Michigan passed its largest-ever state budget with a major literacy investment. Here are the questions parents ask most about what that funding means for their child.

Common questions

What is LETRS training and why does it matter for struggling readers?

LETRS stands for Language Essentials for Teachers of Reading and Spelling. It is a 160-hour professional development program accredited by the International Dyslexia Association that trains teachers in the full science of how the brain learns to read: phonological awareness, phonics, morphology, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension. It replaces approaches like three-cueing, which trained children to guess words from pictures and context — what cognitive scientists describe as what struggling readers do. Teaching it as a method makes reading difficulty worse, not better.

My child’s school says it uses the “science of reading.” How do I know if that is real?

Ask specifically: has the teaching staff completed LETRS or an equivalent IDA-aligned training program? Is completion required for all K-6 teachers or optional? What phonics curriculum is in use, and was it selected from a state-approved evidence-based list? A school that uses the phrase without requiring structured professional development from its teachers is likely using the label without the practice behind it.

Is phonics enough, or does my child need more than that?

Phonics is necessary and not sufficient on its own. Reading draws on several systems at once: language, attention, working memory, and processing speed. That is why LETRS includes morphology, vocabulary, and comprehension alongside phonics — and why a child who sounds out words correctly but still struggles to pull meaning from a page needs support beyond decoding alone. The International Dyslexia Association’s 2025 definition update explicitly acknowledges this multi-system picture.

My child is behind in reading. Should I get a screening first?

A screener is a starting point, not a diagnosis. It helps identify whether a child is at risk for a reading challenge like dyslexia and points to which specific skills need practice. If your child might need formal accommodations such as an IEP or 504 plan, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, a professional evaluation is the route to those supports — a screener does not replace that. What it does is give you a place to start today, in language that builds your child up rather than boxing them in.