessons focus on explicit instruction in phoneme-grapheme correspondences and phonics-based decoding. When students encounter unfamiliar words, instruction emphasizes attention to letter-sound relationships rather than relying on context or visual cues to guess the word.
Materials do not contain elements of instruction that are based on the three-cueing system for teaching decoding.
The materials do not contain elements of instruction that are based on the three-cueing system for teaching decoding.
Indicator 1i
Not assessed in Grades 3-5.
Indicator 1j
Materials include systematic and explicit modeling and guided practice in applying multisyllabic word reading strategies, including syllable types, syllable division, and morpheme analysis.
The modeling and guided practice in applying multisyllabic word reading strategies in myView meet expectations for indicator 1j. The materials include explicit teacher modeling of multisyllabic word reading strategies using structured routines that address syllable types, syllable division, and morpheme-based approaches. Lessons guide teachers through systematic modeling that include opportunities for students to segment and blend syllables using graphic organizers and syllable pattern analysis. Guided dictation activities reinforce decoding and encoding of multisyllabic words with embedded morphemes, aligning to weekly instructional goals. Materials include corrective feedback prompts such as “If…then” scaffolds and “Make It Easier” routines that help teachers respond to student errors by reviewing prerequisite syllable type knowledge and reinforcing accurate multisyllabic word reading.
Materials contain explicit guidance for systematic and repeated teacher modeling of multisyllabic word reading strategies.
In Unit 5, Week 1, Lesson 1, Word Study: Open and Closed Syllables V/CV and VC/V, the teacher creates a graphic organizer and models dividing the words paper and talent. For paper, the teacher says, “First, I divide the word after the first vowel and pronounce its long vowel sound: pa/per…That is the V/CV pattern, and we say that the syllable is open.” For talent, the teacher tries the V/CV pattern first, then says, “Let’s try it the other way..tal/ent…this word has the VC/V pattern, and the first syllable is closed.” The routine continues with words like relax, human, and animal.
In the Reading Routines Companion, Side A, Syllable Patterns V/CV and VC/V, the teacher models dividing the word super and explains, “When there is one consonant between two vowels, we usually divide before the consonant. The first syllable ends in a vowel. It is an open syllable, and it spells the long vowel sound /ü/: su/per.” For finish, the teacher first tries dividing as fi/nish but determines fin/ish is more familiar and correct. The teacher explains, “A syllable that ends in a consonant is called a closed syllable and the vowel sound is short.”
Lessons include blending and segmenting practice using structured routines that reflect syllable division and morphological word parts.
In Unit 5, Week 1, Lesson 1, Word Study: Open and Closed V/CV and VC/V, students divide and read multisyllabic words using both V/CV and VC/V syllable patterns. The routine prompts them to segment each word into syllables (e.g., pa/per, tal/ent) and identify whether the first syllable is open or closed, based on vowel sound and syllable structure.
In the Reading Routines Companion, Open and Closed Syllables V/CV and VC/V, Side A, students engage in structured blending and syllable division practice with super, finish, and similar VCV-patterned words, applying their understanding of open and closed syllables to decode the word.
Lessons include guided spelling or dictation practice using grade-appropriate multisyllabic words with embedded morphemes.
In Unit 5, Week 1, Lesson 2, Word Study: Open and Closed Syllables V/CV and VC/V, the teacher conducts dictation with the sentences: “She declared that she never visited our nation’s capital,” and “I remember giving him paper and several pens.” Students repeat and write the sentences, then compare to a correct model and revise as needed. The materials instruct the teacher to “practice encoding words with open and closed syllables V/CV and VC/V by using instruction in spelling.”
In Unit 5, Week 2, Lesson 2, Word Study: Final Stable Syllables -le, -tion, -sion, the teacher conducts dictation using sentences such as, “He doubled the machine’s output by making a simple modification,” and “The solution to the problem was simple, but my division was faulty.” Students repeat and write each sentence, then compare their work to a displayed model and correct any errors. The materials direct the teacher to “practice encoding with final stable syllables -le, -tion, -sion by using instruction in spelling.”
Materials include teacher guidance for providing corrective feedback aligned to word-level reading and spelling strategies.
In the Reading Routines Companion, Open and Closed Syllables V/CV and VC/V, Side B, the materials provide corrective guidance: “If students have difficulty dividing and reading words with open and closed syllables, then model reading words with the VCV pattern again, using steps 2 and 3.
The Make It Easier activity directs the teacher to return to single-syllable practice. The teacher displays syllables such as hap, pre, ti, mis, com, and ba, and prompts students to identify whether each is open or closed, say the vowel sound, and read the syllable. Students are then challenged to say words that begin with each syllable.
Indicator 1k
Materials include frequent and varied opportunities for students to decode and encode multisyllabic words that contain advanced sound and spelling patterns, including affixes and syllable types.
The decoding and encoding practice opportunities in myView meet expectations for Indicator 1k. Materials provide frequent, varied opportunities for students to decode and encode multisyllabic words using grade-appropriate phonics patterns and affixes. Decoding instruction includes explicit modeling of syllable types (e.g., VCe, final stable syllables), affix analysis, and syllable division strategies. Students apply these strategies through word study routines, graphic organizers, and text-based examples. Encoding practice is embedded in sentence dictation, spelling routines, and word-building tasks aligned to newly taught suffixes. Students engage in guided and independent practice that reinforces word analysis, spelling conventions, and pronunciation accuracy. Instructional routines include Assess Understanding and Monitor Progress checkpoints to help teachers identify student needs and provide targeted reteaching, supporting the development of automaticity and fluency in word-level reading and spelling.
