Understanding the Parent Experience

When a parent walks into your classroom with concerns about their child’s reading development, they’re often carrying months—sometimes years—of quiet worry. They’ve watched their child work harder than classmates for smaller gains. They’ve heard “give it time” from well-meaning family members while their gut tells them something different. These parents aren’t looking to assign blame or create problems. They’re looking for a partner who sees what they see.

As a teacher, you’re in a unique position. You observe their child in ways parents cannot—among peers, during instruction, responding to different teaching approaches. You notice patterns that help complete the picture. When you approach parent concerns about reading differences with curiosity rather than defensiveness, you become the ally these families desperately need. Your observations, combined with their instincts, create a fuller understanding of where this child is in their reading development journey.

The conversation isn’t about labels or limitations. It’s about understanding how this particular brain learns to read and what support will help it thrive.