Vision for English Language Arts Education
Nebraska’s PK-12 students have equitable access to high-quality literacy instruction that prepares them for the demands of college, career, and civic life. Instructional practices are grounded in student engagement with complex and challenging texts and are responsive to a range of student needs and interests.
Navigating the ELA Instructional Materials Selection Process
Selecting instructional materials is one of the most critical decisions a district will make. Finding instructional materials that are aligned to Nebraska’s College and Career Ready Standards for English Language Arts and that meet the needs of your district can be overwhelming, particularly when examining a crowded marketplace. It can be even more overwhelming for Nebraska districts as they try to determine if materials aligned to Common Core State Standards are also aligned to Nebraska’s ELA Standards.
How to Use this Guide
The steps below are designed to help districts prioritize time while maximizing choice. Through a clearly defined selection process, districts are able to determine how strongly instructional materials for English Language Arts are aligned to Nebraska’s ELA standards and how the materials support the instructional shifts. Additionally, the process highlights where the district will need to provide additional support in order to ensure a strong implementation of the materials.
Key Actions & Considerations
While the following key actions and considerations are not exhaustive, they can be adapted to meet local needs as they navigate selection, adoption, and implementation stages of high-quality instructional materials for English Language Arts. The considerations contain links to tools and resources that will provide additional support to ensure the process is thoughtfully planned, transparent, and well-documented. As a starting point, districts are encouraged to carefully review the ELA Bridge document. The bridge document should be used in conjunction with EdReports reviews. The document serves as a bridge between the EdReports reviews and the Nebraska standards, and it also describes features of high-quality instructional materials.
Resources
The following steps draw from a number of resources including the Nebraska Instructional Materials Collaborative*, EdReports’ Adoption Steps* , Instruction Partners’ Curriculum Support Guide*, and the work of the Nebraska Instructional Materials Professional Learning Innovation Network Fellowship*.
* Nebraska Instructional Materials Collaborative*
* Instruction Partners’ Curriculum Support Guide,
* Nebraska Instructional Materials Professional Learning Innovation Network Fellowship
Phase 1: Instructional Materials Selection
Key Action:
In this step, the goal is to establish a district-wide instructional vision for English Language Arts.
Considerations:
- Is there a district-wide vision for equitable and excellent English Language Arts instruction? If not, who will lead the development of the vision?
- Do educators and other stakeholders have sufficient knowledge of the Instructional Shifts for English Language Arts?
- How will the vision be communicated with educators and stakeholders?
- What kinds of professional learning will be necessary to align curriculum, materials, instruction, and intervention with the vision?
Key Actions:
District and school leaders will develop a plan for reviewing and selecting materials.
Considerations:
- What kinds of data will be collected to analyze student learning needs (e.g. NSCAS ELA achievement data, early literacy screening data, interim and formative assessments).
- How will new ELA materials support school-level and district-wide improvement goals?
- What are the criteria for high-quality instructional materials to ensure alignment with Nebraska College- and Career-Ready Standards for English Language Arts?
- To what extent will newly adopted ELA materials align with materials in use at other grade levels? In other content areas?
- To what extent will newly adopted ELA materials align with foundational skills programs already in use? With any intervention programs in use? Refer to The Reading League’s Curriculum Evaluation Guidelines free workbook to find practices aligned with the Science of Reading (word recognition, language comprehension, reading comprehension, writing, and assessment).
- What are the adoption requirements set forth in district and/or school board policy?
Key Actions:
The adoption committee will explore how the high-quality materials selected for further review may align with other ELA programs in use—foundational skills and/or intervention programs, screening, diagnostic and progress monitoring assessments, and core materials in use at other grade bands and within other content areas.
Considerations:
- What are the primary materials, programs, and/or resources used to teach a sequence of foundational skills? What tools will the team use to assess their evidence base and alignment to the highly rated materials under consideration?
- Assessment— How do the curriculum-based measures align with the other programs and assessments in use?
- To what extent do the highly rated ELA materials align with the scope and sequence of foundational skills from other ELA programs in use?
- What are the primary materials, programs, or tools used to provide support and intervention for struggling readers? How will you determine the quality of interventions already in use as well as those under consideration?
- Who will determine which supplementary and/or core materials are used at other ELA grade levels? In other content areas?
- To what extent will the highly rated ELA materials align with other materials to create a cohesive sequence of knowledge-building within and across content areas?
- To what extent will newly adopted ELA materials align with foundational skills?
Key Actions:
District and school leaders will develop a plan for reviewing and selecting materials.
Considerations:
- How will the parameters of the adoption be established (e.g. budget, timing, decision-making process, technology needs)?
- Which teachers, school leaders, and other stakeholders, including parents and community members, may comprise the selection and/or adoption committee(s)?
- Who will create and communicate an adoption timeline and schedule of events?
Key Actions:
This step involves taking stock of the highly rated English Language Arts materials available in the marketplace.
Considerations:
- What initial research is necessary to learn more about available highly rated ELA materials?
- Who will conduct and communicate the initial research?
- Are the materials under consideration in use by other Nebraska districts? If so, how will you establish contact to gather anecdotal information about programs?
- How will local priorities and the vision for excellent English Language Arts instruction be applied to preliminary reviews of available materials?
- How will stakeholder input of ELA materials under review be solicited?
- Which 2-4 programs will be studied more deeply?
- Utilize the bridge document to determine how the EdReports reviews support alignment to the Nebraska English Language Arts Standards and the Nebraska instructional shifts.
