2022
OUR Odell HSLP

10th Grade - Gateway 2

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Gateway Ratings Summary

Building Knowledge

Building Knowledge with Texts, Vocabulary, and Tasks
Gateway 2 - Meets Expectations
93%
Criterion 2.1
24 / 24
Criterion 2.2: Coherence
6 / 8

The instructional materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for building knowledge with texts, vocabulary, and tasks. Texts are organized around a central theme and related guiding questions that connect to the unit topic. As students closely read and analyze literary and informational texts, students respond to coherently sequenced questions that build to Section Diagnostics, which may be oral or written in nature. Section Diagnostics build to the end-of-unit Culminating Task. Culminating Tasks integrate multiple literacy strands, allowing students to demonstrate their knowledge and understanding of a topic. Writing lessons are cohesively designed so that students apply and expand the skills they learn from previous lessons as they progress through the units. Materials include guidance, protocols, models, and support for teachers to implement and monitor students’ writing development. Short and long research projects are sequenced and include a progression of standards-aligned research skills. The program utilizes a Monitor, Diagnose, Evaluate practice that closely links instruction and assessments. Standards-aligned instruction builds to text-based questions and Section Diagnostics and Section Diagnostics build to end-of-unit Culminating Tasks. The Foundation and Application Units are recursive and cover the majority of grade-level standards, with the exception of most Reading: Literature standards. Development Units revisit grade-level standards addressed in the Foundation Unit and address Reading: Literature standards. Although suggested implementation schedules align to core learning objectives, the Model Yearlong Paths cannot reasonably be completed, based on the suggested minimum number of 45 minutes per lesson and the number of units suggested for the year. Optional tasks are meaningful and support core learning.

Criterion 2.1

24 / 24

Materials build knowledge through integrated reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language.

The instructional materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for building knowledge. Grade-level texts are organized around a central theme and related guiding questions that connect to the unit topic. Students complete high-quality, coherently sequenced questions and tasks as they analyze literary elements, such as craft and structure, and integrate knowledge and ideas in individual texts and across multiple texts. Section Diagnostics and end-of-unit Culminating Tasks integrate reading, writing, speaking and listening, or language and connect to the texts students read. The year-long writing plan allows students to participate in a range of writing tasks that vary in length, purpose, and difficulty. The Foundation and Application Units are designed to allow students to "investigate a topic through recursive and iterative cycles of inquiry." The program utilizes a Monitor, Diagnose, Evaluate practice that closely links instruction and assessments. Standards-aligned instruction builds to text-based questions and Section Diagnostics and Section Diagnostics build to end-of-unit Culminating Tasks.

Indicator 2a

4 / 4

Texts are organized around a cohesive topic(s)/theme(s) to build students’ ability to read and comprehend complex texts independently and proficiently.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for Indicator 2a.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for texts are organized around a cohesive topic(s)/theme(s) to build students’ ability to read and comprehend complex texts independently and proficiently. Each unit is organized around a central theme and related guiding questions that connect overall to the unit topic. The texts, tasks, and materials for this grade level are grouped so that students investigate a Central Question when moving through the Foundation and Development units using the information they gather from analyzing the various texts to perform the culminating tasks. Throughout the process of analyzing multiple texts, students broaden their vocabulary and knowledge, strengthen reading comprehension, and develop independent-thinking skills as they dig into unit content and apply their learning to new readings they encounter. The course capstone includes an Application Unit in which students drive their investigation with an inquiry question of interest. The Program Guide provides additional information for teachers relating to the selection of classic and contemporary texts within each unit: “Text sets guide and focus student learning and knowledge development by examining a diverse body of authors, perspectives, and genres. While students develop strands of knowledge in units, they also extend their understanding across units in their year, and across all four years, of high school.”

Texts are connected by cohesive topics/themes to build students’ ability to read and comprehend complex texts independently and proficiently. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Texts are connected by a grade-appropriate cohesive topic/theme/line of inquiry.

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Know the Right Thing to Do?, texts are centered around a central theme: “How do we determine the right thing to do?” Texts that connect to this theme center around the following topics:

      • environmental ethics

      • biomedical ethics

      • ethics of identity and representation

      • sports ethics

      • ethics of social justice.

    • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, students study storytelling, investigating the Central Question: “What makes a good story?” Examples of texts students study to explore a common line of inquiry include, but are not limited to, “Introduction,” “But Sometimes What We Call ‘Memory,’” “Coyotes and the Stro’ro’ka Dancers,” excerpts from Storyteller by Leslie Marmon Siko and the parable “The Far and the Near” by Thomas Wolfe.

    • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, texts are centered around a central theme: “How do storytellers use primary sources?” The unit focuses on the play, the original Broadway performance “Hamilton” by Lin-Manuel Miranda and a series of historical documents. The unit also includes texts discussing Lin-Manuel Miranda’s use of history in his performance in “‘Hamilton’ and History: Are They in Sync?” by Jennifer Schuessler.

    • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, students investigate the Central Question: “What does it mean for things to fall apart?” Examples of texts students study to explore a common line of inquiry include, but are not limited to, the novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe and the poem “The Second Coming” by William Butler Yeats. During the unit, students focus on character analysis and an exploration of the missionary and Igbo tribes in answering guiding questions such as “What shapes Okonkwo’s character?” and “How do secondary characters enrich the novel?”

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, students investigate the Central Question: “How do we balance the common good with individual rights and personal liberty?” Complex texts students read to examine the common line of inquiry include, but are not limited to, these Grade 10 appropriate texts: “What Would Happen if We Stopped Vaccinations?” by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention and “A Framework for Ethical Decision Making” by the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics. During the unit, students examine the questions: “How should we address ethical issues involving the development of vaccines?” and “How should we address issues of unequal access to public health resources?” as they prepare for an evidence-based argumentative essay around the theme of ethics in public health.

  • Texts build knowledge, vocabulary, and the ability to read and comprehend complex texts across a school year.

    • Students read across genres with eight central texts connecting to the theme of the unit, including, but not limited to, Amy Tan’s “Mother Tongue,” excerpts from Dreams From My Father by Barack Obama, and the prose poem “The War Prayer” by Mark Twain.

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, students build their knowledge around the cohesive topic of ethics. Students examine the essential question, “How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?,” by analyzing multiple texts including narrative non-fiction, a poem, and articles about various ethical situations. In Section 1, Lesson 1, students watch “The Ethical Dilemma of Self-Driving Cars” to begin to develop their understanding of the complex theme. Students explore this topic further in Lesson 3 with “A Framework for Ethical Decision Making” and “Utilitarianism: Crash Course Philosophy #36.” In Section 2, Lesson 1, students examine ethical issues in a text and decide in which pathway the ethical should be placed. The culminating task follows a similar process, but students work together with a group to select a pathway and discuss the ethical issues that surround that pathway.

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, students examine texts and complete tasks to answer the Central Question: “How Do We Tell Someone Else’s Story?” Students build vocabulary on the author’s craft throughout the unit. In Lesson 2, Section 3, students create an Author’s Craft Journal to examine The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. This tool helps them build knowledge and vocabulary to address the Central Question. Students further expand their knowledge by reading a poem about HeLa cells. The culminating task involves students writing an expository essay to answer the essential question. Students gain analysis skills from engaging in the complex texts in this unit that prepare them for reading texts throughout the school year.

    • In The Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, six central texts connect to the theme, and the unit includes opportunities to read across text types, including an excerpt from “A Framework for Ethical Decision Making,” “The Hippocratic Oath,” and “The Belmont Report” from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

    • In the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research?, students develop knowledge and vocabulary to conduct their own independent research through the use of plans, checklists, and guides. For example, in Section 3, Lesson 2, students use a Forming Evidence-Based Claims Tool to examine key details in the resources they collected. These guides help students read texts independently and proficiently.

Indicator 2b

4 / 4

Materials require students to analyze the key ideas, details, craft, and structure within individual texts as well as across multiple texts using coherently sequenced, high-quality questions and tasks.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for Indicator 2b.