Lessons provide students with frequent opportunities for students to decode multisyllabic words containing grade-level sound and spelling patterns.
In Unit 1, Week 5, Lesson 1, Word Study: VCe Syllables, the teacher creates a graphic organizer and models identifying and decoding VCe syllables in multisyllabic words. For example, the teacher points to the word chase and highlights the VCe syllable ase, explaining that the a is Long and the final e is silent. The teacher then models decoding beside, identifying the VCe syllable ide in the second syllable and explaining that the i has a Long vowel sound. Students follow the same routine using additional examples to complete the graphic organizer.
In Unit 5, Week 1, Lesson 2, Word Study: Suffixes -ic, -ism, -ive, the teacher models forming new words from context using examples from the text. Words include heroic, economic, historic, optimism, skepticism, reflective, and supportive. Students work with a partner to write original sentences using at least one word with taught suffixes. The materials prompt students to use a dictionary to confirm spelling and meaning.
Lessons provide frequent opportunities for students to encode multisyllabic words through dictation, word building, or sentence-level tasks.
In Unit 3, Week 2, Lesson 2, Connect to Spelling, the teacher dictates two sentences for students to write: “The excellence of their skill and grace were on full display throughout the performance.” and “She is a scientist that specializes in desert environments.” After students repeat and write the sentences, the teacher displays the correct versions and prompts students to check and revise their work. The materials direct the teacher to “practice encoding words with suffixes ize, -ance, -ence, and -ist by using instruction in spelling.”.
In Unit 1, Writing, Week 2, Lesson 4, Spelling: Review Words with Suffixes -ic, -ism, -ive, students engage in structured word-building tasks to encode multisyllabic words. The teacher models how to alter the spelling of base words before adding suffixes, such as dropping the silent e from athlete to form athletic. Students then apply this process with additional base words (e.g., history, myth, narrative, relate) to form words like historic, mythic, realism, and relative. The guided routine emphasizes morphological awareness and reinforces spelling conventions for multisyllabic words with derivational suffixes, supporting accurate encoding through explicit instruction and structured practice.
Student-guided practice and independent practice includes varied activities focused on blending, segmenting, and analyzing multisyllabic words.
In Unit 1, Week 1, Lesson 2, Word Study: Suffix -ive, the teacher points out the word interrogation in paragraph 12 of the informational text Louie Share Kim, Paper Son. The base word interrogate is defined as “to question,” and a volunteer adds the suffix -ive to form interrogative, noting that the final e is dropped. Students discuss how suffixes change word meaning and part of speech, then explore the term interrogative sentence.
In Unit 2, Week 2, Lesson 2, Word Study: Final Stable Syllables -le, -tion, -sion, students engage in guided and independent analysis of multisyllabic words containing final stable syllables. The teacher models how to identify and underline the final syllable -tion in the word condition from the text A Place for Frogs by Melissa Stewart. Students then work in pairs to divide additional words (able, people) into syllables. The lesson continues with a collaborative search for other words with final stable syllables in A Place for Frogs and other texts in the Student Interactive. After identifying five to six words, students divide each into syllables, reinforcing segmenting and pattern recognition through varied multisyllabic word analysis.
Materials include structured practice designed to build accuracy and automaticity in word-level reading and spelling, with embedded opportunities for teachers to monitor progress and determine when students are approaching mastery.
In Unit 5, Week 2, Lesson 5 Word Study: Syllable Patterns, students are provided with a list of multisyllabic words such as definition, wilderness, suspension, automobile, and noticeable. The materials instruct students to divide each word into syllables and read them aloud fluently. The teacher is directed to monitor students’ understanding and, if needed, reteach the relevant syllable patterns. The materials reinforce key multisyllabic structures (e.g., closed, open, VCe, r-Controlled, vowel teams, and final stable syllables).
In Unit 1, Week 5, Lesson 5, Word Study: VCe Syllables, materials include structured practice to support accuracy and automaticity in decoding and spelling multisyllabic words with the VCe pattern. Students are provided with a list of words (e.g., telephone, confuse, tightrope, attentive, surprise, trombone, forgotten, deviate) and prompted to identify which words contain a VCe syllable with a Long vowel sound. This Assess Understanding task requires students to analyze vowel pronunciation and spelling patterns. The accompanying Monitor Progress guidance directs the teacher to reteach the VCe pattern using additional multisyllabic words if students cannot accurately form, use, or spell target words. Instruction reinforces VCe generalizations, including rules for silent e, vowel pronunciation shifts (e.g., refuse, altitude), and common exceptions (e.g., olive, undone), supporting responsive instruction and student mastery of advanced vowel-consonant-e spelling patterns.
Indicator 1l
Spelling rules and generalizations are introduced in a logical progression, embedded in grade-level content, and connected to word structure. Students receive sufficient practice to support accurate and automatic spelling.
The instruction and practice of spelling rules and generalizations in myView meet expectations for Indicator 1l. Spelling instruction follows a structured, grade-level progression aligned to expectations for multisyllabic word reading and spelling, integrating advanced syllable types, Greek and Latin roots, and derivational affixes. Materials include clear explanations of spelling rules, word parts, and patterns, with guidance that connects word structure to pronunciation and meaning. Students have frequent opportunities to apply spelling generalizations through connected word study, sentence writing, and decoding tasks that promote accuracy and automaticity. Instruction includes collaborative and independent routines supported by teacher modeling and embedded word analysis across units.
Spelling rules and generalizations are taught in a logical order aligned to grade-level word reading and spelling expectations, including morphological patterns.
The Grade 5 English Foundational Skills and Word Study Scope and Sequence outlines a structured and intentional progression of spelling and word analysis instruction.
