Where AERO ELA lands—and where resources miss
First week of October, my Grade 7s were mid-novel and I pulled a “character traits” worksheet someone shared. Ten minutes in, I realized it wanted kids to list adjectives from memory, not cite lines. That’s the split I see all the time with AERO: on-topic versus standards-fit. AERO English threads reading, writing, speaking/listening, and language, but it expects text-dependent work and writing tied to clear claims. A resource can mention theme, structure, or point of view and still dodge evidence, complexity bands, or the kind of short-constructed responses we actually grade.
Inside AERO, I plan across strands: RL/RI for close reading with evidence, W for argument/informative/narrative cycles (with revising, not just drafting), SL for accountable talk, and L for conventions and vocabulary. Fit issues I watch for: generic “journal prompts” that never require quotations, comprehension questions at a too-low Lexile, and rubrics that privilege neatness over reasoning. If I need inspiration, I skim what colleagues are trying in the community spaces and keep a shortlist in the Language Arts library so I don’t reprint the same soft tasks.