Myview Literacy (Savvas)

Description

These highly affordable courses are well-crafted, packed with interesting reading selections, and panoramic in their inclusion of language arts skills.

Organizationally, there are five units in each course. Units are each covered over a six-week time frame. A Reading Workshop, a Writing Workshop, and a Reading-Writing Bridge are packed into each week. Units conclude with a week-long Project-Based Inquiry or, in other words, a grade-appropriate research project. Throughout the Unit, thought-provoking, world-expanding themes and language arts skills are masterfully woven together. Truthfully, this course could be robustly completed using JUST the worktexts. Really. Nevertheless, there are elements available through the companion SavvasRealize online platform that add sparkle, usefulness, and possibly a bit of frustration. The online components are still quite helpful, however, for they alone contain the answers to text exercises and tests.

Usefulness is what you'll notice first. The Teacher Guide – an ebook – provides detailed lesson plans, schedules, and pacing. This is a wraparound book so all student pages are present with answers. Teacher-student interaction is a foundational part of the courses. An involved parent who is reading through student material (trust me, you'll find it interesting), and interacting daily with your student might not need these text answers for the lower levels, but answers/tests do provide a safety-net and efficiency and are more necessary at the upper levels. Online test-taking is easy. Students have the option of playing a recording of the questions or reading them – or both. Most are multiple choice but writing activities are included. Answers are corrected and students can look at missed answers. The Savvas platform also provides a good quantity of additional teacher helps and printable material.

The "sparkle" are things like audio book readings of the literature selections, reinforcement games, flashcards, and videos. That bit of frustration I mentioned? While the SavvasRealize online platform is relatively easy to navigate, there is sometimes a bit of time required to pull things up (videos, particularly).

The Student Worktexts are masterfully done. They are appealing and engaging. They literally walk through the lessons with embedded reading selections, instructional text, questions, exercises, and sidebar content (in older levels). The various unit/lesson parts are color-coded and icon identified.

Reading Workshops provide the stalwart core of this program. Across the grade levels they provide background information, an anchor chart, vocabulary, the actual reading selection, comprehension checks, close read activities, and response to text (reflect and share). In the early grades there is a focus on "foundational skills" – i.e. phonological awareness, phonics, decoding, and fluency. In the upper grades there is more emphasis on literary analysis and thinking skills.
In each lesson, the Reading Workshops material ends with a "Response to the Text" activity. This is a lead into the Reading-Writing Bridge portion of the week's lesson. Here you will find coverage on word study, spelling, language/conventions (a.k.a. grammar, usage, and mechanics), and a section called "Read Like a Writer; Write for a Reader" that provides exercises designed to analyze, duplicate, and incorporate the traits of accomplished authors.

The remaining portion of the weekly lesson sequence is the Writing Workshop. While primarily covering the various parts of the writing process (i.e. brainstorming, rough draft writing, editing, and publishing) they will also cover a diverse range of related topics. For instance, using digital tools such as bolding, graphics/illustrations, and research.

Literary genres included in these courses are broad and diverse. You will find folktales and myths more likely in the early grades and argumentative text at the upper grades, but in general, the genres include: fiction (all types – realistic, historical, science), legend, drama, poetry, informational text, biography, persuasive text, and narrative nonfiction. The various grade-level collections are impressive and rather stunning in their scope. In spot-reading, I often found myself intrigued and learning new things.

Starting right out in the Kindergarten course, one week in each unit is devoted to Project-Based Inquiry. These are setting the groundwork for the upper-level Inquiry weeks that are full-blown research projects. So, for example, Kindergartners are asked to think through their own preferences on a topic, gather information from a partner, and develop a three-line-item research plan as well as to research (find a related poem and explore a kid-based search engine). Concluding the unit, they are asked to write (or draw) content that reflects their research and opinions. While this all sounds rather rigorous for kindergartners, the material and steps as presented seem very grade-appropriate and doable.
At the other end of the grade spectrum in this series, the research "steps" are essentially the same but the expectations are much more sophisticated. Using academic words, evaluating sources, taking notes, and writing an essay with primary/secondary sources have all been added into the basic research outline. Again, though, students have been well prepared and have a strong foundation (built within the year and through the courses) for what they are being asked to do.

These courses are designed to be teacher-student interactive. As such, they will definitely require a time commitment from the parent (probably 20-40 minutes a day – the high end for older students). The worktexts, though, are written directly to the student with the idea that the teacher/parent is looking over their shoulder. All materials are user-friendly including the online ones. Teacher prep is mainly relegated to determining what, if any, online material to incorporate. Since I'm not overly inclined to rely on screen-based activities, I'd be tempted to use the worktexts by themselves. Because many activities have variable answers, I'm not even sure how much I would rely on the online answer keys. When I am working daily with my student, I have a really good sense of what they are learning/retaining making even tests less critical. Everything is there, however, if you want to use it including extra practice worksheets.

With these excellent, comprehensive, standards-based, and affordable language arts courses Pearson has supplied the homeschool community with a treasure. These courses provide complete language arts: phonics, reading skills, literature skills, vocabulary, spelling, grammar, usage, mechanics, handwriting practice, composition skills and even speech experiences. Some might want to add systematic spelling and/or handwriting. ~ Janice

Teaching Method
Traditional
Teacher-centered curriculum commonly used in classrooms that may include a text, teacher manual, tests, etc.
Charlotte Mason
A methodology based on the work of a 19th century educator who maintained that children learn best from literature (Living Books), not textbooks.
Classical
A methodology based on the Latin Trivium (three stages of learning), including the grammar stage (memorization and facts), logic stage (critical thinking), and rhetoric stage (developing/defending ideas).
Unit Study
A thematic or topical approach centered around one topic that integrates multiple subject areas.
Montessori (Discovery)
A methodology based on the work of a 20th century educator that emphasizes student and sensory-driven discovery learning and real-life applications.
Other
Other methodologies
Religious Content
Secular
Contains content contrary to common Christian beliefs (i.e. evolution).
Neutral
Avoids religious or theoretical topics or presents multiple viewpoints without preference.
Christian/Religious
Faith-based or including instructional religious content.
Learning Modality
Auditory
Learns through listening, talking out loud or reading out loud.
Visual
Learns through seeing, prefers written instructions and visual materials.
Kinesthetic/Tactile (Hands-On)
Learns through moving, doing and touching.
Multi-Sensory
Curriculum that employ a variety of activities/components.
Presentation
Sequential
Curriculum progresses through well-defined learning objectives. Emphasizes mastery before moving to the next topic.
Spiral
Topics and concepts are repeated from level to level, adding more depth at each pass and connecting with review.
Conceptual/Topical
Focus is on the “why,” often with a unifying concept as well as specific skills; coverage may be broader.
Teacher Involvement
Low Teacher Involvement
Student-led materials; parent acts as a facilitator.
Medium Teacher Involvement
A mix of teacher-led time and independent student work.
High Teacher Involvement
Teacher-led lessons; may utilize discussions, hands-on activities and working together.
Additional Materials Required
No other materials needed
Everything you need is included.
Other Materials Required
There are additional required resources that are a separate purchase.
Other Materials Optional
There are additional resources mentioned or recommended but are not absolutely necessary.
Consumable
Consumable
Designed to be written in; not reusable.
Non-Consumable
Not designed to be written in; reusable.