Virginia Department of Ed Adds Lexia Literacy Tools to Tutoring Initiative

The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) has added two Lexia Learning literacy tools to its ALL in Tutoring reading initiative — Lexia Core5 Reading for grades 3-5 and Lexia PowerUp for grades 6-8 — as part of its array of tutoring resources.

The tools are available to students participating in the tutoring initiative and who are not currently proficient in Virginia's Standards of Learning (SOL) for their grades due to pandemic losses.

The resources are based on Science of Reading standards that include personalized learning methods, using a "structured, explicit, and systematic approach," Lexia said in a news announcement. The state's [SOL] are embedded into the programs, and educators will be able to identify them both in online and offline materials, the company said.

Core5 features a three-step adaptive blended learning model, and includes an Assessment Without Testing feature that can predict a student's year-end performance. This gives teachers "ongoing norm-referenced and actionable data for prioritizing and planning instruction with supporting offline instructional materials," the company said.

Visit Lexia's Core5 web page to learn more about how it works.

Lexia noted that most of the secondary curriculum is based on reading, but only a third of eighth-grade students achieve their reading level. PowerUp helps fill in individual gaps by combining age-appropriate, student-driven, and teacher-provided lessons and activities. It also supports students learning more advanced analysis skills, the company said.

Learn more about PowerUp on this page.

Lexia said although Ignite Reading 1:1 foundational reading skills tutoring will still be available to Virginia students who require Tier 3 support, Lexia will help schools, districts, and the state to implement their own Core5 Reading and PowerUP Literacy programs.

"We already work with several school divisions within Virginia, and they will also be eligible for the additional success services — tutorials, resources, tools, and professional learning sessions — that we'll provide as part of their ALL In Tutoring reading initiative plans," said Lexia president Nick Gaehde. "Our record of success spurred the VDOE to partner with us, and we are excited to make a difference for even more students in the state."

About the Author

Kate Lucariello is a former newspaper editor, EAST Lab high school teacher and college English teacher.

Featured

  • close-up of a video game controller

    Verizon Launches Free Scholastic High School Esports League

    Through its Verizon Innovative Learning HQ suite of free learning content and resources, Verizon has launched its first-ever scholastic high school esports league. The league opened for registration on Aug. 8 and will run from Sept. 23 to Dec. 13.

  • illustration of a VPN network with interconnected nodes and lines forming a minimalist network structure

    Report Finds Increasing Number of Vulnerabilities in OpenVPN

    OpenVPN, an open source virtual private network (VPN) system integrated into millions of routers, firmware, PCs, mobile devices and other smart devices, is leaving users open to a growing list of threats, according to a recent report from Microsoft.

  • AI-inspired background pattern with geometric shapes and fine lines in muted blue and gray on a dark background

    IBM Introduces Granite 3.0 Family of Advanced AI Models

    IBM unveiled its most advanced family of AI models to date, Granite 3.0, at its annual TechXchange event. The new models were developed to provide a combination of performance, flexibility, and autonomy that outperforms or matches similarly sized models from leading providers on a range of benchmarks.

  • Abstract illustration of a human news reporter interviewing an AI with a microphone

    AI on AI in Education: A Dialogue

    Scholars are doing lots of asking and predicting about the risks and rewards of generative artificial intelligence in school, but has anyone asked the all-knowing chatbots?