60-Second Screening

A tutor for struggling readers asked me for a “60-Second Screening”, something she could use in a hallway or a casual encounter. Here’s a 3-part assessment that you can print out or display on your phone: http://communityreading.org/documents/test.pdf If you have trouble with PDFs on your phone, then here are the

Read more ›

The Cat in the Hat

There is a new section in BLENDING that you might find useful. It’s a warm-up for my favorite ‘first’ book for older non-readers. Even for adult non-readers. The sun did not shine.It was too wet to play.So we sat in the houseall that cold, cold, wet day. The new section

Read more ›

MMIWG in EPUB and MOBI

(This post is NOT about reading deficits.) Reclaiming Power and Place Here are EPUB and MOBI versions of the Final Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG).   These versions are suitable for reading on a phone, tablet, or portable book-reader. Download the EPUB

Read more ›

Dyslexia in Two Languages

We live in Quebec where bilingual education is mandatory. Our dyslexic daughter learns English half the day in grade 3, and French the other half, we have no choice, it’s the law. We are completely English mother tongue so she is drowning in French and struggling in English.  English is

Read more ›

Try the Wordspinner

The free ‘Wordspinner’ is the simplest way to drill blending and segmenting skills. It runs on your PC, tablet, or phone.  Click here to load it.   Key out a word like ‘bat’ and you will see how it works.  The Wordspinner creates both real and nonsense words.  Practice blending by

Read more ›

Types of Phonics

An alphabetic writing system is a code for converting the sounds of speech into text. For example the sounds /b/ /a/ /t/ can be coded as ‘bat’.  Spelling is a two-way code, a skilled writer can encode the sounds into a string of letters, and a skilled reader can subsequently

Read more ›

The Challenge Mindset

We ask parents to teach their child, but it’s not that simple. Overcoming your child’s dyslexia is a marathon, a daily grind of drills, patient practice, slow progress, and frequent setbacks.  You need extraordinary resilience to succeed.  Your child is going to push back, there will never be enough hours

Read more ›

What Else Do I Need?

My son will be 16 soon and reads about a 3rd grade level. I’m going to try teaching him myself starting with BLENDING.  What else do I need?   You need books that interest your son.  Your son is an almost-adult.  You must start reading with him every day.  And

Read more ›

Leila Enrolls to College

“I am enrolling for phlebotomy class. I went to orientation and I filled out the forms for my class on my own. It was such an exciting experience for me because it was something I never dreamed I would be able to do.”   Need a miracle for your struggling

Read more ›

Community Reading Project Newsletter #5

Newsletter #5.    22 March, 2017   MONTSERRAT REVIEW Welcome to our new members from Montserrat, a tiny, beautiful island with a tight-knit but welcoming community. The residents are working together to fight reading deficits, and we’re providing support and tools. This is our opportunity to review the theory, research,

Read more ›

Sound of the Letters

Members of the Community Reading FB group asked “What is the proper way to teach the sounds of the consonants?”  For example, what is the proper way to pronounce the sound of the letter ‘b’? The quick answer is ‘b’ as in ‘bat’ or ‘bet’ or ‘but’.  But there’s a

Read more ›

Community Reading Project Newsletter #4

Newsletter #4.    14 January, 2017   * NEW *  FLUENCY PROGRAM Researchers know that a student who overcomes a phonological deficit usually becomes an average or above-average reader, but often remains a SLOW reader.  This… is… important… because… slow… reading… reduces… comprehension. ‘FLUENCY is based on the technique of

Read more ›

Tutoring towards Disability

Don’t assume your OLDER student can learn on the same path as a younger one. The key idea in the excellent book “Off-Track – When Poor Readers Become “Learning Disabled” is that readers who leave the standard path to reading KEEP LEARNING. The skills they learn might be compensatory or

Read more ›

Goodbye ‘Dyslexia’

I recently got booted out of Facebook’s ‘Dyslexia’ group.  It was a daily parade of funny, sad, pointless, and heartbreaking stories.  I’m going to miss it. ‘Dyslexia’ is a huge group, almost 10,000 members sharing and promoting ideas that are exactly polar opposite to the Community Reading Project. In their

Read more ›

Community Reading Project Newsletter #3

Newsletter #3.    14 December, 2016   UPCOMING MEETUP IN TORONTO The Community Reading Project is hosting a meetup for parents on February 21, 2017 at 7:00 PM, at our Bathurst St clinic.  You can learn more, RSVP, or even invite a friend by clicking here. Hopefully this meeting will be

