District leaders, teachers, and district-level subject-matter specialists have different priorities when choosing curricular materials for classroom use. Education Week asked a few of them what they look for as they sort through curricular options.
Their responses were edited for clarity and length.
What is the first thing you look for in a free online lesson?
鈥淩ule number one: Start with a complex text. The pieces should fall in from there. ... I know it sounds silly, but if the text is not complex, you鈥檙e going to have a harder time teaching it. It is harder to write questions. It is harder to find essential vocabulary. It is harder to have good discussions if you don鈥檛 start off with a meaty text. If the text does not meet the requirements for a complex text鈥攊t鈥檚 got to be on their level, a little above. If they can read it on their own, it鈥檚 not complex text. If the book is not, it鈥檚 not worth teaching.鈥
鈥Meredith Starks, 3rd grade English/language arts teacher, Bellaire Elementary School, Bossier City, La.
鈥淭he first thing a classroom educator or principal should be looking for in the user agreement is some recognition of FERPA (The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act). If you don鈥檛 see that, just back away; that鈥檚 table stakes. ... Any business that deals with kids should be clear on this.鈥
鈥Jim Flanagan, chief learning-services officer, International Society for Technology in Education, Arlington, Va.
How do you find good, reliable sources of free, high-quality materials?
鈥淎 surprising place where I think a lot of teachers don鈥檛 look is actually museum websites. I find some of my best stuff [there]鈥攍ike the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art has great stuff. Go to a museum website, click on teacher resources. You鈥檇 be pleasantly surprised about everything you can find there for teachers. If it鈥檚 a thematically based unit, one of the first places I look is museum websites.鈥
鈥Meredith Starks, 3rd grade English/language arts teacher, Bellaire Elementary School, Bossier City, La.
鈥淎 few organizations are starting to develop ratings for [secure, high-quality education apps]. The [Software & Information Industry Association] has a privacy pledge. I look at Common Sense Media鈥檚 privacy ratings, and IKeepSafe has a badge [for programs that meet different federal and state privacy laws]. There should be expectations that if a vendor is holding student data, they are legally liable to protect student data in these ways; we shouldn鈥檛 have to do it all by ourselves by contract.鈥
鈥Steve Smith, chief information officer, Cambridge, Mass., public schools
What are common red flags that make you question the quality of online materials or apps?
鈥淲hen there are not multiple viewpoints for students to review鈥攕pecifically as it relates to the teaching about the contributions of minority groups to the culture and development of the United States.鈥
鈥Daryl Diamond, director of innovative learning, Broward County, Fla., public schools
鈥淚 look at the amount of student-centered content versus the amount of teacher-centered content. What鈥檚 the teacher鈥檚 role? If it鈥檚 mostly content written for teachers, that鈥檚 a red flag. 69传媒 are not a place where young people should go to watch old people do work.鈥
鈥Stefanie Buckner, K-12 math-curriculum specialist, Buncombe County, N.C., public schools
What鈥檚 the most common mistake teachers make when choosing online material?
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 done intentionally鈥攂ut in the interest of saving time and having so much access鈥攊t鈥檚 [a teacher] not using a rubric to guide whether a resource is a quality, standards-aligned resource. When you鈥檙e competing with Pinterest and Teachers Pay Teachers, which is visual, [teachers may] look at lessons that look very engaging [but may not be a good match for their learning objective].鈥
鈥Brian Kingsley, assistant superintendent of academics, Wake County, N. C., public schools
How do you judge whether materials are aligned to the Common Core State Standards?
鈥淚 do the problems myself and reference the standards. It tells me what components of the standards are there. We should be looking at alignment. We shouldn鈥檛 be just taking a book at face value.鈥
鈥Stefanie Buckner, K-12 math-curriculum specialist, Buncombe County, N.C., public schools