Key Actions:
This step is essential for determining how high-quality ELA materials will meet the needs of diverse learners.
Considerations:
- What steps will be taken to ensure the selection committee is representative of the diversity of the students within the district?
- Are review rubrics and tools designed to ensure students will encounter materials that include and reflect a diversity of perspectives, narratives, and histories, while elevating contributions of traditionally marginalized groups?
- Do review tools allow for adequate evaluation of bias that may be present in materials?
Key Actions:
Teams will make a final selection and prepare for launch and implementation phases.
Considerations:
- How will the final decision be made and communicated?
- Given the review, selection process, and pilot, how will leaders develop and communicate a shared understanding of why the materials were selected?
- What are key talking points that will be reinforced throughout the communication process?
Phase 2: Planning for Implementation
Key Actions:
In this step, initial logistical decisions such as purchase, distribution, and professional learning are made.
Considerations:
- What supplemental materials and/or instructional supports accompany the core ELA program (e.g. consumables, assessment resources, text sets)?
- How will newly adopted ELA materials be procured and distributed to schools in a timely manner, ensuring all teachers have access to essential program resources?
- How will professional learning be designed and offered, and to whom?
- Is there a need to identify partners organizations, i.e. the Professional Learning Partner Guide, to facilitate curriculum-aligned professional learning?
- Does the professional learning plan allow teachers adequate time to orient to the materials and supplements?
- How will professional learning norms and goals be established and maintained?
- What are the long- and short-term activities that will support deeper stages of implementation?
- To what extent is the professional learning plan responsive to teacher needs and concerns during implementation?
- Are there existing structures and opportunities for professional learning in place at the local or state level that can support professional learning?
- What role will ESUs have in supporting initial and ongoing implementation?
Key Actions: Understand the design and demands of your materials.
In this step, the focus is on the design elements of the newly adopted ELA materials (e.g. units, lessons, overall scope and sequence, norms and routines, structures, formative and summative assessments) and how they will inform ongoing professional learning.
Considerations:
- What are the core beliefs about students and the role new materials will play in supporting literacy instruction? How do you anticipate these core beliefs may be challenged?
- How does the vision for equitable and excellent ELA instruction impact the professional learning needs of teachers?
- To what extent does the scope and sequence of newly adopted ELA materials align with the local curriculum? What are the long- and short-term modifications that may be necessary?
- How might the design features impact existing structures such as literacy block scheduling, teacher planning time, instructional hours, and staffing?
- How will design elements of the materials impact existing protocols for assessment and grading?
- Do current systems and structures for professional learning need to be adjusted? If so, what are the changes that need to be made?
Key Actions: Continue to plan and provide professional learning.
In this step, professional learning plans are designed and refined to address learning needs of all stakeholders
Considerations:
To what extent does the content of professional learning impress upon educators why the newly adopted materials were selected and how they align to instructional shifts for ELA?
How will the professional learning plan be communicated and by whom?
What professional learning materials and supports, including publisher resources, will be identified?
How will district and building leaders be involved with professional learning?
What types of literacy coaching models might be put into place as teachers begin with initial implementation?
Key Actions:
This step involves developing a plan for observing the implementation of materials in classroom practice.
Considerations:
- How will stakeholders ensure newly adopted materials are implemented with fidelity?
- How will classroom implementation of high-quality materials be supported and evaluated?
- What kinds of ELA-specific observation tools will be identified and what training is necessary to use them effectively?
- To what extent do structures for classroom observation allow for meaningful collaboration amongst teachers?
- How will observation and feedback plans ensure that the social, emotional, and academic needs of diverse learners are being met through materials and instruction?
Key Actions:
This step requires consideration of current practices and policies related to grading and assessment.
Considerations:
- How will you ensure educators have a clear understanding of the purpose of formative, interim, and summative assessments?
- In what ways do new materials require a shift in practice related to assessment?
- Which types of assessment data will be identified and analyzed to assess student growth?
- What process will be used to adjust current assessment practices so that they reflect the intentions of the newly adopted materials?
- How will fair and equitable grading and assessment practices be established and maintained?
Phase 3: Professional Learning & Progress Monitoring
Key Actions:
In this phase, the plan developed in Phase II is enacted by observing successes and challenges and listening to feedback related to effectively supporting teachers.
Considerations:
- What is the plan for deep implementation?
- What kinds of data will be collected and analyzed?
- How will classroom instruction be observed and evaluated?
- What are the key deadlines and how will they be tracked?
- What needs to happen to get the work done at a high level of quality?
Key Actions:
The goal of this step is to examine progress toward established goals, identify key successes, and problem-solve significant challenges. After analyzing the data, the team will adjust the plan for the next phases of implementation work.
Considerations:
- Once the plan has been adjusted, what are the next steps?
- How will adjustments to the plan be communicated and what kinds of additional learning might be required?
- What will identified stakeholder groups need to learn about adjustments to the plan?
- What questions are anticipated and how will the team respond?
Key Actions:
The goal of this key action is to reflect on the implementation, celebrate successes, identify areas for growth, and define work for the following year of implementation.
Considerations:
- What are the goals for the annual review?
- How will meeting norms be established and communicated to ensure the team discussion is productive?
- What data will be collected to report progress toward goals?
- How will data be disaggregated to ensure equity–specifically for students in poverty, students of color, students with disabilities, and English language learners?
- What additional stakeholder feedback may be necessary?