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Response to EdReports on Fundations

Fundations® offers a program deeper and more comprehensive than what is captured by the
EdReports rubric.

The bullets below identify aspects of the Fundations program not reflected in the review. As a result, the
true essence of Fundations is not captured, and comparison using this rubric does not represent
Fundations’ significant differences with other programs.

  • While a synthetic, systematic phonics program is essential, it is not sufficient. Fundations goes
    beyond phonics to thoroughly integrate the instruction of total word structure, including syllable
    patterns, affixes, and orthography (rules of English written language) so that students fully
    internalize the “system” of the English language. This is key for students to go beyond the
    recognition of single‐syllable words and master multisyllabic word decoding. It is also essential
    to move students from reading words primarily via alphabetic decoding to more automatically
    recognizing written words (see Nation & Castle, 2017).

  • Fundations’ phonological awareness instruction focuses most extensively on the key
    components related to the acquisition of reading and writing (i.e., phonemic awareness skills of
    blending, segmenting, and manipulation). Research strongly identifies that phonemic awareness
    instruction is most effective when also linked with letters.

  • Transcription skills (automaticity of letter formation and spelling) are foundational for writing.
    Fundations instruction emphasizes the mastery of these skills with equal importance as the
    foundational skills for reading. In Fundations, mastery of these are facilitated by tightly
    integrating letter formation with letter recognition and letter‐sound instruction, as well as
    simultaneously teaching decoding and spelling. This essential instruction not only sets
    foundational skills for writing, it is key to developing students’ fluent word recognition since
    spelling instruction has a strong effect on both word reading skills and fluency (see Reed, 2012).

  • Fundations uses encoding as an effective assessment of word recognition, because it requires a
    student to have orthographic mapping skills. This is an efficient way to identify those students
    who have mastered specific phonics skills versus those who need an additional assessment
    followed by targeted instruction and further progress monitoring.

  • All students benefit from Fundations’ design to explicitly and thoroughly teach the structure of
    the English language. However, not all children need the same amount of practice with each
    skill. Fundations intentionally teaches all skills to all students, but then provides varying degrees
    of targeted practice with the application of specific skills to meet students’ needs. The report did
    not count related materials used for targeted practice (Fluency Kits, Progress Monitoring Tools,
    home support packets, and companion online resources for targeted instruction).

  • Fundations is an integrated, structured language and literacy approach, not simply a phonics
    approach. Thus, how skills and concepts are taught is equally as important as what is being
    taught.

  • The review did not recognize how Fundations uses several activities across the curriculum to
    teach skills in varied ways with manipulatives. As just one example, the review states in 1B,
    “Materials do not include sufficient and explicit instruction for all students about the
    organization of print concepts (e.g., follow words left to right, spoken words correlate to
    sequences of letters, letter spacing).” Fundations thoroughly and explicitly teaches all of these
    things. The manual does not specifically label print concepts whenever the instruction occurs,
    because they are so interwoven into several activities and throughout the curriculum.

In addition to the above, the review did not include the full Fundations materials available. While
Fundations provides accuracy, automaticity, and/or fluency practice within each daily lesson, the
Fluency Kits are provided for students needing additional practice with more controlled text. The review
recognized the kits but did not count these materials throughout the review. Fundations was originally
designed with the expectation that students would have practice with books during the ELA block
outside of the Fundations standard lesson.

Recognizing that the availability of meaningful, readable books was lacking, we collaborated with Great Minds® to publish authentic, knowledge‐building readables that provide practice with phonetically regular and high frequency word‐level skills specifically aligned with Fundations’ scope and sequence. The Geodes® Classroom Libraries (Grade K—47 titles; Level 1—64 titles; and Level 2—64 titles) were not allowed as part of the review but would have strongly met the indicators requiring books.

Educators should be made aware that 1) the rubric fails to evaluate the essence of Fundations and its
full program components, and 2) there is a significant disparity between the core ELA rubric on
foundational skills and this supplemental foundational skills review. The inconsistencies between the
criteria, as well as in the overall weighting and evidence expectations, result in an “apples‐to‐oranges”
comparison.

Recognizing that effective foundational skills instruction is more than simply checking off a list of grade-level phonics skills, we remain steadfast that Fundations provides teachers with not just the what, but
the how to thoroughly and systematically include the science of reading (and spelling) in their
classrooms. We invite educators to thoroughly review the program and professional learning as well as
detailed counterevidence to the review provided on our website.

References
Nation, K., & Castles, A. (2017). Putting the learning in orthographic learning. In K. Cain, D. Compton, &
R. Parrila (Eds.), Theories of reading development (pp. 147–168). John Benjamins.
Reed, D. K. (2012). Why teach spelling? RMC Research Corporation, Center on Instruction.

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