In Unit 1, students study suffixes (-ic, -ism, -ive, -able, -ible), vowel teams, and Greek roots such as chron, meter, photo, bio, geo, logy, along with ice syllables.
Unit 2 introduces advanced syllable patterns (V/CV and VC/V), final stable syllables (-le, -tion, -sion), r-Controlled vowels, and prefixes including il-, in-, im-, ir-. In addition, base word and affix relationships are introduced.
Unit 3 emphasizes Latin roots (plot, dict, sect, ten) and derivational suffixes (-ize, -ance, -ence, -ist, -ous, -eous, -ious), along with instruction in unusual spelling patterns and syllable division strategies.
Unit 4 includes word formation with prefixes (com-, pro-, con-, anti-, mid-, trans-, sub-, super-) and roots from both Greek (graph, micro, tele) and Latin (audi, struct, script, spec).
Unit 5 addresses consonant and vowel changes in multisyllabic words, schwa patterns, and syllable-level spelling shifts.
Materials include clear explanations for spelling of specific words and word parts, including rules, patterns, and meaningful units (e.g., roots, prefixes, suffixes).
According to the Proven Practices in the Science of Reading Word Study section, spelling instruction in Grades 3-5 builds on students’ understanding of word structure. The program emphasizes that English spelling preserves morphological relationships, and that learning to recognize and apply those structures improves decoding, spelling, and vocabulary (Cunningham, 1998). Students are explicitly taught to examine longer words for recognizable chunks and morphemes. Instruction includes explanations of complex spellings, morphological units (e.g., -ive, -sion, -able), and syllabication rules. The Reading Routines Companion and Teacher Edition guide teachers in making these connections explicit during instruction using generalization explanations and examples embedded in core texts.
Students have frequent opportunities to practice spelling rules and generalizations through connected tasks that promote accuracy and automaticity.
In Unit 3, Week 3, Lesson 3, Word Study: Unusual Spellings, students engage in connected tasks to analyze and apply irregular spelling patterns in multisyllabic words. The teacher models decoding the word fuchsia, explaining that although ch typically spells /ch/, in this word the ch is silent and the s spells /sh/. Students repeat the process with additional words such as February and mischievous, confirming pronunciations using a dictionary and identifying irregularities in their spelling. Instruction continues with an online word study slide for reading, writing, and spelling words with unusual spellings. Students complete the activity and share their answers with a partner, reinforcing accuracy and automaticity through collaborative analysis and spelling application.
In Unit 5, Week 2, Lesson 3, Word Study: Syllable Patterns, students apply spelling generalizations through connected multisyllabic word tasks. The teacher models how to divide the word remarkable into syllables by identifying familiar syllable types: open (re), closed (mark), and final stable syllable (-ble). The teacher writes the word with syllable breaks: re/mark/a/ble, emphasizing how syllable knowledge supports pronunciation and spelling. Students then apply this process to the word demonstrate by identifying syllable patterns and dividing the word accordingly. The lesson concludes with an online word study slide for integrated reading, writing, and spelling practice, followed by a sentence writing activity that reinforces syllable generalizations and supports spelling accuracy and automaticity in context.
Indicator 1m
Not assessed in Grades 3-5.
Indicator 1n
Materials include targeted assessment opportunities that identify students who require additional support with foundational phonics skills and provide guidance for appropriate instructional responses.
The phonics assessment opportunities and instructional responses in myView meet expectations for Indicator 1n. The materials include diagnostic and formative assessments such as Word Study Practice, Progress Check-Ups, and Standards Practice tasks that measure grade-level phonics skills, including multisyllabic word division and application of derivational suffixes. These tasks are embedded at key points and allow teachers to identify students requiring additional phonics support. The Assessment Guide and Savvas Realize platform provide clear guidance for interpreting results through skill-specific reports and performance breakdowns, enabling teachers to monitor progress and plan targeted instruction. Materials offer embedded pathways for grouping, reteaching, and differentiation based on student data, ensuring alignment between assessment outcomes and instructional supports.
Materials include diagnostic and/or formative assessments that may be administered at entry points or as needed to identify students requiring additional phonics support. These assessments are not expected to be part of routine whole-class instruction.
In the Unit 1, Week 1, Word Study Practice, students work with the suffixes -ic, -ism, and -ive. The lesson asks students to read the definition of the base word (e.g., defense), then define the derived word (defensive) and write a sentence using both. Student responses can reveal whether they are able to apply suffix patterns to decode and construct meaning from multisyllabic words.
In the Unit 2, Week 1, Progress Check-Up, students are asked: “Which word is correctly divided into syllables?” (options include label/ed, minu/tes, re/cord/ing, ma/nu/scri/pt), providing a formative check on students’ knowledge of multisyllabic word division.
In the Unit 3, Week 2, Weekly Standards Practice, students answer: “The suffix that can be added to the word exist to mean ‘the state of existing’ is-” with options: -ence, -able, -ize, -ist. This task allows teachers to assess students’ ability to select appropriate derivational suffixes and can be used to flag students who need more support with morphological analysis.
Assessment materials provide teachers with clear guidance on interpreting results to determine student needs.
The Assessment Guide includes a Student Progress Report Chart that tracks student performance across foundational phonics and word recognition skills. In Grade 5, this includes decoding unfamiliar multisyllabic words, applying knowledge of all letter-sound correspondences and syllabication patterns, and using morphology (e.g., roots and affixes) to read words accurately in and out of context. Teachers are directed to use this tool to monitor individual student progress toward mastery and to identify areas where additional instruction may be needed.
On the Savvas Realize platform, teachers can access data by item and standard, including student-level and class-level performance reports. These digital tools help teachers analyze assessment results to determine which students may need targeted phonics instruction or additional support.