Grade 10 materials provide opportunities for students to analyze the author’s word choice, structure, and point of view development as delineated in the grade-level craft and structure standards. Additionally, each unit in the Grade 10 materials includes guiding questions that students track throughout the unit; these questions are present throughout each lesson and within the written materials and tasks. In the independent reading lessons, students read texts related to the anchor texts and use the guiding questions to present their findings on how the texts relate to each other.

Students build knowledge by investigating a topic or anchor text through organized text sets in each unit. Throughout this process, students cite textual evidence and examine themes and complex characterization according to grade-level standards. To support student learning and literacy development, as students develop their projects they examine key ideas and details from texts, use texts to craft definitions of key concepts and themes through close examination of language used by the authors of the core texts read, examine choices made in film adaptations of literature and how these choices affect the overall meaning of the texts, and embed their learning into final products that take key details and structure into account as they compose their final drafts.

The Foundation Unit provides data for teachers to make decisions about the support necessary in future development units and whether students might need additional guidance or differentiation. The scaffolding for students is consistent to support students in grade-level proficiency by the end of the year and to support comprehension of grade appropriate complex texts. By the end of the year, analysis of key ideas, details, craft, and structure are embedded into student tasks and routines.

Materials require students to analyze the key ideas, details, craft, and structure within individual texts as well as across multiple texts using coherently-sequenced, high-quality questions and tasks. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • For most texts, students analyze key ideas and details and craft and structure (according to grade-level standards).

    • The materials contain coherently sequenced questions and tasks that address key ideas and details.

      • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, students complete a culminating task: a 5–7 minute group presentation of a self-selected ethical issue. Students choose one of several options to reach the final product including the opportunity to create “a text set of need-to-read documents (text-based, visual, or audio) that cover various aspects of your pathway, along with your pathway group’s analysis of those documents.” An example of this analysis is found in Section 3, Lesson 2, as students read and annotate a common text to determine the central idea of the text and how specific information in the text supports their inquiry pathway.

      • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, Section 2 addresses the question: What are the elements used to make a good story?

        • In Lesson 3, students read “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner to review literary elements related to characterization within the text. Students consult the Narratives Reference Guide, built as a resource for this curriculum. Guiding prompts from the Narratives Reference Guide on structure and point of view include, but are not limited to:

          • “Determine what kind of ending the story has.

          • Think about the relationships between the character’s tragic flaws and the story’s plot, resolution, and themes.”

      • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, Section 2, Lesson 2, Activity 4, students read “From Alexander Hamilton to The Royal Danish American Gazette, 6 September 1772” by Alexander Hamilton. To analyze key ideas and details in the text, students underline unfamiliar words and note any sections of the text that reveal the central idea. In a subsequent activity in the same lesson, students further examine the central idea by analyzing the purpose. Students then write a central idea statement in one or two sentences.

      • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, Section 1, Lesson 2, students read chapters 2–3 of Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe, analyzing complex characters and citing textual evidence when responding to questions in their Learning Log; examples include:

        • “Describe Okonkwo’s relationship with his wives and children and explain the reason for his behavior. What evidence from the text offers the strongest support for this interpretation?”

      • In Section 2, Lesson 4, students read Chapter 14 and answer questions, such as:

        • “What is Okonkwo’s attitude now that he has been exiled? What evidence from the text supports this interpretation?”

      • In the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research?, Section 4, Lesson 2, students determine the relevance of the research materials they collected using the Research Frame Tool. Students use the Research Frame Tool to inquiry questions and keywords gathered from the text. This tool is used to show relevance between key ideas and details from the texts researched and then inquiry paths students select.

    • The materials contain coherently sequenced questions and tasks that address craft and structure.

      • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, Section 1, Lesson 4, students read two excerpts from Sandra Cisneros’s “A House of My Own” and answer questions to determine how the author uses language to convey meaning, including:

        • “As you read the two excerpts, what do you notice about the author’s use of language and how the structure of her sentences shifts? Provide specific examples of the author’s use of language and sentence syntax from the text.”

      • In Section 3, Lesson 3, students examine Amy Tan’s use of language when reading “Mother Tongue.” Students answer questions, such as:

        • “What do you think Tan is saying about writing when she uses the phrase “the intersection of memory upon imagination?”

      • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, Section 2, Lesson 2, students examine the vocabulary in “From Alexander Hamilton to The Royal Danish American Gazette, 6 September 1772” by Alexander Hamilton to determine the meaning of words and their impact on the text. Students answer questions, such as:

        • “What does the context suggest the word means? What is its connotation, and how does that compare with a dictionary definition?”

      • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, students focus on character analysis and an exploration of the missionary and Igbo tribes to answer guiding questions such as:

        • “What shapes Okonkwo’s character?

        • How do secondary characters enrich the novel?”

      • In Section 2, Lesson 2, students read, “Colonialism Explained” by Jamila Osman to determine an author’s perspective and how it is developed over the course of a text. Throughout the lesson, students answer guiding questions to gather evidence that frames their analysis of the author’s perspective in preparation for a class discussion on the author’s perspective about colonialism. Prompts for the discussion include:

        • “Based on the tone and central idea of the text, what do you think is the author’s perspective on colonialism? Support your answer with evidence from the text.

        • How does the author use rhetoric (e.g. language, word choice, structure of main points, facts, data, and historical context) to develop her perspective?”

      • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Section 1, Lesson 3, students analyze the craft and structural choices from The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. Students use the Author Craft Note-Taking Tool to examine various aspects of the text, such as tone, representation of key persons, and figurative language. Students apply the knowledge from the task to a subsequent activity in Section 3, Lesson 3, in which they write an analytical statement about the author’s craft in Chapters 26–28 of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.

  • By the end of the year, these components (language, word choice, key ideas, details, structure, craft) are embedded in students’ work rather than taught directly.

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, students complete a culminating activity in which they compose an “expository essay comparing the portrayal of Henrietta Lacks’s story in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks with its portrayal in one of the unit’s companion texts.” Students answer guiding objectives, such as “Explain the techniques that are used in each text to convey her story.” To build capacity to complete the task, in Section 3, Lesson 3, students use the Author’s Craft Note-Taking Tool to analyze Skloot’s craft by answering a cloze reading prompt: “What effect does Skloot’s use of _____ have on the reader’s understanding of the text?” Students then reflect on the following ideas in their Learning Log:

      • “the technique that Rebecca Skloot devises by using the terms on the Author Craft Note-Taking Tool

      • an example of this technique from your reading

      • the purpose of the technique and its intended effect.”

    • These activities help support students embedding these ideas in their final product at the end of the unit.

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, Section 2, Lesson 3, students read “New Media, old Messages: Themes in the History of Vaccine Hesitancy and Refusal” by Jason Schwartz to identify and analyze key ideas and details in response to the text-specific prompt:

      • “Preserving and Promoting Vaccination in a Democracy: What does the author suggest is a superior strategy for advocates of vaccines and why? How do key details from the text explain and support this strategy?”

    • Students may work with a partner, and the materials include Teaching Notes for instructors to provide additional student support and differentiation. In Section 3, Lesson 3, students independently read and annotate excerpts from “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights’’ by the United Nations General Assembly. Students annotate the document for key words, phrases, and ideas related to questions, such as: What stipulations in the declaration relate to the health and welfare of all humans?” In Section 5, students complete a culminating task that “respond[s] to a complex ethical question by researching information, identifying perspectives, delineating arguments, developing a personal perspective and position, and writing an evidence-based argument.” By this point in the unit, students are familiar with the evaluation process and were guided in preparing their research and returning to guiding questions encountered in the unit. Students follow a Culminating Task Checklist and rubric to support their planning, pacing, and accountability to embed the required components within their work to demonstrate mastery of unit skills and standards.

    • In the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research?, students apply the knowledge acquired in previous units regarding key ideas, details, craft, and structure to find, assess, and annotate appropriate texts for their culminating research assignment. Guiding questions prompt students to independently focus on key ideas, details, craft, and structure and are embedded in the lesson activities rather than the explicit teaching of the components.

