Two Charter Schools Adopt Personalized Learning Program for Struggling Readers

Two schools have gone public with their use of an online reading program that personalizes the content for each student. KIPP Delta Elementary Literacy Academy in Arkansas and E.L. Haynes Public Charter School in Washington, D.C. have both integrated the use of Lexia Learning's Lexia Reading Core5 into their reading curriculum.

The program covers grades pre-K through 5 with six skill areas: phonological awareness, phonics, structural analysis, vocabulary, automaticity and comprehension. Students work independently in 18 levels of self-paced activities that take them on adventures around the world. When they struggle at a given task, the program continually adapts by limiting what's displayed on the screen and providing additional instruction until they're able to show understanding and be returned to "standard-level activities."

Teachers and administrators receive real-time reporting on individual student progress toward mastery on the Common Core State Standards along with reports projecting each student's probability of meeting end-of-year, grade-level benchmarks. The system produces action plans for each student that recommend lessons and the proper intensity of instruction that will be needed to improve student performance while also meeting benchmarks.

The software runs through a browser, as a download to the computer and on the iPad.

At E.L. Haynes, the Core5 software has been added as an intervention resource for students in grades 1-4. The school makes Core5 available to students outside of the classroom as well. "What we like about Lexia is that it provides the opportunity to practice and develop foundational literacy skills such as decoding and phonics while building vocabulary, so students can access increasingly challenging texts," said the school's director of technology innovation, Jeanne Chang, in a statement. "The reports give teachers strategic insights about the specific support students need to close individual skill gaps, and the program includes corresponding resources to facilitate this instruction."

KIPP Delta "struggled" to find a product that would work for its students and its teachers. "Lexia Reading Core5 is masterful in the way it keeps the kids engaged at just the right level to accelerate their reading skills while giving our teachers and classroom volunteers resources, like scripted lessons, that go right to the heart of a particular skill or activity that a student or a group of students had found to be a real stumbling block. You can tell a great deal of research went in to its development," noted Assistant Principal John Bennetts.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • AI-powered individual working calmly on one side and a burnt-out person slumped over a laptop on the other

    AI's Productivity Gains Come at a Cost

    A recent academic study found that as companies adopt AI tools, they're not just streamlining workflows — they're piling on new demands. Researchers determined that "AI technostress" is driving burnout and disrupting personal lives, even as organizations hail productivity gains.

  • three silhouetted education technology leaders with thought bubbles containing AI-related icons

    Ed Tech Leaders Rank Generative AI as Top Tech Priority

    In a recent CoSN survey, an overwhelming majority of ed tech leaders (94%) said they see AI as having a positive impact on education. Respondents ranked generative AI as their top tech priority, with 80% reporting their districts have gen AI initiatives underway, or plan to in the current school year.

  • blue AI cloud connected to circuit lines, a server stack, and a shield with a padlock icon

    Report: AI Security Controls Lag Behind Adoption of AI Cloud Services

    According to a recent report from cybersecurity firm Wiz, nearly nine out of 10 organizations are already using AI services in the cloud — but fewer than one in seven have implemented AI-specific security controls.

  • lightbulb

    Call for Speakers Now Open for Tech Tactics in Education: Overcoming Roadblocks to Innovation

    The annual virtual conference from the producers of Campus Technology and THE Journal will return on Sept. 25, 2025, with a focus on emerging trends in cybersecurity, data privacy, AI implementation, IT leadership, building resilience, and more.