I teach and I have a 5yo. That combination has made it genuinely hard to be around at school pickup when this subject comes up. I found some things that parents are actually being told versus what the research on phonics reading instruction actually supports.
"Just read to them every day" - valuable for vocabulary, comprehension, and loving books. Not a substitute for explicit decoding instruction. Reading to a child and teaching a child to read are two different activities and treating them as interchangeable is how kids get to second grade unable to sound out words they've never seen before.
"Point at words while you read" - marginally better than nothing. Does not constitute systematic phonics instruction. A child learning to associate the shape of a word with its sound is pattern recognition, not decoding. These collapse quickly once they see words they haven't memorized.
"Use flashcards for sight words" - this one specifically frustrates me because it explicitly teaches memorization over decoding. Some high frequency words need to be known on sight eventually but leading with memorization before phonics foundation is backwards and a lot of research says so.
"Apps that kids enjoy independently" - engagement is not a literacy outcome. A child can complete two hundred app lessons enthusiastically and have a patchy phoneme foundation because the app is optimized for retention metrics rather than systematic instruction sequence. Apps like reading .com follow a direct instruction model, though it requires a parent present for every session which isn't for everyone as well as All About Reading being the main one people recommend for home use. The above list is mostly good intentions with weak instructional foundations and parents deserve to know the difference."
"Make it fun, don't make it a lesson" - I understand the impulse and I'm not arguing for joyless drilling. But systematic phonics requires explicit instruction in a logical sequence and that is by definition a lesson. The goal is to make the lesson feel enjoyable, not to replace the lesson with play and hope it transfers.
The above list is mostly good intentions with weak instructional foundations and parents deserve to know the difference.
Submitted April 21, 2026 at 12:17AM by Novel_Savings_4184 https://ift.tt/u1OeY4P