Indicator 2c

4 / 4

Materials require students to analyze the integration of knowledge within individual texts as well as across multiple texts using coherently sequenced, high-quality text-specific and/or text-dependent questions and tasks.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for Indicator 2c.

The Grade 10 materials include questions and tasks to support students’ analysis of knowledge and ideas via sets of coherently sequenced higher-order questions and tasks that require students to analyze the language, knowledge, and ideas within a text or texts to make meaning and to build an understanding of a text or a topic.

Throughout the year, students read a variety of selections for analysis and annotation while investigating a topic. The sequences of text-specific and/or text-dependent questions support students in their ability to analyze across multiple texts and within single texts. The materials juxtapose texts strategically to build student knowledge around a common topic or theme. Lessons build to a unit culminating task or project through which students demonstrate understanding of the core body of knowledge and skills built into the unit. By the end of the year, integrating knowledge and ideas is embedded in student work.

Materials require students to analyze the integration of knowledge and ideas within individual texts as well as across multiple texts using coherently-sequenced, high-quality, text-specific and/or text-dependent questions and tasks. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Most sets of questions and tasks support students’ analysis of knowledge.

    • Sets of questions and tasks provide opportunities to analyze within single texts.

      • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, Section 1, students focus on the text “A Framework for Ethical Decision Making.” In Lesson 9, students prepare for the Section Diagnostic by reading and annotating the text and discussing the following questions with a partner:

        • “What is the problem or challenge of applying an approach described in the framework?

        • Why is the framework for making decisions important to making ethical decisions?”

      • Students use this analysis to support building the knowledge needed to apply to the Section Diagnostic where they “choose an approach from ‘A Framework for Ethical Decision Making’ and apply it to the ethical dilemma presented by self-driving cars.” In Section 2, Lesson 2, students analyze Rachel Carson’s “A Fable for Tomorrow” by responding to a series of questions including:

        • “What is the main idea expressed in this reading?

        • What are three to four sentences presented in the text that represent the main idea or enhance your thinking on the topic?

        • What pathway is represented by this reading? Based on what you have read, would you like to further explore this topic?”

      • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, Section 3, Lesson 3, students continue to build knowledge relating to good storytelling, focusing on who tells the story and the narrator’s perspective. Students read and analyze Amy Tan’s memoir and essay, “Mother Tongue,” considering a series of text-specific questions, including:

        • “In her essay, Tan expresses multiple views of her mother and her use of the English language—views that have shifted over time. What are two contrasting views presented by Tan, and what language and examples does she use to characterize her mother’s English? Cite specific examples from the text.

        • How does Tan use her experiences with her mother (and her mother’s English) to develop a narrative about herself as a person and a writer?”

      • In Section 4, Lesson 3, students read three texts that employ fictional narration and narrative nonfiction to answer:

        • “How do the stories of the three survivors compare? What evidence from the text supports this comparison?

        • What do they add up to in terms of helping us understand the impact of 9/11 on survivors’’ lives?

        • What do you think Sides is trying to communicate with his nonfiction narrative?

        • What do you think is the story’s meaning or theme?”

      • This series of coherently sequenced questions scaffold to support student understanding of the key ideas and details of the passages.

    • Sets of questions and tasks provide opportunities to analyze across multiple texts.

      • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, Section 3, Lessons 1 and 2, students closely examine songs from Hamilton the Revolution in tandem with excerpts from Introduction to Washington and Hamilton’s Relationship to explore how the relationship between Washington and Hamilton was represented in the musical and in the primary sources. Students use the Washington-Hamilton Note-Taking Tool to analyze the songs and use the evidence collected to complete the Comparison Organizational Frame, a tool to support students’ comparisons of the musical and the primary source. In Section 3, Lesson 4, students integrate knowledge and ideas from multiple texts to compare how Alexander Hamilton is represented in Hamilton the Revolution by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarte to how he is represented in primary sources. Students answer questions such as: “How did Lin-Manuel Miranda interpret primary and secondary sources to portray Hamilton’s relationship with Washington?”

      • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, Section 1, Lesson 1, students read “Igbo Culture and History” by Don Ohadike as an introduction to the Igbo Culture and primer to the colonization of Nigeria before they begin to read Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. Students question what they find interesting about the culture and identify what they would like to learn more about. Both texts and associated tasks prepare students to answer the Central Question of the Unit: “What does it mean for things to fall apart?” In Section 2, Lesson 8, students further develop their understanding of the history and culture of the Igbo tribe and the novel’s author, Chinua Achebe. Students continue analyzing “The Second Coming” by William Butler Yeats and then write a paragraph in Lesson 9 examining Achebe’s choice of title: Things Fall Apart. During text analysis, students respond to questions such as:

        • “What kind of event is the speaker describing?

        • How do you know? To what source or event does Yeats allude in the poem?”

      • In the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research?, Section 3, Lesson 3, students synthesize research findings from multiple texts and use the Research Frame Tools with their team, reviewing their inquiry paths and questions and establish which steps they would like to take as they move forward with their research.

  • By the end of the year, integrating knowledge is embedded in students’ work.

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, students complete a culminating task to compare the portrayal of Henrietta Lacks in the core text and a unit companion text. Students “Evaluate which text, the book or the companion text, is the most compelling in relating the story of Henrietta Lacks and the HeLa cells.” Students practice embedding this knowledge throughout the unit in a series of activities.

      • In Section 2, Lesson 5, students explore the importance of how the author of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Rebecca Skloot, uses primary sources to develop Henrietta Lacks in the text.

      • In Section 4, Lesson 2, students explore the painting Henrietta Lacks (HeLa): The Mother of Modern Medicine by Kadir Nelson and discuss questions, such as: “What aspects of Henrietta Lacks’s story are emphasized in the painting?”

    • These activities help students develop skills to integrate this knowledge in the culminating activity.

      • In Section 5, students complete the Culminating Task to integrate knowledge from multiple sources to write an expository essay comparing the life of Henrietta Lacks’ as portrayed in both texts. Integration of student knowledge is embedded in students’ work as they answer guiding questions such as: “How do other texts portray the story of Henrietta Lacks and the HeLa cell culture?”

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, Section 3, Lesson 2, students build background knowledge for Subtopic 3: Access to Public Health Resources by reading two seminal documents from the United Nations, including excerpts from “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights” and the “UN Declaration of Universal Health Coverage.” Students consider how the documents relate to other approaches and seminal documents they study as well as how the principles outlined in the documents are relevant to public health and controversies while ensuring equal access to health resources such as vaccines. As an example, students examine, “How should we address issues of unequal access to public health resources, healthcare, and preventative measures such as vaccines?” Student tasks and close analyses of texts help prepare them to work in research teams to investigate the central topic and to “write an evidence-based argument that presents and supports an ethics-based position in response to a significant public health question.” In Section 5, students complete the Culminating Task to “respond to a complex ethical question by researching information, identifying perspectives, delineating arguments, developing a personal perspective and position, and writing an evidence-based argument.” By the end of the year, the students choose and prepare their own topic of study, returning to guiding questions encountered in the Foundation Unit and throughout the Development Units. Students follow a Culminating Task Checklist and rubric to support their planning, pacing, and accountability to embed the required components within their work to demonstrate mastery of unit skills and standards.

Indicator 2d

4 / 4

Culminating tasks require students to demonstrate their knowledge of a unit's topic(s)/theme(s) through integrated literacy skills (e.g., a combination of reading, writing, speaking, listening).

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for Indicator 2d.

The Grade 10 materials include multimodal and summative unit Culminating Tasks that provide various ways for students to communicate their understanding to smaller peer groups and to the larger learning community. Unit Culminating Tasks are varied and include the following: Narrative Essay/Group Presentation; Fictional, Personal, or Historical Narrative; Literary Analysis; Explanatory Essays; Argumentative Essay; and Portfolio/Group Presentation. Session Diagnostics at the end of each unit section provide formative opportunities to assess student readiness of the discrete skills required to complete each Culminating Task. According to the Program Guide: “Written diagnostics tasks span a range of task types, including literary analysis, argument, narrative, and expository. Oral diagnostics may be tasks done by an individual (e.g., participation in a Socratic Seminar) or in groups (e.g., presentation of an analysis with teammates).”