These reports allow teachers to pinpoint which phonics and word recognition skills students have or have not mastered. Materials support interpretation of results by aligning digital reporting tools to key instructional skills, enabling teachers to group students strategically, plan reteaching, or provide enrichment based on demonstrated need.
Materials support teachers with instructional suggestions, scaffolds, reteaching routines, or intervention pathways based on assessment results to help students progress towards mastery.
The Assessment Guide provides explicit guidance for using assessment results to support instruction. In the Q&A section, teachers are advised to use benchmark assessment data to group students with similar error profiles for targeted mini-lessons. The materials recommend reviewing student responses to identify patterns, adjusting instruction accordingly, and assigning students to intervention groups when needed. For students demonstrating mastery on the baseline, the guide advises selecting appropriately challenging texts to better assess instructional needs.
Together, these tools provide multiple, embedded pathways for interpreting assessment results and delivering instructional supports that align with students' phonics needs in Grade 5.
Criterion 1.2: Word Recognition and Word Analysis
Materials support students in reading and analyzing grade-level words through instruction in spelling patterns, syllable structure, and meaningful word parts. Instruction emphasizes automaticity and supports vocabulary development through word analysis.
The myView materials meet expectations for Criterion 1.4 by providing explicit instruction and practice that support students in reading and analyzing grade-level words through spelling patterns, syllable structures, and meaningful word parts. Instruction includes systematic teaching of common Greek and Latin roots, prefixes, and suffixes appropriate to grade-level texts, with clear definitions and modeling of how these elements contribute to spelling, pronunciation, and meaning. Students engage in frequent opportunities to apply morphological analysis to decode unfamiliar multisyllabic words and determine their meanings, supported by partner and independent tasks, dictionary use, and graphic organizers. Morphological instruction is consistently embedded across literary, science, and social studies texts, reinforcing vocabulary development and connecting word structure to broader content knowledge.
Lessons provide explicit instruction and modeling for decoding multisyllabic words using knowledge of syllable types and morphology, with teachers demonstrating strategies such as identifying VCe and open/closed syllable patterns and explaining how vowel sounds and structures influence pronunciation. Students apply these strategies in guided and independent reading tasks, dividing words into syllables, reading sentences, and discussing meaning, while being prompted to make strategic decisions about decoding, rereading, and monitoring comprehension through peer discussion and sentence-based analysis. Materials include explicit instruction in syllable division patterns and systematic morpheme analysis that students apply across connected literary and informational texts to support decoding, spelling, and vocabulary development.
Assessment opportunities are systematically embedded through weekly formative checks, such as “Assess Understanding” tasks, that measure decoding accuracy, morphological understanding, and multisyllabic word analysis. Middle- and End-of-Year assessments evaluate cumulative mastery of syllable division and affix meaning, aligned to the program’s scope and sequence. Teachers receive clear guidance in the Assessment Guide for interpreting results and using data to form instructional groups, with explicit recommendations for reteaching or enrichment when students require additional support. Overall, the materials deliver explicit instruction, consistent practice, and systematic assessment that support mastery of word recognition and word analysis skills in Grade 5.
Indicator 1o
Materials include instruction and practice in analyzing and applying meaningful word parts (prefixes, suffixes, roots) to support decoding, spelling, and vocabulary development.
The instruction and practice in meaningful word parts in myView meet expectations for Indicator 1o. Materials include explicit instruction in common Greek and Latin roots appropriate to grade-level texts, including clear definitions and modeling of how these roots, prefixes, and suffixes contribute to word meaning. Students regularly engage in opportunities to apply morphological analysis to decode unfamiliar multisyllabic words and determine their meanings. Lessons include partner and independent tasks, dictionary use, and graphic organizers that reinforce morphological understanding. Instruction is embedded across science, social studies, and literary texts, supporting vocabulary development through connections between morphology, spelling, pronunciation, and meaning in content-rich contexts.
Note: This indicator is analyzed at the lesson level to examine the instructional progression within and across lessons. Repeated references to a single week or lesson reflect the structured sequence of explicit instruction and guided practice, which is representative of how the materials support this skill throughout the year.
Materials include explicit instruction in common prefixes, suffixes, and roots appropriate to grade-level texts.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 3, students are introduced to common Greek roots, including:
meter = “measure” (perimeter)
chron = “time” (chronicle)
bio = “life” (biodiversity)
logy = “study of” (zoology)
geo = “earth” (geocentric)
photo = “light” (photograph)
Instruction emphasizes how knowing the meanings of roots helps students decode and understand new multisyllabic words.
In Unit 4, Week 5, Lesson 4, students are reminded that many English words contain Greek and Latin roots, and that knowing the meaning of these roots helps them understand unfamiliar words. The lesson explicitly defines the meanings and origins of the roots:
graph (Greek, “write or draw”) -autograph
micro (Greek, “small”) -microphone
dict (Latin, “say”) -predict
tele (Greek, “far away”) -television
Materials provide opportunities for students to apply morphological analysis to decode unfamiliar words and determine word meaning.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 2, Word Study: Greek Roots, students engage in meaningful practice applying morphological analysis to decode unfamiliar words and determine their meanings. The teacher models analysis of the word astrobiologist, breaking it into the Greek roots astro (“star”), bio (“life”), log (“study of”), and the suffix -ist (“one who does”), guiding students to synthesize these parts to determine the word’s meaning: “one who studies life in the stars.” Students then work with partners to identify additional multisyllabic words in the text that contain Greek roots, analyze each word’s parts, and confirm meanings using a dictionary. Students read and write example words, explain their meanings orally, and extend practice through collaborative identification of new root-based words. These tasks support vocabulary development by reinforcing how Greek roots contribute to decoding and meaning-making.
