A photo of four students in a group, smiling and looking happy

Digital Citizenship Week is October 14–18!

Join thousands of teachers and students worldwide and celebrate in your classroom!

Help meet students where they are and feel great about gaining ground.

Student doing a math worksheet lying on a floor

Math, reading, and writing are historically areas we use to measure student progress. In recent years, learning disruptions have set this progress back a bit. While we can and should acknowledge these challenges, framing them as "learning loss" can put undue stress on you and your students.

Instead, let's honor students' commitment to learning, no matter where they are in their lives or academic development. Let's offer the support they need to build confidence and stay in school.

We think the resources we've curated below can help you in this process. These (mostly) free tools can help you assess how students are doing -- and feeling -- alongside other resources for building up their skills and confidence. 

We've divided this list into three parts -- you can jump to any section below using these links:

  1. Assess Where Your Students Are
  2. Help Students Build Academic Skills and Knowledge
  3. Create a Culture of Growth and Reflection with SEL

Assess Where Your Students Are

These tools will help you get a sense of where students are, and which skills they still need to develop. Many of these tools also offer follow-up exercises and activities that target students' specific areas of need.

ASSESSMENT TOOLS FOR ALL SUBJECTS

Edulastic

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Grades K-12: Use the SmartStart Diagnostics at the start of the year to get a sense of where students are relative to their grade level or specific skill needs. There are 35 tests for math (grades K-12) and 10 tests for ELA (grades 3-12).

Read our review of Edulastic

 

Freckle

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Grades K-9 for math and 3-8 for ELA: Assign Freckle's Benchmark Assessments to figure out how well students have mastered specific standards. Then follow up with differentiated instructional activities. Note: The free version only supports one assignment per week.

Read our review of Freckle

 

ASSESSMENT TOOLS FOR MATH

Inside Mathematics

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Grades 2-12: This site, developed by the University of Texas at Austin, has CCSS-aligned downloadable performance tasks for elementary through high school including rubrics and student work samples.

Read our review of Inside Mathematics

 

Knowledgehook

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Grades 3-12: Assign this tool's Kick-Off Missions to quickly assess whether your students grasp core mathematics concepts at their grade level. There are also daily warm-ups and exit tickets to sustain learning.

Read our review of Knowledgehook

 

Math Nation

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Grades 6-12: This one is only an option for states and districts with Math Nation licenses. But if you have access, there's an excellent self-paced On-Ramp course that assesses students' learning needs and then offers instruction to build their confidence and knowledge.

Read our review of Math Nation

 

ASSESSMENT TOOLS FOR READING AND WRITING

Quill

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Grades 1-12: Use Quill's diagnostic tool to figure out where students stand with some key grammatical skills, including -- and especially -- the ability to write complex sentences. There also are assessments specifically for ELLs.

Read our review of Quill

 

ReadTheory

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Grades K-12: If you need to assess your students' reading comprehension, then ReadTheory is worth a look. The activities mimic standardized tests, and it's not the most exciting tool, so you may want to use it sparingly. But it offers quick, actionable data that can be valuable.

Read our review of ReadTheory

 

Writable

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Grades 3-12: This one isn't free, but it makes the list because it's a writing tool that truly gets assessment right. The focus is on developing the writing process through copious opportunities for peer and instructor feedback, student reflection, and iteration.

Read our review of Writable

 

Help Students Build Academic Skills and Knowledge

Use these sites and resources to help students develop their skills and grow what they know. Most of these tools offer (nearly) comprehensive coverage of their content areas, so they should offer just what students need to fill in gaps in knowledge and become more confident.

SKILL-BUILDING TOOLS FOR ALL SUBJECTS

CK-12

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Grades K-12: This is a free, cornerstone resource covering math and ELA, as well as a variety of other content from health to social studies. Make sure to look into the FlexBooks, which are comprehensive, interactive textbooks spanning subject areas and grades, and are available in both English and Spanish.

Read our review of CK-12

 

Khan Academy Kids

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Grades pre-K-2: For the youngest learners, this is an outstanding mobile option that'll encourage curious learning across math and reading with a healthy dose of the arts. The data reporting isn't great, but it's serviceable, and the excellent learning design means you can trust that students are developing.

Read our review of Khan Academy Kids

 

SplashLearn

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Grades K-5: This is a good tool to send home with students so they can practice key skills and concepts. It features tons of color and character; however, the activities could get repetitive. So it's best used as a time-limited supplemental activity.

Read our review of SplashLearn

 

Tailor-Ed

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Grades K-8: It can be tough to differentiate effectively, especially at the start of a new year with fresh faces. Tailor-Ed can help by assessing students (academically, and from an SEL perspective), grouping them, and then suggesting the right resources. Of course, teachers know best and can approve or modify students' experience so it's just right.

Read our review of Tailor-Ed

 

SKILL-BUILDING TOOLS FOR MATH

Assistments

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Grades 2-12: While it's not the flashiest tool, Assistments is highly useful for creating a feedback loop around classwork or homework. You can assign problem sets, see how students performed (students also get on-the-spot feedback), and then use that performance data to tune your lessons to the most pressing needs.

Read our review of Assistments

 

Khan Academy

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Grades K-12: You probably already know about Khan Academy, but you might not know about their "get ready courses" for math. Each course offers instruction and tests for need-to-know concepts at that grade level. It's a manageable way for students to review and refresh as they kick off a new school year.

Read our review of Khan Academy

 

Youcubed

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Grades 8-12: Backed by Stanford, this is a great resource for teacher PD, as well as for finding math tasks that build students' confidence, undoing the damaging math myths that can prevent students from reaching their potential.

Read our review of Youcubed

 

SKILL-BUILDING TOOLS FOR READING AND WRITING

Bookshare and Learning Ally

 

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Grades pre-K-12: These sites are paired here because they similarly offer tons of digital books for students with various learning and attention issues. Each text has handy supports, including audio and customizable visuals, that make reading more accessible. The incredible books on offer can help build a student's love of reading.

Read our reviews of Bookshare and Learning Ally

 

CommonLit

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Grades 3-12: Find high-interest and curriculum-connected leveled texts. Each features built-in supports that improve accessibility as well as assessments that get students thinking.

Read our review of CommonLit

 

Lalilo

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Grades K-3: If your students need phonics support, this is a great program to look into. It's a comprehensive and adaptive program that's not too busy. And while it can be a bit limited in terms of feedback, it'll come alive with effective teacher support.

Read our review of Lalilo

 

ReadWorks

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Grades K-12: Similar to CommonLit, ReadWorks is a library of texts for students' reading development. What's special about ReadWorks is its focus on daily content as well as its offering of different types of texts (StepReads, human-voiced, ebooks) and question sets.

Read our review of ReadWorks

 

Create a Culture of Growth and Reflection with SEL

Let's acknowledge the anxieties that come with transitions, hardships, and other challenges. These teaching and learning resources give students the SEL tools to check in with their emotions, honor their progress, and stay motivated.

Breathe, Think, DoSmiling MindInsight Timer

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Grades pre-K-12: While the jury's out on the benefits of mindfulness to battle depression and anxiety among teens, providing students space to breathe and relax can be a useful way to refocus them and transition. These three tools are some of our favorites for creating these kinds of moments in classrooms.

Read our reviews of Breathe, Think, Do; Smiling Mind; and Insight Timer

 

Bulb

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Grades 7-12: It might be a good idea this year to have students do regular written reflections that take note of what they've done, how it went, and where they need to go. Bulb is a simple portfolio tool that could structure this activity and others. Note: The free version only supports 10 pages.

Read our review of Bulb

 

Formative or Mentimeter

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Grades K-12: Whether you're looking to do warm-ups, exit tickets, or just SEL check-ins with your students, these are two of the best tools you'll find. Formative focuses more on substantive, cyclical feedback, while Mentimeter is best for quick polls and temperature checks.

Read our reviews of Formative and Mentimeter

 

inspirED

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Grades 8-12: Pull from this site's browsable collection activities if you're looking to support students' SEL skills development. Most require very little prep and minimal materials, and you can use them flexibly across grade levels.

Read our review of inspirED

 

Mitra

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Grades 9-12: With teacher support, the Mitra app could offer a way for students to take stock of their values and identify how their emotions may relate to those values. The app encourages daily check-ins, which teachers could connect to the classroom through assignments or discussions.

Read our review of Mitra

 

Image courtesy of Allison Shelley/The Verbatim Agency for American Education: Images of Teachers and Students in Action.

Tanner Higgin

Tanner was Editorial Director, Learning Content at Common Sense Education where he led the editorial team responsible for edtech reviews and resources. Previously, he taught writing and media literacy for six years, and has a PhD from the University of California, Riverside. His research on video games and culture has been published in journals, books, and online, presented at conferences nationwide, and continues to be cited and taught in classes around the world. Prior to joining Common Sense Education, Tanner worked as a curriculum developer and researcher at GameDesk, helping to design and launch Educade.org and the PlayMaker School. While at GameDesk, he co-designed the United Colonies alternate reality game (ARG) with Mike Minadeo. This ARG is to date one of the most sophisticated to be implemented in a K-12 environment. Outside of education, Tanner has been a Technical Writer-Editor for the Department of Defense, a web designer, and co-editor and co-creator of a print literary journal.