Read more ›

Community Reading Project Newsletter #2

Newsletter #2.    5 November, 2016   A THRILLING SUCCESS STORY Three months ago we met Adam and his mom Havah.  Adam was in grade-3 and couldn’t read at all.  Havah also struggled with reading, she could decode but her fluency and comprehension were very low. We showed Havah how

Read more ›

Design of the BLENDING Program

This posting looks at our free BLENDING program; what it teaches, how it works, who it is for, and where it came from.  If you just want to get started, then here is a 9-minute quick-start video.  Click here for the sign-in screen, which you can bookmark for quick access

Read more ›

Community Reading Project Newsletter #1

Newsletter #1.    25 October, 2016 OUR FIRST NEWSLETTER !! There are lots of new and exciting things going on at the Community Reading Project.  And one of them is this newsletter.  If you are on our mailing list, then we have already met, but let us re-introduce ourselves. We

Read more ›

Matthew Effects in Reading

If you only read one paper on the theory of reading disability, find the one by Dr Keith Stanovich called “Matthew effects in reading: Some consequences of individual differences in the acquisition of literacy”. Its title comes from a paraphrase of the Gospel of Matthew: “The rich get richer and

Read more ›

End of Summer

School is about to start, and Haroun and I are finishing our last days together.   He is now reading independently, and his comprehension, fluency, and stamina are improving daily. We have worked about  80 hours over this summer, averaging just under two hours per day through July and August.  Haroun

Read more ›

Bonus Myth 13 – Dyslexia is hereditary

We reposted an excellent list of the 12 Myths of Dyslexia from the Promethian Trust here: http://communityreading.org/wp/the-dirty-dozen-12-myths-about-dyslexia/   Bonus Myth:  Dyslexia is hereditary. Dorothy Bishop, one of the leading researchers in the genetics of dyslexia outlines the faint evidence of a link between dyslexia and genetics in an excellent blog

Read more ›

12 Myths about dyslexia:

These myths are insidious. Some of these myths survive because they have a grain of ‘truthiness’.  Others intentionally confuse cause and effect. We believe some myths simply because other people believe them, or we find comfort in believing them. But each of these claims is a myth, a falsehood, a

Read more ›

Curse of the Hardy Boys

I grew up with the The Hardy Boys. The writing was crisp and the stories were heart-pounding (to a 10-year-old). At the time there were about 40 titles in the series, and I think I read every one of them. I owned a few titles, traded others with friends, and

Read more ›

Reply to a worried Mom…

“My son is going into grade-7, and reads at grade-2 level. His school provided phonics interventions over the years, but they didn’t help. We are very worried…”   I’m going to violate all the niceties and just tell you the answer.  My colleagues would be horrified – “How can you

Read more ›

Restarting with H.

I have reconnected with H., whom I worked with over Christmas. Blog posts about our previous work are here. It is a pleasure to see him again. He is much more poised, and looks to have grown inches in the last 6 months. He has been receiving intermittent tutoring, and

Read more ›

Launching the Summer of Repairing Dyslexia

Dyslexics don’t have a problem with learning, they can learn anything if taught in a suitable way.  But the skill they especially don’t learn is READING.   Poor reading often leads to educational failure, LD classrooms, bullying, and emotional problems. Yet reading is just a skill we all can learn, if

Read more ›

Phonological Memory

The ‘student’ who got me interested in dyslexia was 17-years-old, perceptive, well behaved, and seemed normal enough.  He talked in grunts, which seemed to me as well-adjusted for a teenager. But over a few chats I started to learn the truth.  He couldn’t read “The Cat in the Hat”, and

Read more ›

Closing the Math Gap

Community Reading Project focuses on students who lag years behind in reading, using intensive sustained tutoring.  Nothing wrong with the kids, they just need proper and intensive instruction. The SAME technique works for kids who are far behind in math. Consider this New York Times article: The teenagers in Chicago’s

Read more ›

Christmas Crash Reading – Day 1

We met Haroun over Christmas in an 11-day crash program.  In the months that followed he received some excellent tutoring outside of school, enough to maintain and solidify his reading skills but not much move them forward.   The blog posts from the 11 Christmas days start below. We continue

Read more ›