In Unit 4, Week 5, Lesson 4, Word Study: Greek and Latin Word Origins, students engage in structured opportunities to apply morphological analysis to decode unfamiliar multisyllabic words and determine their meanings. The teacher models how to analyze the word biographical by identifying the root graph (“write”), the prefix bio- (“life”), and the suffix -al (used to form adjectives), leading to the definition “related to writing about a person’s life.” Students then work in pairs to complete a graphic organizer, using their knowledge of word parts to define additional words and confirm meanings with a dictionary. These activities promote vocabulary development by reinforcing how Greek and Latin roots and affixes contribute to word meaning in academic and literary contexts.
Instruction connects morphological patterns to spelling, pronunciation, and meaning across content areas (e.g., science, social studies, or informational texts).
In Unit 4, Week 5, Lesson 2, Word Study: Latin Roots, instruction connects morphological patterns to meaning and pronunciation within a social studies context. Using the historical fiction text Ezekiel Johnson Goes West by Guy A. Sims, students analyze the word appreciative by examining its Latin roots: ad- (“to”), pretium (“price”), and the suffix -ive(“pertaining to”). The teacher guides students in connecting the modern English meaning to its Latin origins, illustrating how morphological elements inform spelling and semantics. This analysis is embedded in a reading task that builds content knowledge about U.S. westward expansion and historical settlements, supporting interdisciplinary vocabulary development through the application of Latin roots across content areas.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 2, Word Study: Greek Roots, instruction connects morphological analysis to vocabulary development within a social studies and science context. Students analyze the word atmosphere from the informational text Life on Earth—and Beyond by Pamela S. Turner, using a dictionary to confirm that the Greek root sphere means “round body” or “globe.” The activity emphasizes the Greek origin of scientific vocabulary and reinforces understanding of how root meanings inform spelling and semantic interpretation. Instruction is further contextualized through exploration of NASA’s mission and the role of space probes, linking morphological instruction to disciplinary content and building knowledge of government, space exploration, and scientific investigation.
Indicator 1p
Materials support students in applying word reading strategies to decode unfamiliar multisyllabic words encountered in connected text, using knowledge of syllable types, morphology, and spelling patterns.
The word reading strategies in myView meet expectations for Indicator 1p. Materials provide explicit instruction and modeling for decoding multisyllabic words using syllable types and morphology. Teachers demonstrate strategies such as identifying VCe syllables and open/closed syllable patterns, providing clear guidance on how vowel sounds and word structures contribute to pronunciation. Students engage in guided and independent practice within grade-level reading materials by dividing words into syllables, reading full sentences, and discussing word meaning. Instruction emphasizes strategic decision-making by prompting students to apply decoding strategies in context, reread for accuracy, and monitor comprehension through peer discussion and sentence-based analysis.
Note: This indicator is analyzed at the lesson level to examine the instructional progression within and across lessons. Repeated references to a single week or lesson reflect the structured sequence of explicit instruction and guided practice, which is representative of how the materials support this skill throughout the year.
Materials provide instruction and modeling for how to approach unfamiliar multisyllabic words in context using syllabication and morphology.
In Unit 1, Week 5, Lesson 2, the teacher explicitly models how to decode words with the VCe syllable pattern. Using the word outside from paragraph 3, the teacher identifies the final e as silent and underlines the ide syllable, explaining how the i spells a Long vowel sound. This demonstration provides students with a concrete decoding strategy for recognizing and analyzing VCe syllables in multisyllabic words encountered in context.
In the Reading Routines Companion: Open and Closed Syllables V/CV and VC/V, Side A, Step 2, the teacher models decoding of multisyllabic words: super is divided as su/per, identifying the first syllables as open due to the long vowel /ü/; finish is first attempted as fi/nish, then corrected to fin/ish, showing a closed syllable.
Lessons include guided and independent practice applying decoding strategies in grade-level reading materials.
In the Foundational Skills Toolkit Unit 5, Week 2, Word Study Slides, Syllable Patterns, students are given grade-level sentences with underlined multisyllabic words and asked to identify the word, apply syllable division, and write the correct syllable break. Example sentence: “Astronomers use powerful telescopes to make observations of distant planets.” observations -> ob/ser/va/tions. This extended practice reinforces students’ ability to analyze word structure and apply decoding strategies in context, supporting transfer of syllabication knowledge to authentic reading and writing tasks.
In the Reading Routines Companion: Open and Closed Syllables V/CV and VC/V, Side A, Step 3 (Guided Practice)directs students to decode and divide words such as tulip, pedal, humid, volume, and major, with teacher support. Students analyze each word’s syllable structure and practice accurate pronunciation. In Step 4 (On Their Own), students independently apply these decoding strategies and discuss each word’s meaning, reinforcing syllabication skills through both supported and independent practice.
Instruction emphasizes strategic decision-making when decoding new words, including rereading and self-monitoring for meaning.
In Unit 1, Week 5, Lesson 2, students work in pairs to locate and decode the word imitate in paragraph 35. They are prompted to identify the VCe syllable, explain the vowel sound, and read the sentence aloud, confirming their understanding through discussion. Students then extend this practice in Picturesque Journeys, reading sentences aloud and identifying VCe syllables in unfamiliar words.
This activity fosters strategic word reading by prompting students to apply decoding strategies in context, discuss their reasoning with a partner, and reread sentences aloud to confirm understanding—reinforcing purposeful, student-led decision-making when encountering unfamiliar words.
Indicator 1q
Materials include explicit instruction in syllabication and morpheme analysis and provide students with practice opportunities to apply these strategies within grade-level content.