Culminating tasks require students to demonstrate their knowledge of a unit’s topic/theme through integrated literacy skills. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Culminating tasks are evident across a year’s worth of material and they are multifaceted, requiring students to demonstrate mastery of several different standards (reading, writing, speaking, and listening) at the appropriate grade level. Culminating tasks are varied across the year and provide students the opportunity to demonstrate comprehension and knowledge of a topic or topics through integrated skills (reading, writing, speaking, listening).

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, students complete the Culminating Task, a presentation and reflection incorporating speaking, listening, reading and writing skills to answer the Central Question: “How do we determine the right thing to do?” Throughout the unit, students consider ethical issues, including environmental ethics, biomedical ethics, ethics of identity and representation, sports ethics, and ethics of social justice.

    • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, Section 4, Lesson 6, students complete the Section 4 Diagnostic to research a historical or contemporary event or figure and write a historical narrative depicting the story of the selected event or figure. For this task, students are required to demonstrate mastery of several standards, including writing narratives using a variety of narrative techniques, drawing evidence to support analysis of texts, analyzing themes, and using precise language.

    • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, Section 5, students complete a Diagnostic Task to create lyrics for an original song or to write additional verses to an existing song from Hamilton: An American Musical. This task incorporates the reading of research, writing of a song, and speaking and listening during group work. In addition, students reflect on their Diagnostic Task and self-assess their preparation for the Culminating Task, a personal essay reflective of the creative process and addressing the unit Central Question: “How do storytellers use primary sources?”

    • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, students read the text Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. In Section 1, Lesson 10, students complete the Section 1 Diagnostic, a multi-paragraph analysis of how Achebe uses foils to amplify Okonkwo’s character. In Section 2, Lesson 11, students complete the Section 2 Diagnostic, a whole-class Socratic Seminar addressing the question: “How does Achebe build up tension in Section 2 of Things Fall Apart?” Student-facing materials prompt students as follows:

      • “A successful Socratic Seminar requires you to have read the text closely, reviewed your notes and annotations, and prepared to articulate your ideas clearly. The expectation is that everyone participates in the discussion. You can engage in the discussion through the following discussion strategies:

        • posing meaningful questions that propel the conversation

        • asking clarifying questions

        • respectfully challenging perspectives

        • building on others’ ideas by providing additional evidence or ideas

        • synthesizing your peers’ ideas.”

    • Both diagnostics provide opportunities for students to demonstrate comprehension and knowledge of a topic through integration of reading, writing, speaking, and listening.

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Section 1, Lesson 9, students complete the Section Diagnostic, a literary analysis to demonstrate an understanding of Rebecca Skloot’s writing techniques and their effects as exemplified in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. In Section 3, Lesson 9, students complete the Section Diagnostic, a Socratic seminar addressing the question: “In what ways did the history of Henrietta Lacks and the HeLa cells change our world?” As the unit Culminating Task, students write an expository essay in which they evaluate and explain which text is the most compelling relating to the story of Henrietta Lacks and the HeLa cells. The various unit tasks provide students multiple opportunities to demonstrate understanding of the texts they are examining through reading, writing, speaking, and listening.

    • In the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research?, students work in groups to submit research portfolios the instructor uses to assess their progress toward the Culminating Task, a collaborative research presentation that demonstrates their findings and conclusions of their group-developed research questions. In Section 1, Lesson 7, students submit their preliminary research portfolio, including their completed Exploring a Topic Tool, Central Research Question Checklist, Potential Sources Tool, and individual reflections. The Potential Sources Tool asks students text-specific questions, such as:

      • “What is the purpose of the text with respect to the topic?

      • Does the text provide accurate, current and supported information?”

    • In Section 3, Lesson 8, students resubmit their portfolios, including the Research Frame Tool, Potential Sources Tool, Research Note-Taking Tool, Forming Evidence-Based Claims Tool, Organizing Evidence Tool, Research Evaluation Checklist, and three claims about their inquiry questions or research problem. The Organizing Evidence Tool prompts students to state claims from their research and to cite supporting evidence from the resources they collected. In both portfolio submissions, the teacher provides feedback and the students self-assess their preparedness by answering a series of guided questions, including:

      • “How well did you take necessary action to prepare for the task?

      • What went well for you during the completion of this task?

      • What did you struggle with during the completion of this task? How did you push through that struggle?”

    • Students use the Culminating Task Checklist to assist their completion of the task which includes the following categories for assessment: Reading & Knowledge Goals, Writing Goals, and Speaking & Listening Goals. Students complete the checklist by answering prompts, such as: “How well does our presentation use visual media and technological tools in an effective way, building the audience’s interest and illuminating our findings?”

  • Earlier text-specific and/or text-dependent questions and tasks are coherently sequenced and will give the teacher usable information about the student’s readiness (or whether they are “on track”) to complete culminating tasks.

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, Section 1, Lesson 5, students expand on their understanding of ethics by reading about the rights approach and using the Ethical Approach Note-Taking Tool to synthesize their learning. Subsequent to reading “A Framework for Ethical Decision Making” by the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, students apply the rights approach to previous readings and discuss some of the approach’s advantages and disadvantages. The student-facing materials provide guidance and a series of questions, including:

      • “How does this approach relate to the question, ‘Should Batman kill the Joker?’ that was posed in the Crash Course video?

      • What are the advantages of this ethical approach?

      • How is this a challenging ethical approach? What are some of its disadvantages?”

    • The various readings and lesson activities prepare students for the Culminating Task, an oral presentation in which they collaboratively research, create, and deliver a presentation about ethical issues and write an individual reflection on their research process. Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition provide additional guidance, such as:

      • “These questions are designed to direct students to connect the rights approach to Kant’s formulations of the categorical imperative and to understand why this approach can be challenging to apply.”

    • Teachers may use these opportunities to inform instructional decisions and to assess student understanding of the texts throughout the unit.

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Section 2, Lesson 1, students collect evidence and engage in a class discussion to analyze the tone in Chapter 12 of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. Teachers use this activity to monitor student preparedness for the Section Diagnostic to write a multi-paragraph response to the following questions:

      • “How does Skloot convey various perspectives about complex issues in Part 2 of the book?

      • What impact do her choices have on the reader’s understanding of the complex issues—race, ethics, class, and science—in the text?”

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, students work throughout the unit to prepare for the Culminating Task, an argument essay addressing the unit Central Question: “How do we balance the common good with individual rights and personal liberty?” In Section 2, Lesson 6, for example, students examine arguments on complex public health issues by answering questions, such as:

      • “The Common Good: In what ways does the argument reflect consideration of the common good?

      • Individual Rights and Personal Liberty: In what ways does the argument reflect consideration of individual rights or personal liberty?”

    • In Section 2, Lesson 11, students utilize their Learning Logs to self-assess both their performance on the Section 2 Diagnostic and their preparation for the unit Culminating Task by responding to a series of prompts, including:

      • “How well did you take necessary action to prepare for the task?

      • What went well for you during the completion of this task?

      • What did you struggle with during the completion of this task? How did you push through that struggle?

      • How well did you actively focus your attention during this independent task?”

    • Students then update their Culminating Task Tracker to include any skills or content area knowledge they need to address and to evaluate how well they are mastering the required knowledge and skills. Finally, students consider the unit Central Question: “How do we balance the common good with individual rights and personal liberty?” as they respond in their Learning Log to the prompt: “How has your response to the question evolved, deepened, or changed?” In Section 5, Lesson 1, students begin working on the Culminating Task to “Write an evidence-based argument in response to a complex ethical debate in the realm of public health.” Earlier sections of the unit include text-specific and text-dependent questions and tasks to prepare students for the Culminating Task.

Indicator 2e

4 / 4

Materials include a cohesive, year-long plan for students to achieve grade-level writing proficiency by the end of the school year.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for Indicator 2e.

