2026
Open Court Reading

3rd-5th Grade Report Overview

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Gateway Ratings Summary

ELA 3rd-5th Grade Overview

Open Court Reading partially meets expectations for Gateway 1 in Grades 3–5 by providing systematic, research-based instruction in multisyllabic word reading, word analysis, and oral reading fluency. The materials include explicit instruction in syllable types, syllable division, and morpheme-based strategies, supporting students’ ability to decode, spell, and analyze increasingly complex words. Instruction integrates prefixes, suffixes, and Greek and Latin roots to support decoding, spelling, and vocabulary development, and fluency routines offer regular, structured opportunities to build accuracy, rate, and prosody through repeated reading of connected, grade-level texts. Assessments occur regularly across lessons, units, and benchmarks to monitor student progress in word recognition, analysis, and fluency. However, expectations are only partially met due to limited opportunities for guided encoding practice, inconsistent task-specific corrective feedback, and broad guidance for using assessment data to inform instructional decisions. As a result, while the materials support accurate and efficient word reading and fluent oral reading, gaps in feedback specificity and assessment-driven guidance reduce the consistency of targeted instructional support for students who need additional reinforcement.

Open Court Reading partially meets expectations for Gateway 2 by offering a coherent, research-informed literacy program grounded in strong text quality, thematic knowledge-building, and consistent instructional routines. The program provides a balanced collection of informational and literary texts organized into cohesive, content-rich units, supported by clear text complexity analyses using both quantitative and qualitative measures. Students engage in varied reading experiences, including scaffolded exposure to complex texts through read-alouds, and receive structured supports before, during, and after reading. Daily lessons include robust text-based questions, explicit vocabulary instruction, collaborative discussions, inquiry-driven research opportunities, evidence-based writing tasks, and culminating assessments that integrate reading, writing, speaking, and listening. However, expectations are only partially met due to limitations in instructional coherence and teacher guidance. Writing instruction—particularly sentence-level instruction and process writing—is frequently disconnected from unit texts and content, limiting integration between reading and writing. Additionally, while scaffolding, differentiation structures, formative assessment tools, and supplemental resources are present, guidance for using these supports to make targeted instructional decisions is often broad and left largely to teacher discretion. Overall, Open Court Reading demonstrates strong foundations in comprehension, knowledge-building, and instructional design, with opportunities to strengthen alignment and instructional clarity to fully meet Gateway 2 expectations.