The instructional opportunities for syllabication and morpheme analysis in myView meet expectations for indicator 1q. Materials include explicit instruction in syllable types and division patterns, such as open and closed syllables and the six common syllable types, with consistent teacher modeling and application using multisyllabic words. Morpheme instruction is systematic and includes Greek roots, base words, and suffixes, with clear explanations of how affixes impact meaning and part of speech. Students apply word analysis strategies in both literary and informational texts across content areas, including social studies, supporting decoding, spelling, and vocabulary development in connected reading tasks.
Materials include explicit instruction of syllable types and syllable division patterns that support decoding, spelling, and pronunciation of multisyllabic words.
In Unit 2, Writing, Week 1, Lesson 2 Spelling - Open and Closed Syllables, the teacher explains that open syllables end in a vowel and typically contain a Long vowel sound, while closed syllables end in a consonant and typically contain a Short vowel sound. Students are introduced to the corresponding syllable division patterns: V/CV for open syllables (e.g., deliver) and VC/V for closed syllables (e.g., delegate). The teacher models how to apply these patterns using words such as recent, topical, and honest, guiding students to identify syllable boundaries, decode each part of the word, and connect these patterns to accurate spelling and pronunciation.
In Unit 3, Week 5, Lesson 3, Word Study - Syllable Patterns, students receive explicit instruction in syllable types and syllable division patterns supporting decoding, spelling, and pronunciation of multisyllabic words. Using the lesson, the teacher reminds students of six syllable types: closed, open, VCe (magic e), r-Controlled, vowel team, and final stable syllable. The teacher provides definitions and examples for each type (e.g, lemon -> lem/on; final -> fi/nal; reptile -> rep/tile; perform -> per/form; sailing -> sail/ing; bottle, station, mansion), modeling how to apply syllable analysis to longer words.
Materials include explicit instruction in morpheme analysis (e.g., prefixes, suffixes, root) to support decoding and determine word meaning.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 3, Word Study - Greek Roots, students receive explicit instruction in Greek roots, including meter, chron, bio, logy, geo, and photo. The teacher explains the meaning of each root and how they appear in compound words (e.g., chronologist, biodiversity, zoology). Students learn how to combine root meanings with suffixes (e.g., -ist, -logy) to determine the full meaning of unfamiliar words. For example, students analyze the word chronologist as “one who studies time.” Students use a dictionary to confirm meanings.
In Unit 2, Week 5, Lesson 2, Word Study - Base Words and Endings, students receive explicit instruction in morpheme analysis to understand how base words and suffixes affect both the meaning and grammatical function of a word. Using the lesson, the teacher reminds students that a base word is a word’s most basic form, and that adding an ending can change what the word means or how it functions in a sentence. Students examine the word responsibility from paragraph 15 of the grade-level text Let Wild Animals Be Wild by David Bowles. They identify the base word (responsible) and its part of speech (adjective), and then determine how the suffix -ity changes the word into a noun.
Materials provide frequent and varied opportunities to apply word analysis strategies in connected texts across content areas (e.g., science, social studies).
In Unit 3, Week 5, Lesson 2, Word Study-Syllable Patterns, students apply syllabication strategies using multisyllabic words drawn from the literary text Life & Art from The Wright 3 by Blue Balliett. The teacher reminds students that recognizing syllable patterns helps with decoding unfamiliar words, and displays a list of examples: empty (closed syllable), focus (open syllable), frowning (vowel team), life (VCe), responsible (final stable syllable), and visitors (r-Controlled). Students identify the syllable pattern in each word and apply that knowledge during reading, reinforcing decoding and pronunciation strategies in a content-rich, interdisciplinary text.
In Unit 5, Week 3, Lesson 2, Word Study - Word Part sub-, students apply word analysis strategies in the context of a grade-level informational text, The Bill of Rights by Amie Jane Leavitt. Using the lesson, the teacher directs students to analyze the word subjected as it appears in two entries in the starred list of the text. Students are reminded that the prefix sub- means “under” and the Latin root ject means “throw.” They are then prompted to determine the meaning of subjected using the structural knowledge, connecting the word’s morphology to its contextual meaning (“placed under authority or control”).
Indicator 1r
Materials regularly and systematically offer assessment opportunities that measure student progress of word recognition and analysis.
The assessment materials in myView meet expectations for indicator 1r. Students engage in frequent formative assessments through weekly “Assess Understanding” tasks that evaluate decoding accuracy, morphological understanding, and word analysis in multisyllabic contexts. Middle- and End-of-Year assessments measure cumulative mastery of syllable division and affix meaning, aligned to the scope and sequence. The Assessment Guide provides teachers with clear direction for evaluating student performance and using multiple data sources to form instructional groups. Materials also include explicit guidance for using results to inform reteaching or enrichment, particularly when students struggle to apply morphological or phonics-based strategies.
Note: This indicator is analyzed at the assessment level to evaluate how the program measures student progress in word recognition and word analysis across the year. Repeated references to specific weeks, lessons, and assessment types reflect embedded and recurring assessment structures designed to monitor decoding, spelling, and morphological understanding over time.
Materials provide a variety of assessment opportunities throughout the year to monitor student progress in word recognition and word analysis.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 5, Word Study Greek Roots, the “Assess Understanding” section includes a formative assessment that prompts students to identify Greek roots in a list of multisyllabic words (e.g., altimeter, autobiography, photosensitive, chronometer, biosphere, climatologist, geostationary, geologist) and determine each word’s meaning.
