Name
TELC level
License
File
Evergreen (beginner, intermediate, advanced)
Evergreen is a series of three books (beginner, intermediate, advanced) that have 10 stories each about interesting people, places, and things all around Oregon. The stories come from ESOL News Oregon, a free local news site for students of English as a second language. Each story has a picture, comprehension exercises, and discussion and writing prompts. An appendix contains an answer key.
2-9
CC BY-NC-SA
Cuyamaca ESL 1 High Beg. Writing: Accelerated Remote Course (ARC)
A reading course based on the novel The Wishtree
3-4
CC BY-SA
The Picture of Dorian Gray – an ESL reader
The Picture of Dorian Gray is a classic, and in this era of selfies and Instagram, the themes of beauty and image are particularly relevant. This reader was written for high-beginner/low-intermediate ESL students. Lines of text are numbered, so students and instructors can more easily locate words and phrases that are being discussed. Definitions of more advanced vocabulary words are in the footnotes on the pages where the words are first used. These words are also listed alphabetically in the glossary at the back of the book. The worksheets include grammar review and speaking practice.
3-4
CC BY-SA
A Closer Read
This low intermediate reading skills workbook for English learners at Portland Community College is built around the engaging theme of hobbies. Each unit focuses on a specific reading skill—such as finding the topic, identifying the main idea, supporting details, summarizing, and interpreting visuals—through hobby-related content like gardening, music, sports, and social media. Units include illustrated vocabulary previews with self-correcting H5P exercises, warm-up discussions, audio-supported dialogues, skill presentations with practice, short reading passages with comprehension checks, annotation tasks, and wrap-up prompts to reinforce learning and promote discussion.
3-5
CC BY-NC-SA
Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol: An Open Reader
This adaptation of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is written as a graded reader for ESL/EFL/ELT purposes. The text is estimated to be at the INTERMEDIATE level on the Extensive Reading Foundation Grading Scale, or A2 on the CEFR scale.
4
CC PD
The Double-Entry Journal
The Double Entry Journal is a note-taking technique for English Composition courses that encourages students to become active readers.
5-10
CC BY-NC
Alma Strikes a Chord
When Alma tries to write a song for her boyfriend Quang, she learns that actions speak louder than words.
5
CC BY-NC-SA
EL Civics Government and History Lessons for ESL Students
A website of readings to familiarize ESL students with US history, contains short bios and Q&A
5-10
Intermediate Reading and Writing
Intermediate-level reading/writing textbook uses themes from the novel Uprising. Includes pre-reading, comprehension questions, graphic organizers, and writing prompts.
5-6
CC BY
Sherlock Holmes Stories for Intermediate and Advanced English Language Learners
Your English Detective is a website that offers adapted Sherlock Holmes stories at the B1 Common European Framework of Reference level. Each story is about 10-15 pages and could be used as extensive reading. In addition, there are Sherlock-inspired lessons and ideas for the ESL classroom, including fanfiction writing prompts.
5-6
CC BY-SA
A Christmas Carol
This version of the classic holiday story has been slightly abridged and lightly adapted for advanced students of English language. The text includes comprehension checks, discussion questions, and collaborative activities.
6-8
CC BY
Short Stories from the Outer Circle
This global short story anthology is grounded in the belief that English belongs to all who use it, however they use it. Featuring stories from countries where English remains influential post-colonization, the collection embraces the legitimacy of all English varieties—regardless of grammar, vocabulary, or pronunciation differences. Each authentic story highlights the power of language to honor cultural diversity while also revealing shared human experiences, affirming that all forms of English have a rightful place in the literary canon.
6-10
CCO
“Intro to Fiction” Anthology
Readings from Marginalized Voices and Identities – This anthology offers links to short fiction pieces by living authors whose lived experiences have been marginalized due to race ethnicity, gender or ability. This book is intended as a starting point for future collaboration in celebrating and sharing voices and stories that need to be shared.
7-10
CC BY-NC-SA
Preparing for University Reading
This book uses authentic freshman-level reading materials to teach important reading skills and prepare students, including English Language Learners, for university. In each chapter, you’ll find passages from freshman textbooks, explicit reading skill instruction, reading comprehension questions, vocabulary activities, and discussion topics. Together the materials in this book will help students better understand typical readings from their freshman year of college by giving them the tools to succeed.
8-10
CC BY-SA
Read Faster, Understand More
This advanced-level reading skills workbook (Level 8 at Portland Community College) uses a social justice theme and primarily authentic texts to develop key academic reading skills. These include vocabulary in context, main ideas, supporting details, implied ideas, inferences, infographics, organizational patterns, and identifying purpose and tone. Each unit features vocabulary activities, a graphic organizer, interactive Google Slides for instruction and practice, comprehension checks, and extension activities that deepen understanding and engagement.
8-10
CC BY-NC-SA
Web Literacy for Student Fact-Checkers
This is an unabashedly practical guide for the student fact-checker. It supplements generic information literacy with the specific web-based techniques that can get you closer to the truth on the web more quickly. We will show you how to use date filters to find the source of viral content, how to assess the reputation of a scientific journal in less than five seconds, and how to see if a tweet is really from the famous person you think it is or from an impostor. We’ll show you how to find pages that have been deleted, figure out who paid for the web site you’re looking at, and whether the weather portrayed in that viral video actual matches the weather in that location on that day. We’ll show you how to check a Wikipedia page for recent vandalism, and how to search the text of almost any printed book to verify a quote. We’ll teach you to parse URLs and scan search result blurbs so that you are more likely to get to the right result on the first click. And we’ll show you how to avoid baking confirmation bias into your search terms. In other words, we’ll teach you web literacy by showing you the unique opportunities and pitfalls of searching for truth on the web. Crazy, right?
8-10
CC BY-NC-SA
It’s All Greek to Me! Using Authentic Readings to Improve Knowledge of the English Language and Western Culture-Openbooks
“It’s All Greek to Me!” has everything—entertaining stories, academic articles in a variety of disciplines, vocabulary crossover in literary and academic readings, connections to local, American, and Western culture, and plenty of chances for critical thinking for advanced students of English as a Second Language (ESL). All readings are authentic with minimal adaptation from a variety of sources.
9-10
CC BY-NC-SA
Speaking of Culture
Speaking of Culture is a book designed to define and explore the broad concept of culture and related ideas. Its purpose is to help readers develop a deeper understanding of what culture means and to build a more precise vocabulary for discussing it. Since culture is often used loosely in everyday English, the book aims to clarify its meaning by drawing from a range of academic disciplines, including anthropology, biology, history, mythology, political science, psychology, and sociology.
9-10
CC BY-NC