Learn to Read · Adaptive Practice · Pre-K through 8th grade
157 structured lessons teach your child to read — from first letter sounds through phonics, fluency, and comprehension to real chapter books. The adaptive engine then keeps them practicing vocabulary, comprehension, and literary analysis at exactly their level through 8th grade. No separate phonics program needed.
Teaching guides, concept explainers, and curriculum reviews for every reading skill.
Learn to Read takes your child from letter sounds to chapter books across 157 structured lessons. Adaptive Reading Practice uses the same engine as math — adjusting difficulty, tracking mastery, and reinforcing skills with spaced review from Pre-K through 8th grade.
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41 articles about Phonics
A clear guide to the letter and sound knowledge your Pre-K child should be developing, from recognizing letters to connecting them with sounds. Know what to expect and how to tell if your child is on track.
A practical guide to kindergarten reading expectations, from letter sounds and sight words to simple sentences. Know what is typical, what is advanced, and when to be concerned.
A clear guide to first-grade reading expectations, from phonics patterns and fluency to comprehension skills. Know what your child should master this year and how to spot gaps early.
A hands-on guide to building phonemic awareness in Pre-K children (ages 3-5). Activities for rhyming, identifying beginning sounds, clapping syllables, and playful sound work that prepares children for phonics instruction.
A parent-friendly explanation of phonemic awareness, what it is, why it matters for reading, and how it differs from phonics.
A practical guide for homeschool parents on teaching rhyming to preschoolers and kindergartners. Why rhyming is a powerful predictor of reading success, plus hands-on activities to build this essential phonemic awareness skill.
A clear explanation of vowel teams, two vowels that work together to make one sound. Common patterns, examples, and the old rule that sometimes applies.
A practical guide for homeschool parents on teaching vowel teams and diphthongs. How to introduce two-vowel patterns like ea, oa, ai, and ou, plus strategies for handling vowel teams that make more than one sound.
A simple explanation of digraphs, two letters that team up to make one sound. Common examples, why they matter, and how they differ from blends.
A parent-friendly explanation of consonant blends, what they are, common examples, and how they differ from digraphs.
A practical guide for homeschool parents on teaching consonant blends and digraphs. The critical difference between the two, which ones to teach first, and hands-on strategies for helping your child decode words with complex consonant patterns.
A clear explanation of CVC words, consonant-vowel-consonant words that are the first words children learn to sound out and read.
A practical guide for homeschool parents on teaching CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) words. How to help your child blend sounds into real words, which word families to start with, and how to build confidence through early reading success.
A parent-friendly explanation of sight words, what they are, why children memorize them, and how they fit alongside phonics instruction.
A practical guide for homeschool parents on teaching sight words. Which words to prioritize, how many to introduce at a time, and research-backed methods that build instant word recognition without mindless memorization.
An honest comparison of the best phonics programs for homeschoolers in 2026: Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons, Explode the Code, All About Reading, Logic of English, Hooked on Phonics, and how Lumastery adapts phonics instruction to each child.
A detailed comparison of three popular homeschool phonics programs: All About Reading, Logic of English Foundations, and Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. Strengths, weaknesses, and how to choose, plus where adaptive platforms like Lumastery fill the gaps.
There is no universal age when children are ready to read. The idea that all children should read by a specific birthday does more harm than good, creating pressure, shame, and misdiagnosis. Here is what readiness actually looks like and why watching your child matters more than watching the calendar.
Not every child reads on the same timeline. Learn why some children are naturally later readers, when the timing is normal, when it warrants attention, and how to support your child without panic or pressure.
Phonics gaps often hide behind other problems, avoidance, slow reading, or poor comprehension. Here is how to recognize the warning signs and close the gap before it widens.
A child who struggles with reading could have a decoding problem, a comprehension problem, or both. These two issues require completely different interventions, and mistaking one for the other wastes time and deepens frustration.
Phonics and fluency require a human ear, someone who can hear a child decode words, catch mispronunciations, and judge expression. A text-only platform cannot do that honestly. Here is what we assess instead, and why.
Many children appear to learn to read without explicit phonics instruction. until they hit a wall. Here is what happens when phonics gets skipped, why the damage is often invisible at first, and what to do about it at any age.
The science of reading has become a rallying cry in education circles, but most of what reaches parents is oversimplified or distorted. Here is what the research actually says, what it means for your homeschool, and how to cut through the noise.
The debate between phonics and whole language has raged for decades, and it has left parents more confused than ever. Here is what each approach actually claims, what the evidence says, and why the real answer is more nuanced than either side admits.