In Unit 5, Week 1, Lesson 5, Word Study: Consonant Changes, the “Assess Understanding” section provides a formative assessment in which students are given a list of base words and suffixes (e.g., grace + -ious, politic + –ain, inspect + -tion, extinct + -tion, artifice + -ial, office + -ial, finance + -ial). Students are directed to write and read aloud the new word and explain how the suffix changes the consonant sound in the word.
Summative assessments occur at multiple points throughout the year to monitor overall student progress in word recognition and analysis. For example:
Middle-of-Year Assessment, Question 20: Which word is correctly divided into syllables? (correct answer: part/tic/u/lar). This item assesses student understanding of syllable division in multisyllabic words.
End-of-Year Assessment, Question 17: What does the prefix trans- tell you about the word transportation? (correct answer: it involves moving across). This item assesses morphological understanding of the prefix trans-.
These assessments are aligned to the scope and sequence and are designed to evaluate cumulative mastery of word recognition and analysis skills across the year.
Assessment and materials provide information about the students’ skills in decoding, spelling, and morphological analysis, including their ability to apply these skills across a range of text types.
The Assessment Guide directs teachers to assess student proficiency in word recognition and analysis by evaluating their application of decoding strategies, spelling conventions, and morphological knowledge (e.g., affixes and roots). Teachers are prompted to use end-of-unit benchmarks and informal assessments to observe whether students can apply word study skills taught throughout the unit, including identifying syllable patterns and deriving meaning from meaningful word parts.
The Assessment Guide explains Developing, On-Level, and Advanced passage sets, and instructs teachers to use decoding accuracy as a key factor in determining placement. If students are not accurately applying decoding and word analysis strategies in their assigned text, the manual advises reassessment and the selection of myView Cold Reads passages that better align with students’ instructional needs.
Teachers are guided to use data from multiple sources—including benchmark tests, weekly assessments, and informal observations—to group students by word study and decoding needs. The guide specifies that students who struggle to apply word analysis skills (e.g., decoding unfamiliar multisyllabic words, applying morphological knowledge) should be placed in instructional groups that focus on reteaching specific word study elements, while students demonstrating mastery receive extension and enrichment tasks.
Materials include guidance for using assessment results to inform instructional next steps, including targeted support or enrichment.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 5, Word Study Greek Roots, if students are not successful, the materials instruct teachers to reteach how to use Greek roots to form and understand multisyllabic words. The materials provide teachers with definitions and examples for common Greek roots (e.g., meter = measure, bio = life, geo = earth, photo = light).
In Unit 5, Week 1, Lesson 5, Word Study: Consonant Changes, if students are not successful in forming or applying the correct pronunciation and spelling of the derived words, the materials direct the teacher to reteach consonant changes using additional multisyllabic words. The lesson reinforces rules that govern how certain suffixes affect consonant sounds (e.g., -tio, -ial, -ian, -ious).
Criterion 1.3: Fluency
Materials provide varied and frequent opportunities for students to build fluency–accuracy, rate, and prosody–through reading grade-level connected texts. Instruction supports the development of fluent reading as a bridge to comprehension.
Note: Criterion 1.5 is non-negotiable. Instructional materials being reviewed must score Meet Expectations in this criterion to proceed to Gateway 3.
The myView materials meet expectations for Criterion 1.5 by providing varied and frequent opportunities for students to build fluency—accuracy, rate, and prosody—through reading grade-level connected texts. Instruction is systematically embedded across narrative and informational passages, poetry, and small-group routines, appearing within core components such as Listening Comprehension and Teacher-Led Small Group Instruction. Lessons include repeated oral reading, rhythm-based poetry routines, and guided practice supported by the Reading Routines Companion, which offers reusable structures for building fluency, expression, and prosody. Teachers are guided to model fluent reading, provide corrective feedback, and support students in applying prosodic features to strengthen comprehension, with scaffolds designed to address a range of learner needs.
Assessment opportunities are systematically provided through Cold Read passages administered across the year, aligned to fluency instruction and offered at multiple proficiency levels. These assessments include timed oral readings, Words Correct Per Minute (WCPM) calculations, rubrics, and class- and student-level progress charts, with comprehension questions tied to weekly instructional objectives. The Cold Reads Teacher Manual offers clear guidance for scoring and interpretation, including a Grade 5 benchmark of 146 WCPM, and provides instructional recommendations for targeted decoding support, increased exposure to fluent reading models, and independent reading strategies. Overall, the materials deliver explicit, systematic fluency instruction and assessment aligned to research-based practices for developing fluent, meaningful reading in Grade 5.
Indicator 1s
Note: Not assessed in Grades 3-5
Indicator 1t
Materials include varied and frequent opportunities for students to build fluency-accuracy, rate, and prosody-through reading grade-level texts in order to support comprehension.
The instructional opportunities for oral reading fluency in myView meet expectations for indicator 1t. Materials include frequent and varied opportunities for students to build fluency--accuracy, rate, and expression–through oral reading of connected grade-level texts, including narrative and informational passages, poetry, and small-group fluency routines. These opportunities are embedded in core components such as Listening Comprehension and Teacher-Led Small Group Instruction. The Reading Routines Companion provides reusable poetry routines that support reading, rhythm, and prosody, with scaffolds and feedback strategies for a range of learners. Teachers are guided to model fluent reading, provide corrective feedback, and support students in applying prosodic features to support comprehension.
Note: This indicator is analyzed at the lesson level to examine the instructional progression within and across lessons. Repeated references to a single week or lesson reflect the structured sequence of explicit instruction and guided practice, which is representative of how the materials support this skill throughout the year.
