There’s just about an app for everything, regardless if you are an Apple or Android user. And there is no short supply of educational ones too. Here are the best reading apps we’ve curated to help your child succeed:

Phonics

1.    Phonics Genius – While not stocked full of beautiful, kid-friendly graphics and “game” animation, Phonics Genius can be a useful part of child’s daily routine. With thousands of words already loaded (and the option of loading and recording more), children practice reading words on flash cards. Afterward first reading a word to themselves, they touch the word to have it read back to them. Emerging readers can also have the word pronounced letter by letter.

•    Cost: Free
•    Where: iTunes

2.    Kids Learn to Read – Set within Intellijoy’s reading apps series (preceded by Kids ABC Letters and Kids ABC Phonics and followed by Kids ABC Trains and Kids Sight Words), Kids Learn to Read has been particularly well rated among educational specialists (and kids alike!). Kids play with Tommy the Turtle on skateboards and with balls, all while practicing and learning to blend letters and sounds to make words and identifying word families.

•    Website: http://www.intellijoy.com/
•    Cost: $2.99 for full version (free version available)
•    Where: Android

Sight Words

1.    See.Touch.Learn – Actually, it’s difficult to classify See.Touch.Learn. What area can See.Touch.Learn not work on? It is a multipurpose app, which you can use to teach sight words, phonemic awareness, or even classifying like objects for toddlers or memorizing math facts. What it is not is a complete curriculum. For many of the apps listed on this page, all the work has already been done for you.

For this app, you must make your own custom lessons. But before you get discouraged, look at how great it can be! Let’s say you’re working on words that rhyme. You might write a prompt that says “Point to words that rhyme with wall.” You could have six pictures of different objects, but within them would be a picture of a man having a fall, a shopping mall, and a ball. Clearly all three of those would rhyme. You can do similar prompts for sight words.

•    Website: http://www.brainparade.com/products/see-touch-learn-free/
•    Cost: Free for app. If you download the pre-made libraries of “cards,” you will pay between $.99 and $1.99.
•    Where: iTunes

2.    Alphabet Car – A fun, energetic game, where kids spell out their sight words by getting behind the wheel of a school bus and driving straight into the letters as they pass them. With five levels, starting from Preschool to Expert, and nine stages at each level, there’s a lot of room for your child to progress. Additionally, this is one of the few educational games that’s available on both Android and Apple devices.

•    Cost: $2.99 (free version available)
•    Where: Android and iTunes