Dyslexia Support

Clear Answers for Parents Concerned About Reading and Learning

If reading feels unusually hard for your child—or you've been told to "wait and see"—this support helps you understand what's going on and what effective instruction should include.

If You've Been Told to "Wait and See"

Dyslexia doesn't go away on its own. Early, explicit instruction matters. If your child is struggling with reading, spelling, or decoding, waiting can make things harder—not easier.

Common Signs of Dyslexia

These signs don't mean your child has dyslexia—but they do mean it's worth investigating further.

Reading Struggles

Difficulty sounding out words, slow reading pace, avoiding reading tasks                                     

Spelling Issues

Inconsistent spelling, difficulty remembering sight words, phonetic spelling errors                 

Letter/Sound Confusion

Trouble connecting letters to sounds, reversing letters or numbers

Comprehension vs. Decoding

Strong understanding when read to, but struggles when reading independently

Family History

Parent or sibling with reading difficulties or diagnosed dyslexia                                               

Slow Progress

Works hard but reading skills don't improve at expected rate                                                                  

How Dyslexia Support Helps

Understand whether your child's struggles suggest dyslexia or another learning difference

 Learn what evaluations should include and how to interpret results

Identify what kind of instruction works for dyslexic learners (and what doesn't)

Navigate school conversations about reading intervention

Understand your rights and options in public, private, or homeschool settings

 Create a clear action plan based on your child's needs

 Connect with appropriate resources and next steps

Common Myths About Dyslexia

Myth: Dyslexia means seeing letters backwards

Dyslexia is a language-based learning difference that affects how the brain processes written language. It's not about vision or seeing letters backwards.

Truth: Dyslexia is about how sounds and letters connect—not about reversed vision
Myth: Kids will grow out of it

Dyslexia is lifelong. However, with appropriate instruction and support, people with dyslexia can become strong readers.

Truth: Early intervention with the right methods makes all the difference
Myth: Dyslexia means low intelligence

Dyslexia has nothing to do with intelligence. Many people with dyslexia are highly intelligent and successful—they just learn to read differently.

Truth: Dyslexia affects reading, not intelligence or potential
Myth: You need to wait until 3rd grade to diagnose

Signs of dyslexia can be identified as early as kindergarten or first grade. Waiting delays critical intervention time.

Truth: Earlier identification leads to better outcomes
Myth: All reading programs work the same

Students with dyslexia need structured, explicit, systematic phonics instruction. Not all reading programs provide this.

Truth: Evidence-based methods like Orton-Gillingham are most effective for dyslexia

What Effective Dyslexia Instruction Looks Like

Students with dyslexia benefit from instruction that is:

 Structured: Follows a logical, sequential order from simple to complex

 Explicit: Directly teaches concepts rather than expecting discovery

 Systematic: Builds skills in a planned, consistent manner

 Cumulative: Reviews and reinforces previously taught skills

 Multisensory: Engages visual, auditory, and kinesthetic pathways

 Intensive: Provides sufficient time and practice for mastery

Support for Different Settings 

Public School Families

Understand evaluation processes, IEP/504 eligibility, and how to advocate for evidence-based reading instruction.

 

Private School Families

Navigate what private schools can and cannot provide, and explore outside tutoring or evaluation options.

 

Homeschool Families

Select appropriate curriculum, understand what structured literacy looks like, and create effective reading plans.

 

Get Clear Answers About Your Child's Reading

Let's talk about what you're seeing and create a plan that makes sense for your family.

Book a Free SPED Strategy Session