Materials provide frequent and varied opportunities for students to practice oral reading fluency in connected texts (e.g., repeated readings, partner reading, poetry, reader’s theater) that develop accuracy, expression, and rate.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 1, Listening Comprehension, Fluency, students are invited to read aloud sections of the grade-level text “Searching for Life Under the Sea” with a partner. Students are expected to demonstrate accuracy, appropriate pacing, and emphasis on keywords.
In Unit 3, Week 2, Lesson 2, Teacher-Led Small Group Instruction, Fluency Group, Prosody, students choose a paragraph from the week’s core text and read it aloud with a partner, focusing on maintaining an appropriate rhythm. The instruction specifically discourages rushing and inappropriate pausing.
In the Reading Routines Companion Prosody: Poetry Side A, students read and re-read poetry multiple times in a single session, building prosody through repetition, rhythm, and expression. The teacher prompts a discussion about where and why certain words are emphasized or paused on. Students engage in partner reading, taking turns and giving peer feedback.
Practice opportunities are embedded in regular reading routines and are sufficiently frequent to support the development of fluent, meaningful reading. Frequency and structure may vary based on student needs and program design.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 1, Listening Comprehension, Fluency, the fluency practice is embedded in the Listening Comprehension block, a regular component of the weekly instructional routine.
In the Reading Routines Companion Prosody: Poetry Side A, the poetry routine follows a repeatable, four-part instructional structure: introduce, model, guide, and independent practice. This routine is designed for use throughout the year with a variety of poems, and the Side-by-Side section provides strategies for reusing the same poem until students can read with fluent phrasing and expression.
Materials include teacher guidance for providing feedback, modeling fluent reading, and using scaffolds that support student growth in fluency and comprehension.
In Unit 3, Week 2, Lesson 2, Teacher-Led Small Group Instruction, Fluency Group, Prosody, the teacher is instructed to model reading the paragraph with appropriate rhythm, helping students understand the desired prosodic feature.
In the Reading Routines Companion Prosody: Poetry Side B, the Side-by-Side section, the corrective feedback guidance instructs teachers to re-model using Steps 2 and 3 if students struggle. The Make It Easier strategies include echo reading, marking pauses and emphasis with slashes and underlines, clarifying vocabulary, and discussing how word meaning influences expression. The Make It Harder extension encourages fluent students to prepare and perform a class poetry reading, with time for self-preparation, partner rehearsal, and peer performance.
Indicator 1u
Materials regularly and systematically offer assessment opportunities that measure student progress in oral reading fluency (as indicated by the program scope and sequence).
The assessment materials for oral reading fluency in myView meet expectations for indicator 1u. Cold Read assessments are systematically embedded across the year and are aligned to fluency instruction, offering leveled passages (Developing, On-Level, Advanced) accompanied by comprehension questions aligned to weekly objectives. Fluency is assessed through timed oral readings, Words Correct Per Minute (WCPM) calculations, and supported with rubrics and progress charts at both the individual and class level. The Cold Reads Teacher Manual provides clear guidance for scoring and interpretation, including a fluency benchmark of 146 WCPM by the end of Grade 5. Teachers receive actionable recommendations for instructional adjustments such as targeted decoding support, increased exposure to fluent models, and independent reading strategies. These components ensure assessments are instructionally meaningful and support student progress toward fluent, expressive reading.
Assessment opportunities occur multiple times across the year and are aligned to fluency instruction, allowing students to demonstrate progress toward mastery of rate, accuracy, and prosody.
In Unit 1, Week 2, Lesson 2, the teacher is instructed to use Unit 1, Week 2, Cold Reads for Fluency and Comprehension to assess students’ oral reading fluency.
In the Cold Reads for Fluency and Comprehension Teacher Manual - How to Use Cold Reads section, it states that each cold read test includes a passage with comprehension items tied to weekly comprehension focus and aligned to the Common Core State Standards and previously taught skills. Tests are designed for repeated, grade-level-aligned assessment across the year and include passages written at Developing (D), On-Level (OL), and Advanced proficiency levels. Cold Read assessments can be administered independently or in small groups, integrating fluency assessment into both individual and supported formats.
Materials include tools such as timed readings, WCPM checks, or prosody rubrics to assess oral reading fluency with consistency and instructional relevance.
In the Cold Reads for Fluency and Comprehension Teacher Manual - Administering and Scoring a Fluency Test section provides a step-by-step process for conducting timed oral reading fluency assessments: count the total words read in one minute, mark and subtract errors, and calculate Words Correct Per Minute (WCPM) using the formula: Total words read - number of errors = WCPM.
The manual emphasizes that fluency is a multifaceted skill that includes expression, prosody, reading rate, and comprehension—not just speed. This framing encourages teachers to assess fluency as a holistic indicator of reading development, helping them look beyond WCPM scores to understand how students convey meaning through tone, phrasing, and pacing.
The Fluency Rubric and Fluency Progress Charts (at both individual and class levels) are provided to help teachers monitor and interpret student progress. These tools guide instructional decisions by identifying specific fluency components where students may need support—such as expression or accuracy—thus making fluency assessment actionable and instructionally relevant.
Materials provide teachers with guidance for interpreting assessment results and making instructional adjustments to support fluency, growth, including reteaching, scaffolding, or enrichment.
In the Cold Reads for Fluency and Comprehension Teacher Manual - Interpreting the Results section, students in Grade 5 should read fluently at 146 WCPM in text that is on grade level, and a milestone chart is provided to guide interim expectations.
If student’s fluency is below expectations, the manual directs teachers to review student errors to determine whether decoding issues are affecting fluency, provide explicit instruction and additional practice if foundational reading skills in decoding is weak, increase exposure to fluent oral reading models for students lacking prosody or expression, and encourage independent reading at an accessible level, such as children’s magazines or grade-level texts.