The Grade 10 materials provide writing tasks across the grade level that increase in complexity. The program’s design provides practice through Section Diagnostics to allow teachers to monitor student progress of grade appropriate writing activities and to prepare students for completing the unit summative tasks. The program also offers a final Application Unit as a capstone in which students can follow a self-selected topic of inquiry and apply writing skills they acquire and practice throughout the year. The student-facing materials include guidance as students complete writing tasks, and the teacher-facing materials provide additional support for scaffolding, including opportunities for modeling and using exemplar or model texts students read during the unit. A Literacy Toolbox includes Reference Guides and Tools to support student writing tasks. These tools are incorporated purposefully throughout the course materials.

Students encounter a Culminating Task at the beginning of each unit and perform a series of formal and informal writing activities addressing grade-level standards to build their knowledge and writing skills over the course of each unit. The materials provide students a wide range of writing tasks, including short-response questions, guiding questions, and formative writing opportunities throughout the year. Writing tasks vary in length and purpose and help students to develop their analytical, argumentative, informational, and narrative writing skills. The lessons provide a cohesive design so that students apply and expand the skills they learn from previous lessons to perform on later lessons throughout the units. Culminating tasks walk students through each stage of the writing process and allow students to monitor their progress with rubrics, checklists, and graphic organizers. Writing instruction and assignments scale up in difficulty throughout the year. Writing instruction supports students’ growth in writing skills over the course of the school year, building students’ writing ability to demonstrate proficiency at grade level at the end of the year.

Materials include a cohesive, year-long plan for students to achieve grade-level writing proficiency by the end of the school year. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Materials include writing instruction that aligns to the standards for the grade level and supports students’ growth in writing skills over the course of the school year.

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, Section 3, Lesson 2, students write a concise, objective summary of the text. Supports for students include the Attending to Details Tool, The Foundation Unit Research Guide, and the Foundation Unit Pathway Text “How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?” Scaffolds include completing the Attending to Details tool as a group, creating a list of the central ideas in the text, using the Assess the Usefulness of Sources for Your Research Purposes portion of the Research Guide to ensure the relevance of the text to student research, and using the Evaluating Ideas Tool to determine how language choices indicate author’s perspective. These steps and stages allow the students to meet the Lesson Goal: “Can I write a concise, objective summary of the text?”

    • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, students write an original narrative for the Culminating Task. To support grade-level writing proficiency, students practice various narrative writing techniques throughout the unit, and the writing tasks provide opportunities for teachers to assess student readiness and support them to achieve proficiency with the Culminating Task. In Section 2, Lesson 2, for example, students respond to the following questions in their Learning Log:

      • “What might happen in a story you could tell—perhaps one drawn from your own experiences?

      • What might be the opening scene (exposition) in your story?

      • How might you develop and complicate your story in its middle (rising action, complication)?

      • What kind of ending (climax, resolution) might the events of your story lead to?”

    • Students use these questions to begin to plan their narratives and to outline the structure of their writing. In Section 2, Lesson 8, students write a narrative response to the question: “How might you retell a classic story?” The writing task connects to mentor texts students read during the unit, including “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner, and “The Far and the Near” by Thomas Wolfe. The student-facing materials prompt students to reflect on the knowledge and skills they are developing in preparation for the Culminating Task. Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition include additional guidance to support students, such as:

      • “Encourage students to make connections among what they have learned in this section, what they have learned in the Section Diagnostic, and what is required to successfully complete the Culminating Task.”

    • Lesson Goals for this activity include writing standards that require students to:

      • “Organize Ideas: How well do I group and sequence narrative details, paragraphs, and sentences to produce a coherent and well-developed retelling of a classic story?

      • Develop Ideas: How well do I use a first-person point of view to retell and develop a classic story told originally in third person?

      • Use Language to Convey Meaning: How well do I use vivid, descriptive images and words to retell a classic story in the style of its original author?”

    • In Section 3, Lesson 4, students review the Section 3 Diagnostic Checklist to self-assess their understanding of the narrative writing process before they complete a one-to-two page narrative of a moment in their life that is both “dramatic and meaningful.” Lesson Goals for this activity include writing standards that require students to “identify important details and examples of the writer’s craft.”

    • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, Section 1, Lesson 10, students complete the Section Diagnostic, a mutiparagraph analysis of how Achebe uses foils to amplify Okonkwo’s character in the text, Things Fall Apart. Lesson Goals for this activity include writing standards that require students to:

      • “Form Claims: How well do I develop and clearly communicate meaningful and defensible claims about Okonkwo that represent valid, evidence-based analysis?

      • Develop Ideas: How well do I use devices, techniques, descriptions, reasoning, evidence, and visual elements to support and elaborate on coherent and logical narratives, explanations, and arguments?

      • Organize Ideas: How well do I sequence and group sentences and paragraphs and use devices, techniques, descriptions, reasoning, and evidence to establish coherent, logical, and well-developed explanations?

      • Use Conventions to Produce Clear Writing: How well do I apply correct and effective syntax, usage, mechanics, and spelling to communicate ideas and achieve intended purposes?”

    • Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition provide guidance to support students, such as:

      • “You can use evidence gathered from students’ Section Diagnostic responses to determine where individuals or groups of students might need additional support, especially regarding the skills and knowledge they will apply on the Culminating Task.”

    • The activities include an opportunity for students to reflect on their work and to self-assess readiness for the Culminating Task to write a character analysis of Okonkwo that addresses the unit Central Question: “What does it mean for things to fall apart?”

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, students complete the Culminating Task, an expository essay comparing the portrayal of Henrietta Lacks’s story in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks with its portrayal in one of the unit’s companion texts. In Section 1, Lesson 5, the student-facing materials direct students to “Respond to the following questions in your Learning Log, citing evidence from the text to support your answers:

      • What more do you learn about Henrietta in this chapter?

      • What do you learn about Rebecca Skloot in this chapter?”

    • This writing activity serves as a scaffold to prepare students for other unit writing assignments, including the Culminating Task in Section 5. Lesson Goals for this activity include writing standards that ask students:

      • “Can I sequence and group sentences and paragraphs and use devices, techniques, descriptions, reasoning, evidence, and visual elements to establish coherent, logical, and well-developed narratives, explanations, and arguments?

      • Can I recognize points of connection among texts, textual elements, and perspectives to make logical, objective comparisons?

      • Can I apply correct and effective syntax, usage, mechanics, and spelling to communicate ideas and achieve intended purposes?

      • Can I use effective formatting, style, and citations to present ideas for specific audiences and purposes?”

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, students complete the Culminating Task, an argumentative essay addressing the prompt, “In light of personal beliefs, individual rights, and social justice, how should we address the common good as it relates to topics of public health?” Students develop their ability to accomplish the Culminating Task throughout the unit in the form of Section Diagnostics and informal writing activities within the unit lessons. In Section 2, Lesson 1, for example, students use the Video Note-Taking Tool to record the arguments that experts and parents present for and against vaccinations in the Frontline video, “The Vaccine War.” In Section 4, Lesson 1, students employ the Delineating Arguments Tool to examine a model argument presented in “Measles, Mumps, and Religious Freedom: Mandatory Vaccination and the Limits of Parental Rights” by Christopher O. Tollefson by identifying issues and questions and by locating claims and supporting evidence presented in the text. Lesson Goals for this activity include writing standards that ask students:

      • “Can I delineate and explain the structure of a research-based model argument about ‘Mandatory Vaccination and the Limits of Parents Rights’?

      • Can I plan a sequence of the claims and evidence I will use to support my argument about a public health controversy?”

    • These activities reflect a cohesive plan to support student understanding of how arguments are structured and help them develop their own arguments for the unit Culminating Task.

  • Instructional materials include a variety of well-designed guidance, protocols, models, and support for teachers to implement and monitor students’ writing development.

    • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, Section1, Lesson 1, the materials provide resources to help students unpack and complete the Culminating Task to write an original song to be included in Hamilton The Revolution. In addition to the Literacy Toolbox, which is useful to teachers in every unit and lesson, the Teaching Notes for this activity offer specific guidance to support student writing, including ideas and materials for a mini-lesson on the difference between poetry and prose. In Section 2, Lesson 11, students “write a response comparing Miranda’s interpretation of Hamilton’s views of slavery with what we found in our reading of primary and secondary sources.” The Teacher Edition provides guidance for teachers to support students through this writing process, such as:

      • “Some students might benefit from using a tool when composing their response. Sentence frames can also be a useful scaffolding for all students, regardless of ability range and are particularly useful for English learners.”

    • The use of organizers and sentence frames represents a protocol for teachers to implement writing development.

    • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, students complete a character analysis of the character Okonkwo in which students “consider how internal and external factors influence his relationships and contribute to his fate at the end of the novel.” The materials offer a variety of protocols and support in the form of guides, tools, and suggestions presented in the Teaching Notes section of the Teacher Edition. In Section 4, Lesson 2, for example, the Teaching Notes suggest that teachers review the Claims Reference Guide to model for students how to form claims in their own writing. Similarly, in Section 4, Lesson 5, the Teaching Notes prompt teachers to direct students to the Conventions Reference Guide for their Culminating Task essay revision activity to help model writing conventions such as parallel structure and incorporating mentor sentences.

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, Section 2, Lesson 4, students utilize their Mentor Sentence Journals to identify and record sentences they find interesting or ones that are strong examples of language concepts. The student-facing materials guide students through the process through prompts, such as:

      • “What does this sentence contribute to the author’s ideas in the text?

      • How does it expand your understanding of the text or author?”

    • Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition provide additional details to guide teaching strategies, such as choosing at least one mentor sentence worthy of careful study in advance:

      • “You might model a mentor sentence analysis by engaging in a think-aloud as you follow the steps for deconstruction, analysis, and writing practice. If needed, consider working on a second mentor sentence with the whole class, allowing the students to work as a group. Then, you can divide the students into groups and turn over the work to them.”

Indicator 2f

4 / 4

Materials include a progression of focused research projects to encourage students to develop knowledge in a given area by confronting and analyzing different aspects of a topic using multiple texts and source materials.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for Indicator 2f.

Grade 10 materials build skills throughout the year, including opportunities for collaborative research, evaluating sources, synthesis and analysis of texts, and applying those skills in a unit-long research project as a capstone for the course. The Program Guide provides details relating to active learning through inquiry: “In the Foundation and Application units, students investigate a topic through recursive and iterative cycles of inquiry in which they work in learning communities to explore significant issues and topics, refine research questions, find and assess sources for relevance and credibility, and present their research in various forms.” Students compile comprehensive research on specific questions during the final Application Unit and present their findings to their learning community. The student-determined text set during the final unit provides students with an opportunity to explore topics they have been learning more deeply and demonstrate the research skills they acquire.

The materials reviewed for this grade level include a progression of research skills according to the grade level standards by providing various opportunities for students to engage in online research and discussion of unit topics and to cite evidence from multiple sources in the Lesson Activities, Section Diagnostics, Culminating Tasks, and Independent Reading Presentations. Students also have the opportunity to synthesize work and analyze content through a variety of tools provided in the materials and are given opportunities to complete research projects of varying lengths. Materials sequence research projects throughout the year to help students progress in their research skills. At the beginning of the year, students begin to practice working in groups in the Foundation Unit with focused guidance from the instructor, and during the Application Unit at the end of the year students work collaboratively in self-directed teams with the instructor acting as coach or facilitator. Materials support teachers in employing projects that develop students’ knowledge of different aspects of a topic. The materials provide guidance and support to teachers, including but not limited to, questions to prompt student thinking, graphic organizers to assist students, and an option for teachers to provide various scaffolds for students.

Materials include a progression of focused research projects to encourage students to develop knowledge in a given area by confronting and analyzing different aspects of a topic using multiple texts and source materials. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Research projects are sequenced across a school year to include a progression of research skills according to grade-level standards.

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do, students complete the Section Diagnostic using their research from Section 1 to “draft a multi-paragraph analysis of an ethical dilemma, using the information gained from texts in this section to analyze the dilemma.” Later in the unit, in Section 4, Lesson 1, students begin their Culminating Tasks in which they “Collaboratively participate in a research team to choose a pathway option and create and deliver a 5–7 minute presentation about ethics and why ethical issues are complex in that pathway.” In Section 4, Lesson 3, students complete the Application Unit Potential Topics Tool and use the following questions as a guide:

      • “Were there any particular topics or texts that captured your attention? Why?

      • What about each text or topic do you still want to study? What questions do you still have? Write these down in the Questions or Subtopics to Explore column.

      • How would you begin to research each text or topic?”

    • These lessons represent a progression of research skills throughout the unit.

    • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, students complete the Culminating Task, a personal essay reflecting on the creative process of creating original song lyrics using primary and secondary sources. After completing the Culminating Task, in Section 6, Lesson 5, students engage in a whole class or group discussion of possible connections among the unit, other units from the year, and the research students might choose to do in the final Application Unit. In the Application Unit, Section 1, Lesson 1, students use the Application Unit Potential Topics Tool to develop potential topics to explore with their research teams by addressing the questions:

      • “Which questions fascinate you?

      • What mysteries would you most love to dig into, whether or not they can ever be solved?”

    • These activities are sequenced throughout the year to allow students to reflect on the skills they developed and prepare them for the final Culminating Task of the year.

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, students examine the ways in which the Central Question, “How do we balance the common good with individual rights and personal liberty?” plays out in the realm of public health decision making. To learn how broad ethical questions and approaches apply in a specific context, students examine the historical and contemporary history of vaccinations, public health mandates, and personal dissent by reading informational sources to build background knowledge, analyzing and delineating various perspectives and arguments, and developing their own perspectives and positions. For the Culminating Task, students work in research teams to further investigate this topic, or a related ethical issue in public health, and write an evidence-based argument that presents and supports an ethics-based position in response to a significant public health question. Student-facing materials prompt students as follows:

      • “Write an argument in which you state your response and logically and sufficiently support your position with claims and textual evidence, including the use of ethical frameworks, examples, statistics, arguments, and direct quotations with parenthetical citations.”

    • To complete this task, students must:

      • “Use correct and effective words, phrases, syntax, and mechanics to clearly communicate your analysis.state your response and logically and sufficiently support your position with claims and textual evidence, including the use of ethical frameworks, examples, statistics, arguments, and direct quotations with parenthetical citations.”

  • Materials support teachers in employing projects that develop students’ knowledge of different aspects of a topic via provided resources.

    • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, students compare Lin-Manuel Miranda’s interpretation of Alexander Hamilton’s view on slavery to those found in unit primary and secondary resources. In Section 3, Lesson 2, for example, students work as a class using the Comparison Organizational Frame to compare the relationship between Alexander Hamilton and George Washington presented in the musical to those portrayed in primary sources, such as an excerpt from Illustrating Washington’s Temper, Referencing A. Hamilton Letter 18 February 1781 from Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow. Student-facing materials guide students as follows:

      • “You will continue using this tool over the next few lessons. You will begin by summarizing what you know about Hamilton and Washington’s relationship.”

    • In Section 4, students continue their study of Alexander Hamilton from the perspective of Historical Accuracy and Artistic License to consider how Lin-Manuel Miranda’s interpretation of Alexander Hamilton compares with the way Hamilton is revealed in the primary and secondary sources read.

    • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, Section 4, Lesson 1, students engage in a sustained recursive inquiry process as they conduct research to complete the Culminating Task, a character analysis of Okonkwo from Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. In Section 4, Lesson 6, students collaborate in groups to discuss their understanding of the novel, including thematic connections to other units of study and possible questions and ideas to explore for the longer Application Unit research task at the end of the year. Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition provide questions and prompts for teachers to support students in their research and Culminating Task, such as:

      • “You might have students develop a master list of important events or quotes from the novel (including page numbers), along with a list of character traits that students feel best fit Okonkwo.”

