Successful strategies for teaching dyslexic students
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You’ve seen it happen in your classroom—a bright, creative student whose eyes light up during discussion time goes quiet when it’s time to read aloud. You’ve watched them work twice as hard as their peers, only to struggle with words that seem to come easily to everyone else. That feeling of wanting to help but not quite knowing where to start isn’t a sign that you’re failing as a teacher. It’s a sign that you care deeply about reaching every student in your classroom. And if you’ve stayed after school searching for better approaches, wondering how to unlock the potential you know is there, you’re exactly the kind of educator who can make a real difference.
TL;DR
Students developing reading skills need explicit, systematic phonics instruction
Multisensory teaching engages visual, auditory, and kinesthetic pathways simultaneously
Creating emotional safety is essential—stress shuts down learning
Words teachers use become part of students' internal dialogue
With the right instruction, brain activation patterns for reading can normalize
Understanding How Reading Skills Develop Differently
Reading is not a natural ability that some children simply have and others don’t. It’s a complex skill that must be explicitly taught, and for students developing reading skills differently, the teaching approach matters more than anything else. Research shows that the brain can build new neural pathways for reading at any age through systematic practice and the right kind of instruction.
Students with reading differences often show different patterns of brain activation when processing text. These differences aren’t deficits—they’re variations in how the brain organizes itself for reading. With appropriate instruction, brain imaging studies show that activation patterns can normalize. The brain remains remarkably plastic and capable of building strong reading networks throughout childhood and beyond.
What this means for you as a teacher is profound: the student struggling with decoding today can become a confident reader. Every reading practice session strengthens neural pathways. The earlier and more consistently you provide the right kind of support, the more dramatic the changes you’ll see.
The most effective approach for students developing reading skills is systematic, explicit phonics instruction delivered through multiple sensory channels. This means teaching letter-sound relationships in a structured sequence while engaging visual, auditory, and kinesthetic pathways simultaneously.
When a student sees a letter, hears its sound, and traces it in the air or on a textured surface, the brain creates stronger, more durable connections. This multisensory approach works because it gives the brain multiple pathways to encode and retrieve information. Programs based on this methodology, like Orton-Gillingham approaches, have decades of research supporting their effectiveness.
One critical element many teachers miss: the order of presentation matters enormously. The 5-Minute Reading Fix approach shows words letter by letter, with pictures appearing only after the word is decoded. This prevents the “word guessing” habit that undermines reading development. When students learn to rely on phonetic decoding rather than picture cues or context guessing, they build genuine reading skills that transfer to any text.
To improve reading ability in your classroom, focus on explicit instruction in phonemic awareness, systematic phonics, vocabulary building, fluency practice, and comprehension strategies. Each component builds on the others, creating a comprehensive foundation for reading success.
Author Quote"
Neuroplasticity research demonstrates that reading literally changes brain structure, and children with reading differences can develop the same neural pathways as typical readers through systematic instruction.
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Laura LurnsLearning Success Expert
Research Insight: Brain imaging studies demonstrate that intensive reading intervention changes brain structure and function. Children with reading differences show normalized activation patterns after receiving systematic, explicit phonics instruction. The brain remains plastic throughout childhood, meaning it's never too late for meaningful improvement.
Creating a Supportive Classroom Environment
The physical and emotional environment of your classroom plays a crucial role in how students with reading differences experience learning. When a child’s stress response is activated, it literally shuts down the prefrontal cortex where learning happens. Creating emotional safety isn’t just nice to have—it’s essential for reading development.
Start by examining the language you use. The words teachers choose become part of a student’s internal dialogue. Saying “you’re building your reading skills” rather than “you struggle with reading” creates a different neurological response. Students who believe their brains can change and grow actually show enhanced neuroplasticity. Expectations literally change brain chemistry and learning outcomes.
Structure your classroom to minimize distractions while maintaining richness. Reduce visual clutter around reading areas. Provide noise-reducing options for students sensitive to auditory distractions. Create comfortable spaces for reading practice. When the environment supports focus, students can direct their mental energy toward skill building rather than filtering out interference.
Build in movement breaks between reading activities. The same brain chemical—dopamine—controls both motivation and movement. Physical activity primes the brain for learning. A few minutes of movement before reading instruction isn’t wasted time; it’s preparation that makes the learning more effective.
Teacher language shapes student self-belief and outcomes
Practical Strategies That Work Every Day
Understanding dyslexia and reading differences is important, but what matters most is what you do in your classroom each day. Here are strategies that experienced teachers have found effective:
Preview and prepare. Before reading new material, introduce vocabulary and concepts. This reduces the cognitive load during reading, allowing students to focus more energy on decoding.
Use echo reading and repeated reading. Read a sentence or passage aloud, then have the student read it back. This builds fluency and confidence while providing a model of what fluent reading sounds like.
Celebrate effort over accuracy. When students attempt challenging words—even incorrectly—praise their persistence. Say “I love how you worked through that” rather than just marking errors. This builds the growth mindset that fuels long-term reading improvement.
Teach students about their own brains. Help them understand that phonological differences in reading aren’t permanent limitations. When students know their brains can change, they persist longer through challenges. This isn’t just motivation—it’s accurate neuroscience that changes outcomes.
Partner with parents. The most powerful reading progress happens when school instruction is reinforced at home. Give parents specific, manageable activities—even five minutes daily makes a difference. Parents who understand they’re building neural pathways, not just completing homework, bring more consistency to the practice.
Author Quote"
The National Reading Panel found that systematic phonics instruction significantly improves reading achievement, with brain imaging studies showing new neural pathway development in students receiving explicit instruction.
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Here’s what I believe with every fiber of my being: you don’t need anyone’s permission to help your students reach their potential. You don’t need to wait for formal evaluations or special programs to start using evidence-based strategies in your classroom. The system may be designed around labels and limitations, but that system can’t survive a teacher who refuses to accept that any child “can’t” learn to read. Your daily presence in that classroom, your belief in each student’s capacity for growth, and your willingness to try different approaches—these are more powerful than any label or diagnosis. Every child’s brain is capable of extraordinary growth, and you’re in the perfect position to help make that happen. Start your free trial of the Learning Success All Access Program to discover additional strategies and resources that support you in reaching every learner.
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