Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
Which dyslexia professional associations recommend diagnosing pre-kindergarteners with dyslexia? I'm eager to do more reading if this is true.
I’m not at my desk now, but I’ll find the links and post when I can.
Thank you! I look forward to reading. I do think we agree about the importance of early intervention. The disagreement is if it is appropriate/accurate to diagnose a SLD in reading in a child who is too young to have started reading instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
Which dyslexia professional associations recommend diagnosing pre-kindergarteners with dyslexia? I'm eager to do more reading if this is true.
I’m not at my desk now, but I’ll find the links and post when I can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We may actually be aligned with what we both know these little kids need. You believe that the schools will provide it, I think. I know from sad experience (personal and professional) that they will not, however well intentioned and passionate they are.
Yes, I do think we agree about early intervention. The disagreement is about if dyslexia is an appropriate diagnosis for pre-kindergarteners who haven't been exposed to phonics instruction yet.Anonymous08/17/2025 18:29 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
5 is very young. Where I live they do provisional diagnosis at 7 (age expected to read) but won't fully diagnose until about 3rd grade as some kids are just on a different developmental trajectory and reading develops in bursts. They won't even test until 7 - they just recommend additional support until then.
I don't know of many programs that will take 5 year olds who developmentally are not yet reading or expected to read in most of the world. Orton Gillingham is a great resource for dyslexia.
Anonymous08/17/2025 18:28 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
Which dyslexia professional associations recommend diagnosing pre-kindergarteners with dyslexia? I'm eager to do more reading if this is true.
I’m not at my desk now, but I’ll find the links and post when I can.Anonymous08/17/2025 18:25 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
I am aware, and fully support screening and early intervention. The great thing is that we don't need diagnoses to provide phonological processing and reading interventions, either in schools or privately. There are many options between diagnosing pre-kindergarteners with dyslexia and "watch and wait." Most (if not all) public schools in this area have reading intervention groups for kids who are identified as being at risk for reading difficulties.
Also, how familiar are you with phonics-based reading curriculums? Kindergarten level instruction includes phonological awareness (segmentation, blending, etc.) without a connection to written letters.
I’m not familiar with every curriculum area schools use, for sure. What I do know is that no school, public or private, has a curriculum that has the level of intensity and explicitness that a dyslexic kid needs to build their phonological awareness skills to catch up to peers. That is why there are kids who go to great schools with excellent instruction aligned with the science of reading/structured literacy who still come out of 1st grade without the phonological skills they need. These kids would have a much more successful entry to schooling if they were provided what they need early.
It’s giving the antibiotic early, rather than waiting for sepsis.
We may actually be aligned with what we both know these little kids need. You believe that the schools will provide it, I think. I know from sad experience (personal and professional) that they will not, however well intentioned and passionate they are.Anonymous08/17/2025 18:19 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
Which dyslexia professional associations recommend diagnosing pre-kindergarteners with dyslexia? I'm eager to do more reading if this is true.Anonymous08/17/2025 18:14 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
I am aware, and fully support screening and early intervention. The great thing is that we don't need diagnoses to provide phonological processing and reading interventions, either in schools or privately. There are many options between diagnosing pre-kindergarteners with dyslexia and "watch and wait." Most (if not all) public schools in this area have reading intervention groups for kids who are identified as being at risk for reading difficulties.
Also, how familiar are you with phonics-based reading curriculums? Kindergarten level instruction includes phonological awareness (segmentation, blending, etc.) without a connection to written letters.Anonymous08/17/2025 18:09 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
NP here. I wish more school psychologists were familiar with this research so that more kids could be identified and get help earlier.Anonymous08/17/2025 18:05 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.
I believe there may be new research you aren’t familiar with. Age appropriate phonological awareness (and there is a skill set that is developmentally appropriate for every age) isn’t just correlated with dyslexia, it is predictive of struggle acquiring reading. And improving phonological awareness at age 5-6 is preventative - it makes reading failure less likely. This child does not need phonics yet. That isn’t age appropriate. She needs explicit phonological awareness training, and moving into linking speech sounds to letter shapes.