    • The instructional materials provide a Culminating Task Progress Tracker to help students develop research and note-taking skills, reflect on what they have studied, and consider potential inquiry questions for the final Application Unit. Teachers may use the Culminating Task Progress Tracker to conference with students and guide their questions when monitoring readiness for both the unit Culminating Task for Things Fall Apart, and in beginning the initial stage of planning for The Application Unit end of year research project. The materials also provide an Application Unit Potential Topics Tool for students to capture their reflections, and the student-facing materials provide questions for consideration, such as:

      • “Were there any particular topics or texts that captured your attention? Why?

      • How would you begin to research each text or topic?”

    • Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition provide additional guidance relating to the Tool students use and the purpose of the project, for example:

      • “It provides a space in which students can capture their reflections about what they found intriguing in a unit and might want to explore further in the Application Unit.

      • It serves as a repository of leads they might research when they arrive at the Application Unit.”

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Section 4, Lesson 11, students have the opportunity to develop different aspects of a topic by analyzing texts that they have chosen for independent reading. Student-facing materials provide the following information to explain how students will use independent reading to make connections to different aspects of the topic:

      • “We will share the analyses we have made about our independent reading texts and make connections to the unit. We will plan a final product to share our experiences from reading independently and the knowledge we have gained.”

  • Materials provide many opportunities for students to synthesize and analyze content tied to the texts under study as a part of the research process.

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, students work toward the Culminating Task during which they collaboratively participate in a research team to choose a pathway topic and create and deliver a 5–7 minute presentation about ethics and why ethical issues are complex in that pathway. In Section 3, Lesson 7, students complete an annotated bibliography as part of the Section Diagnostic. Students compose their annotated bibliographies by writing “two to three sentences explaining how this text connects to your pathway, how it enhances your understanding, and how it furthers your thinking and lines of inquiry.”

    • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, Section 5, Lesson 1, students begin the Culminating Task during which they write an original narrative that presents an interesting story from their lives, their imaginations, current events, or history. Students choose from the genres of Personal Narrative or Memoir, Original Story or Folk Tale, and Nonfiction or Historical Narrative for their original narrative. To prepare for this task, students read an array of stories over the course the unit, including but not limited to, “The Lottery,” by Shirley Jackson, “A Rose for Emily,” by William Faulkner, and “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County,” by Mark Twain. Students then analyze and synthesize the various storytelling approaches, use of narrative voice, and use of dialogue in each of these stories before they choose the genre for their own original narrative.

    • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, Section 5, Lesson 7, students have opportunities to synthesize and analyze content as part of the unit Culminating Task by engaging in the following activities explained in the student-facing materials:

      • “We will continue to explore the following question: How will I use primary and secondary sources to create an original work? Following our research, we will closely analyze one of the previously studied songs in order to guide our writing of lyrics for our own original song or writing new verses to an existing song from the musical using our research and the influence of primary sources.”

  • Students are provided with opportunities for both short and long projects across the course of a year and grade bands.

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, students complete a Culminating Task during which they write an expository essay comparing the book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot with a companion text, such as “HeLa” by L. Lamar Wilson and “Henrietta Lacks, HeLa Cells and Cell Culture Contamination” by Brendan P. Lucey, Walter A. Nelson-Rae and Grover M. Hutchins. As part of this longer project, students engage in shorter research activities within the unit in the form of Section Diagnostics. In Section 3, Lesson 9, for example, students participate in a Socratic Seminar as the Section Diagnostic to discuss what the book presents in regards to the life of Henrietta Lacks. Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition explain:

      • “Once students have completed this task, they will have a better understanding of how the text fits in with the history of race, class, science, and ethics in America.”

    • In Section 4, Lesson 7, students write a multi-paragraph response on how The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks and one of the companion texts address one of the following central issues: race, ethics, class, and science. Students then reflect on how well they did on the Section Diagnostic and how prepared they are for the Culminating Task. Here we see opportunities for students to expand on their learning of the topic, issue, and resources used as they develop skills and knowledge needed for the culminating task.

    • In the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research?, students complete a series of short projects as a part of the longer Culminating Task that progresses throughout the unit. In Section 1, Lesson 1, students discuss the importance of a researched perspective and the research process. Students form small research teams and begin developing their research topics. The teacher discusses each phase of the Research Plan and the Research Portfolio Description section. In Section 1, Lesson 2, students begin the first section of a shorter research project using the Exploring a Topic Tool to identify one or two potential Central Research Questions that might lead to valuable questions and problems to explore in their research. Students use this tool to choose which topic to explore for their long project that will complete the unit and the grade level materials. Students may choose from any of the prior units for their long project. Students choose from topics within How Do We Determine the Right Thing To Do?, Telling Stories, Alexander Hamilton, Things Fall Apart, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, and The Ethics of Public Health Decisions and all of the texts and topics within these units. In Section 1, Lesson 3, students explore topics and craft research questions to share with their groups. The Application Unit provides students with an opportunity to self-direct their research process, build a research portfolio, and develop a presentation for their learning community that shares their research findings. Tools and Reference Guides students utilize in previous units are available for students in the Literacy Toolbox throughout the unit-long project.

Criterion 2.2: Coherence

6 / 8

Materials promote mastery of grade-level standards by the end of the year.

The instructional materials reviewed for Grade 10 partially meet the criteria for coherence. While suggested implementation schedules align to core learning objectives, the provided Model Yearlong Paths cannot reasonably be completed. The suggested number of minutes per lesson, as well as the number of units suggested for the year, do not seem practical for teachers and students to complete. Optional tasks are meaningful and support core learning.

Indicator 2g

4 / 4

Materials spend the majority of instructional time on content that falls within grade-level aligned instruction, practice, and assessments.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 meet the criteria for Indicator 2g.

The instructional sequence begins with a Foundation Unit, followed by teacher-selected Development Units, and concludes with an Application Unit. Materials include Model Yearlong Paths as suggested guidance. The Foundation Unit serves as the starting point of student-led inquiry; instructional content addresses a large number of the Reading: Informational Text, Writing, Speaking & Listening, and Language standards. The Development Units include opportunities to revisit these standards and also address the Reading: Literature standards. The Application Unit is the recursive conclusion to students’ inquiry, and instructional content revisits the standards addressed in the Foundation Unit.

As part of the program’s Monitor, Diagnose, Evaluate practice, instruction and assessments are closely linked. Instruction is coherently sequenced, preparing students to respond to standards-aligned, analytical questions and tasks based on the complex texts of study. Questions and tasks are coherently sequenced and prepare students for Section Diagnostics. Each Section Diagnostic builds to the end-of-unit Culminating Task.

Materials spend the majority of instructional time on content that falls within grade-level aligned instruction, practice, and assessments. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Over the course of each unit, the majority of instruction is aligned to grade-level standards.

    • The CCSS Alignment document illustrates coverage of each standard strand. During all three model pathway options, materials address the majority of Reading: Literature, Reading: Informational Text, Writing, Speaking & Listening, and Language standards.

  • Over the course of each unit, the majority of questions and tasks are aligned to grade-level standards.

    • As students closely read and analyze complex text, they respond to standards-aligned, text-based questions. Questions and tasks require students to cite textual evidence and draw upon the text to infer what is not explicitly stated. Questions and tasks build to and prepare students for the Section Diagnostic and end-of-unit Culminating Task.

  • Over the course of each unit, the majority of assessment questions are aligned to grade-level standards.

    • Section Diagnostics and the end-of-unit Culminating Task align to grade-level standards. Each lesson includes standards-aligned explicit instruction, as well as questions and tasks, that prepares students for the corresponding Section Diagnostic. Each Section Diagnostic prepares students for the Culminating Task.

  • By the end of the academic year, standards are repeatedly addressed within and across units to ensure students master the full intent of the standard.

    • The instructional sequence begins with the Foundation Unit, progresses through three to four Development Units, and ends with the Application Unit. Instruction and assessments within the Foundation Unit and Application Unit address a large number of the Reading: Informational Text, Writing, Speaking & Listening, and Language standards. Development Units revisit these standards and address Reading: Literature standards.

