What I actually need from a ready-to-run Common Core pack
On Monday of Week 3, my Grade 5 math team reviewed addition and subtraction of fractions (5.NF.1–2). The exit tickets showed kids could add unlike denominators but stumbled explaining why their common denominator worked. That’s where a “ready-to-run” pack earns its keep: I need fluency items, a short conceptual prompt, and at least one multi-select that mirrors how our interim asks for reasoning. Vocabulary has to match our unit (“compose/decompose,” “common denominator,” “benchmark fraction”), and there should be a nudge toward MP.3 so students critique an example solution.
ELA is the same story. In a Week 6 Grade 6 nonfiction unit (RI.6.1/RI.6.2), I need a pair of texts with paragraph references, a two-part evidence-based selected response, then a short constructed response with a sentence frame I can fade out by the second draft. I keep my short list in ClassPods so I’m not rebuilding the wheel each quarter.