I know many professionals prefer a watch and wait approach. It is risky, though, because kids with dyslexia can get turned off school and internalize reading failure very early. By first grade many dyslexic kids already have experienced repeated failure and are starting to have negative behaviors and coping strategies. When they do begin to read they rely on guessing and rote memory. It is unnecessary suffering.
I truly say this with respect for you and what you do for kids every day. Consider whether the research supports early diagnosis and referral to services. I believe it does, as do the dyslexia professional associations I belong to.
Anonymous08/17/2025 17:30 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
This surprises me, too. I've been told that first grade is the earliest it makes sense to evaluate. I was concerned about my daughter's reading in kindergarten and part of first and she began getting pulled for reading intervention. I asked about an evaluation and they chose to wait - I'm glad they did. Reading "clicked" for her partway through first grade with the reading interventions. I'm glad I didn't get a private evaluation because she may have been misdiagnosed because it really was just too early to tell.Anonymous08/17/2025 16:40 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
What are your child's goals/services for speech? That may also address some of the phonological processing issues.Anonymous08/17/2025 16:35 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone diagnosed dyslexia in a five year old who hasn't started kindergarten yet? That is incredibly concerning. I would hold off on pursuing tutoring or extra supports and instead see how your child does in kindergarten reading instruction.
I know you mean well, but you are wrong. Dyslexia is neurobiological. You can identify a dyslexic brain in an FMRI at 18 months. The core deficit in dyslexia is phonological, basically the ability to hear and separate individual sounds in the unbroken stream of speech. It is such a tiny thing, but it is essential to reading. If you can teach that skill before the child is taught phonics they have the possibility to learn to read “normally”. If they go into phonics instruction with the core deficit unremediated they can’t learn phonics. You need to be able to segment the speech sounds before you can’t map them to letters.
No, I'm not. For background, I am a psychologist and diagnose learning disabilities. First, just because something is neurobiological does not mean it can be identified at any age with brain scans. While there are certain neurological differences that we can see on scans, these differences are not diagnostic. This is true for many diagnoses (e.g., autism, depression). Second, phonological processing is core to dyslexia. However, early deficits in phonological processing may indicate children who are at risk for dyslexia, but are not enough to diagnose dyslexia. Dyslexia is a specific learning disability in reading. If someone is not yet at an age where they can be developmentally expected to read (and have also not been in school yet), they cannot be reliably or validly diagnosed with dyslexia.Anonymous08/17/2025 16:15 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
My child had a speech delay due to multiple ear infections causing prolonged intermittent hearing loss. He was in speech therapy and could not blend or rhyme at age 4. Reading research I knew he was at a huge risk of having trouble learning how to read.
The most important thing I learned was he needed daily intervention. It wasn’t going to be enough 1-2 a week or even three times a week of intervention. And because we couldn’t afford to pay for hundreds of hours of tutoring AND there is a limit of how much a 4-5 year old can sit there and do work.
We ended up buying several reading/spelling programs. Then I sat down and worked with him every day -7 days a week for a year. I wrote it down on a calendar and it was 360 out of 365 days. Even if it was only 5-10 minutes it became like brushing teeth something you do every day.
And to motivate him because it was hard work he got stickers and earned prizes every Friday. We went to target and looked and Amazon so he was always working towards something. Days that were really hard for him he got candy/smoothie after reading (I put a gummy or mm chocolate on the periods so as soon as he read a sentence he got the candy.
I bought 100 easy lessons to start because they have some great say it fast say it slow
Exercises to work on blending. I bought All About Reading and All About Spelling which is an OG program (I just tweaked it so we skipped the short e words because 100 easy lessons works on long e first)
After 360 days he was 5 and reading. He had no problem blending orally when a year before he could not orally blend words or do any phonemic awareness activities.
I continued buying different curriculum throughout early elementary. The one to one really made the difference.,
Anonymous08/17/2025 15:23 Subject: Outside of School Resources and IEP for newly diagnosed dyslexia
Read ‘Overcoming Dyslexia’ by Dr. Sally Shaywitz.