Antiquated and Scattered--Badly Needs an Overhaul
Community Review for StudySync
My Take
While it has been bad enough for ELA, trying to use it for ELD has proved to be worse. There are only TWO dedicated lessons per unit for designated ELD. While this may be enough support for integrated (it's not, but let's just say it is) it is an absolute disaster if your district was sold that it was an ELD curriculum. This is misleading at best, deceptive at worse. It is designed like an English support curriculum, which is in no way helpful for my students to pass the ELPAC. Honestly, if I had all the hours I have spent going down rabbit holes trying to find things on this maze of a platform, I would be able to add a whole week to this year.
How I Use It
I have been forced to use StudySync, not only for my ELA classes, but also for ELD. While I agree with the a lot of the other teachers who have found StudySync to be a profound disappointment, it is worse for Language Development. I also agree with one of the other teachers that finding what you need to actually plan a lesson (like simple answers to questions, particularly quizzes) is like a scavenger hunt. If you want any direction for the "making meaning" sections for ELD, you won't find any. It simply is not there, and I emailed the representatives directly. The physical books that are paired with the platform at times do not match (I have found typos on the platform that directly changed the meaning of a question/statement and pointed them out to the rep) and I have found several mistakes when I printed out the accompanying lesson plans. The First Read , Re-Read, and Close Re-Read organization of these often VERY short exerpts are absurd if you need to choose the questions available in the book as they are divided. Given that the picture ICON for the story is all the same for all three, this is a nightmare when dealing with 7th graders should you have had to assign more than one. So if you try to avoid the platform and use the students very disposal books (yes there are four of them for each unit of the year) there is NO place for them to put answers to questions, so they are not a study book or a textbook, they are just a physical representation of the stories dedicated to each unit.