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English Language Arts

The Radnor Township School District English Language Arts program will empower students with the literacy skills and knowledge to be critical thinkers, effective communicators, and active participants in an ever-changing world.

Structured Literacy

RTSD provides a systematic and explicit approach to teaching reading and writing through our English Language Arts (ELA) curriculum. Grounded in current research and best practices, our approach emphasizes structured literacy and brain-based instruction. Structured literacy is an evidence-based approach that benefits all learners by focusing on the explicit, sequential teaching of foundational reading and writing skills. Its core components include Phonological Awareness, Phonics, Fluency, Vocabulary, Text Comprehension, Writing Foundations, and Writing Composition. Learn more about Structured Literacy and the Science of Reading below!

Into Reading for Grades K-5

As part of our commitment to continuous improvement, RTSD conducted a comprehensive review of K–5 ELA programs and selected Into Reading (version 3) for implementation beginning in the 2025–2026 school year. This selection followed an 18-month review process (2023–2025) that included analysis of third-party ratings, review of print and digital materials, vendor presentations, consultations with other school districts, classroom pilots of two ELA programs, and feedback from teachers and administrators. Our Structured Literacy professional development series ran in parallel with this review, to help ensure alignment between instructional practices and curriculum materials.

For more details about the selection process, we invite you to view the March 11, 2025, Curriculum Committee meeting recording, beginning at approximately minute 10:25.

Into Reading Family Letters

You are invited to read about each K-5 module in Into Reading, including suggestions for how to support your child’s learning at home, in the family letters available below, organized by grade level and module.

RTSD K-12 Reading Principles

  • Learning to read is a complex process that teachers need to teach explicitly, sequentially, and systematically.
  • The major components of teaching children to read are phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and text comprehension.
  • The ultimate goal of reading instruction for students is reading comprehension.
  • Students need to be taught phonemic awareness as it is the essential prerequisite skill needed to understand phonics.
  • Students need to be taught vocabulary across disciplines prior to new text being read to help them comprehend what they are reading.
  • The ability to comprehend written texts involves a dynamic relationship between the demands of texts, and the background knowledge and goals of readers.
  • Students need to be taught evidence-based text comprehension strategies over time and provided opportunities to apply those strategies to their reading.
  • Students need to build fluency through consistent practice with each component of reading that contributes to reading comprehension.
  • Teachers should use reading assessments aligned with the major components of reading to inform their instruction.
  • Students should be taught efficient and effective strategies for evaluating sources, including digital media.
  • Students need opportunities to read a variety of texts, to be read to, and to engage in discussion of texts to build a joy of reading.

RTSD K-12 Writing Principles

  • Teachers need to provide explicit instruction in writing which will include modeling of expectations, practice with each writing skill, and support to students as individual writers.
  • Students need to be taught the foundational skills of handwriting, keyboarding, and spelling.
  • Instruction in different types of writing should be embedded across disciplines as a tool for learning.
  • Students need to analyze and appreciate texts to understand quality writing.
  • Students need explicit guidance and clear expectations regarding the task, audience, and purpose of writing.
  • Students need to have ownership and accountability by having opportunities to choose their own topics and real audiences for their writing.
  • Students need to experience, understand, and value the writing process — including planning, drafting, revising, and editing — as they apply to the finished product.
  • Students need grammar, syntax, and mechanics taught in context as text is read, as needs are identified, and during the editing stage of writing.
  • Writing is a collaborative process that values students’ ideas and requires social interaction and feedback, including through teacher conferencing with students to set individual goals for improvement.
  • Teacher and student feedback on writing must be a reflective process that is constructive, efficient, and focused on growth.
  • Students need to develop into strategic writers, not formulaic writers