Indicator 2h

2 / 4

Materials regularly and systematically balance time and resources required for following the suggested implementation, as well as information for alternative implementations that maintain alignment and intent of the standards.

The materials reviewed for Grade 10 partially meet the criteria for Indicator 2h. 

Materials suggest educators begin with the Foundation Unit, choose from five Development Units, and end with the capstone Application Inquiry Unit. The Course-at-a-Glance includes Model Yearlong Paths that contain the following guidance: “These model yearlong paths are only suggestions; teachers and curriculum coordinators should make decisions based on their own expertise.” Materials identify Core Lessons and Optional Lessons. The Optional Lessons enhance core instruction and help students deepen their understanding of each unit's topic and themes. Local districts must select the Development Units strategically to ensure that all standards are addressed across the grade level with a balance of informational text and literature. The Program Guide provides details relating to Choice & Flexibility: “Teachers choose from a variety of Development Units to use throughout the year. Teachers can use the curriculum as written, selecting lessons and activities that meet the needs of their students.” Materials provide additional guidance to educators in the Teaching Notes of the Teacher Edition to make decisions relating to instruction and to provide additional scaffolding when necessary. 

With some diligence in planning, the suggested implementation schedules and alternative implementation schedules align to core learning and objectives. For teachers with a traditional class period and typical number of instructional days, the Model Yearlong Paths are not reasonable to complete, based on the suggested minimum number of 45 minutes per lesson and the number of units suggested for the year. 

Materials sometimes systematically balance time and resources required for following the suggested implementation, as well as information for alternative implementations that maintain alignment and intent of the standards. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following: 

  • Suggested implementation schedules and alternative implementation schedules align to core learning and objectives. 

    • In the Grade 10 Course-at-a-Glance, materials offer three pathways for instruction: “A,” “B,” and “C.” Each pathway recommends the teacher implement the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, and the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research? The other pathways differ in the types of Development Units they select. Despite differing Development Units, each pathway aligns with core learning and objectives. 

    • In the Foundation Unit, How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, Section 3, Lessons 1–9, materials clearly label the Core and Optional Lessons. For example, Lesson 1 is Optional and states, “We will make connections between foundational texts and our pathway texts, and reflect on our current understanding of ethics and our pathways.” Lesson 2 is a Core Lesson, during which students work in their research teams to continue reading, analyzing, and evaluating a common seed text from the Foundation Unit Pathway Texts: “We will evaluate the credibility of the text, and reflect on how prepared we are for the Culminating Task.” During Section 3, students explore the ethical implications of their chosen topics and practice making cross-textual connections, analyzing texts for bias and relevance, and creating an annotated bibliography. The program design requires the teacher to implement Core Lessons, as these lessons align to core learning and objectives. Optional Lessons are not required; however, if selected for implementation, these lessons also support the learning objectives of the unit.

  • Suggested implementation schedules may not be reasonably completed in the time allotted. 

    • In the Grade 10 Course-at-a-Glance, materials provide three Model Yearlong Paths as suggestions. For example, Model Yearlong Path A includes the following units: Foundation: How Do We Determine the Right Thing to Do?, Things Fall Apart, Alexander Hamilton, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, Application: What Do I Want to Research?, and the Development Unit The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks assigned as independent reading throughout the year. Lessons are designed to span 45–90 minutes, with time contingent on the number of Activities a teacher chooses to include. Due to the number of Core Lessons following the Model Yearlong Path A, a teacher would not be able to reasonably complete these or add Optional Lessons in a typical class period and instructional days in the school year. 

    • In the Development Unit, Telling Stories, the unit includes five sections, two of which are reserved for the Culminating Task. Section 2 contains five Core Lessons, two Section Diagnostic Lessons, and one Independent Reading lesson. In Lesson 4, there are four core activities and one optional activity. If each core activity represents a day of instructional time, this lesson will take four days to complete. Based on these calculations, it will take five weeks for students to complete the Core Lessons, not including time for the Section Diagnostics, Optional Lessons, or time for reinforcing learning. In order to complete the unit in the time allotted, the teacher would have to choose which Core Lessons and Activities to teach. Materials set the premise that the teacher has the final say on how to implement the instructional materials. Pathway “A” offers fewer units to cover with five total units, including an independent reading option. This pathway reduces the number of units in comparison to Pathway “C” which includes six units of study. 

    • In the Grade 10 Course-at-a-Glance, the Model Yearlong Paths recommend completing one of two Development Units, Alexander Hamilton or The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, as both Units contain an analysis essay for the Culminating Task. The Alexander Hamilton unit consists of 66 lessons, seven of which are considered Optional. Given the quantity of lessons, this unit would be difficult to complete in a grading period, even with the omission of Optional Lessons.  

  • Optional tasks do not distract from core learning. 

    • In the Development Unit, Alexander Hamilton, Section 2, Lesson 4, during an Optional Lesson, students learn about the importance of paying attention to authors’ use of language and begin compiling powerful and interesting sentences in their Mentor Sentence Journals, which connect to their core reading. The Teaching Notes in the Teacher Edition include examples of mentor sentences, such as, “Despite Hamilton’s reputation as the elitist, the starting point of Madison’s most famous essay, Federalist number 10, is that people possess different natural endowments, leading to an unequal distribution of property and conflicts of classes and interests. (para. 1).” This Optional Lesson supports students in their understanding of the text and aids in their success when completing the Section Diagnostic and Culminating Task. 

    • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, Section 2, Lesson 3, students deepen their learning of vocabulary learned in the unit by contextualizing the word within the time period of the novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe:

      • “Contextualize the word: Explain how the word is used in the text. If you chose retain, you might say, ‘In the article “The Colonial Era, (1882-1960),” the Fulani ruling class used the British to keep their power and acquire wealth. Retaining power and wealth was important for colonizers.’” 

    • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, Section 2, Lesson 9, student-facing materials include the following guidance for an optional task: “We will continue to practice delineating and evaluating arguments about mandating vaccinations, using two opposing arguments from a medical journal.” This task extends students’ learning from Lesson 8.  

    • In the Application Unit, What Do I Want to Research?, Section 4, Lesson 4, during the optional Activity 4, students work collaboratively to brainstorm the content, structure, and language to use when composing invitations for possible audience members. This activity serves to enhance the instruction and goals of the lesson and cover Common Core Speaking and Listening Standards. 

  • Optional tasks are meaningful and enhance core instruction.

    • In the Development Unit, Things Fall Apart, Section 2, Lesson 12, students may complete the following optional task using the following guidance in the student-facing materials: “We will review the teacher’s feedback on our Section Diagnostic and will use the feedback to make revisions to our work.” This activity enhances core instruction as students take time to apply feedback and make their writing stronger.

    • In the Development Unit, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Section 1, Lesson 10, during an Optional Lesson, students review feedback on the Section Diagnostic in which they compose a response to demonstrate understanding of Rebecca Skloot’s writing techniques and their effect in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. This Optional Lesson supports students in making revisions and improving their work, and prepares them for the Culminating Task during which they write an expository essay comparing the portrayal of Henrietta Lacks’s story in the mentor text with its portrayal in one of the unit’s companion texts. Lesson requirements include, but are not limited to: “Explain the techniques used in each text to convey her story. Evaluate the effects of the techniques on your understanding.” 

In Section 4, Lessons 8 and 9, students plan and present a photo essay of someone the student believes deserves recognition. This optional activity enhances the Activities, questions, and goals of the unit while providing support for students who may need additional practice in presenting or require another medium in which to be assessed either in lieu of or in addition to the Section Diagnostic.

  • In the Development Unit, The Ethics of Public Health Decisions, Section 4, Lesson 4, students have the option to work with a peer and discuss the feedback and suggestions they received on their Section Diagnostic. Students then revise their work and discuss how they revised their work. Afterwards, students work with the teacher using the Mentor Sentence Tool to analyze effective use of language from texts read in the unit.