General Reading Strategies

  • Make sure your client’s presented instructional material is at their academic level and continue to work on developing their rudimentary reading skills (e.g., phonological awareness, decoding, word recognition, reading fluency).
    • As the client gets older, difficulties mastering these key academic skills may interfere with their learning in other areas. 
  • Continue to work on the client’s understanding of phoneme-grapheme correspondence (i.e., sound-letter correspondences).
  • Reading material that includes many sight words may help increase automaticity.
  • Teaching high-frequency words and spelling-based decoding strategies may also be helpful.
  • Model fluent reading. Teach the client to self-identify reading errors and provide them with corrective feedback.
  • It may be helpful to have your client read along with books/text on a computer using a “read” program such as text-to-speech programs or software. 
  • Every effort should be made to keep the reading process as enjoyable as possible for your client. It is paramount to keep reading fun and maintain a student’s motivational interest. The client should be encouraged to read books that she/he find engaging and are of interest to her.

Provide the client with fun opportunities to build her/his academic skills in reading. She/he may enjoy the following websites that have reading games:   

The following websites may be helpful to her parents: