Today I am sharing with you one of my great frustrations about 5th grade…the lack of resources. We are a curriculum-free school for reading and writing, so in August I walked into a resource-empty classroom. It has taken me months to find my ‘go-to’ websites, apps, and databases that are rigorous enough (i.e. long enough, with a 800-1000 Lexile Level) and interesting for my students. Without further ado, here are my 3 favorite websites for finding nonfiction articles that are (1) appropriate (2) rigorous and (3) interesting.
The first resource my kids LOVE is NewsELA. News ELA is a website that offers free news articles for teachers and students. With hundreds of articles {updated weekly}, articles on War & Peace, Science, Kids, Money, Law, Health, and Arts are all featured. With an account, you can view the articles online or print them out.- Every article is available in 4-5 different Lexile Levels that you choose using the blue menu to the right on each article!!!! ย Regardless of the level, the students are reading the same article just at their just-right reading level! Talk about differentiating!
- Articles marked with an anchor have Common Core aligned quizzes. Each quiz is aligned to a certain ‘anchor standard’. As students take the quizzes, your Teacher Binder automatically updates with the level of quiz students took and their score on the Common Core standard assessed.
- On a computer, students have the option to highlight portions of the text! On their second read of an article, I ask students to highlight the main ideas in one color and the supporting details in a second color. As a teacher, I can see what they highlight on my dashboard. Since main idea is something we always need more practice with, this is a great informal assessment!
ThinkCERCA is the 2nd resource I now pull articles from and is very similar to NewsELA. It has a different mix of nonfiction articles and three particularly awesome features.- An audio feature that reads each article aloud to students. This is such a luxury and a perfect feature for students who receive a reader. Plus, it allows students access to an article they might not be comfortable reading independently during literacy centers (when there is no reader available)!
- Teachers also have the option to input their own “Extended Response/Short Answer” questions. These constructed response questions appear on students’ screens (iPad, moblie device, or computer), and students are given a space to respond. Student responses then appear on your Teacher Dashboard.
- Additionally,ย ThinkCERCAย has an embedded dictionary within each article. This dictionary allows students to click on a highlighted word, hear it read aloud, and see a definition for the word. Nonfiction articles are more likely to contain content-specific vocabulary that many students struggle with, and this feature helps students gain independence and confidence while reading!
Last, but definitely not least, is ReadWorks. ReadWorks is a tried and true gem hosting fiction and nonfiction articles that center on a specific reading skill. With a ridiculous search browser, you can sort articles by keyword, Lexile Level, Domain, and Reading Skill!!!!
- ReadWorks trusts the teacher and allows the searcher to hone their survey to a specific reading skills. Point of view, cause and effect, inference, plot, main idea, vocabulary in context – these are just a few of the dozens of skills they have articles to target!
- Each article is between 3/4’s of a page and 2ish pages in length making the articles readable, analyzable-able, and discuss-able (sure, it’s a word ;)) within my 55 minute reading block!
- ReadWorks does not stop by providing single reading passages, they have also created Common Core aligned skills units that include novels to reference, teaching sequences, lesson plans, and assessments….all for FREE {no strings attached}. My favorite units are the paired text units for 5th and 6th grade. Pairing texts helps me meet with “comparing” verbage of the Common Core and teaches students they have to analyze and integrate the information their reading! Love. It.





Heard about your blog from Kristen at Ladybug's Teacher Files. AMAZING resource ๐ I love readworks. Definitely following you now!
Your new follower,
Leanna
A Little of LiLi
lilismilee.blogspot.com
I have use ReadWorks weekly but have never used the others. I am so excited to find some great resources! Thanks so much for sharing!!!
Wendy
One Happy Teacher
Hey Em! Off hand I cannot not think of any, but if I come across some I'll definitely pass them along to you. ThinkCERCA and NewsELA would definitel not work for you, but ReadWorks should. They are awesome resources for ALL grades and skills. ๐
That's awesome, Kristen! My kids love NewsELA, too. Plus, we've be testing out some new features, and they are AWESOME. I personally like the articles on NewsELA better (they are more current events based and a little more appeal to my kids), but ThinkCERA has some awesome bells and whistles (audio, dictionary, extended response). ๐
Yay! I am so glad to hear that Karen. I am ALWAYS look for new ELA websites. ๐ I hope the planning goes well!
You've made my day, Kim! It makes my heart happy that you found a new resource. I hope they making planning just a little bit easier! ๐
This is a great resource. Thanks!
These are GREAT resources! I've been using ReadWorks, but I've never used the other two. I'm so excited to share them with my teachers!
Buzzing with Ms. B
I always learn something new every time I visit your blog! Thanks for sharing the sites… I have been using NewsELA, but the other two are new to me.
Thanks for your Bright Ideas, and for being such a helpful stop on the Hop!
๐
Kim
Finding JOY in 6th Grade
I love using NewsELA in my classroom! I also use ReadWorks quite a bit, but I've never heard of Thinkcerca before. I'll have to check it out! It can be difficult to find non-fiction articles that meet all of the requirements.
Sara ๐
The Colorful Apple
I am always looking for really good non-fiction articles. Thank you for finding and compiling these for us. Kristy @
This is awesome – thanks so much! ReadWorks was the only one that I had heard of. I can't wait to look at the other websites more closely. ๐
~Heather
Loose Shoelaces
ThinkCERCA was a new one to me and is now bookmarked. Thanks for sharing!!
I LOVE NewsELA.com and ReadWorks.org, but I have never heard of ThinkCera. Thank you for a new resource! I am on the curriculum team for my district, and we are starting to rework curriculum maps for next year, so this was perfect timing!
Oh my goodness Catherine!!! We are still so into Newsela in our class, thanks to you, and now you share two other incredible sites! I can't thank you enough–I'm signing up for both right now!!
Hi! Great post. Some really good resources here! Thank you! Do you think there are sites like that for the lower grades (first??) I will need to do some research on that. Thanks so much for the information ๐
Em
Curious Firsties