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Lesson Planning Mikayla Storey Lesson Planning Mikayla Storey

How to Lesson Plan for Your Literacy Intervention

An effective lesson planning process has the potential to transform your year.

For us educators, lesson planning can reduce stress because we have everything outlined. It also saves us a ton of time in the long run.

But did you know that lesson planning also benefits our students? When we have clear plans, students begin understanding routines, and the increased cohesion between our lesson components helps them get better results!

Keep reading to learn the 5 step process to creating effective literacy lesson plans AND to grab our FREE lesson planning guides!

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Phonological Awareness Mikayla Storey Phonological Awareness Mikayla Storey

Should I Teach Syllable Segmenting?

Can you spell supercalifragilisticexpialidocious? Can your students? 

In all seriousness, supercalifragilisticexpialidocious isn't the most functional word to spell – but as students progress academically, they do need to be able to break down long words for reading and spelling. Keep reading to learn why syllable segmenting is necessary and how to incorporate this instruction into your lessons!

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Research Corey Pollard Research Corey Pollard

7 Must Haves for Research Based Reading Intervention

Whether you are a teacher, a parent, an SLP, or an interventionist, if you’re anything like us…which you are, because you’re here, you care about providing top notch intervention or instruction for your students. However, with all the differing opinions out there in the field of education it can be difficult to know if what you’re doing is the right thing. Click through to read about our 7 Must Haves for effective, research-based reading intervention.

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Phonics Ascend SMARTER Intervention Phonics Ascend SMARTER Intervention

How to Teach the au/aw Spelling Rule

Now, if you have been working with us for a while, you’ll know that we LOVE teaching with key images and phrases to help anchor skills for a student. For au/aw, we use the phrase “Yawn, I have to do the laundry.” This helps our struggling readers and spellers remember the rule. Keep reading for more tips, tricks and activities surrounding the au/aw vowel team.

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Phonics Mikayla Storey Phonics Mikayla Storey

How to Teach the oi/oy Spelling Rule

We use both “oi” and “oy” to make the /oi/ sound (think of the words “boy” and “foil”). When that sound comes in the middle of a word, we use “oi.” If it comes at the end of the word, we will use “oy.” Keep reading to learn more about how we teach our students all about this vowel team!

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Dyslexia Guest User Dyslexia Guest User

My Name is Mackenzie, and I am Dyslexic.

My name is Mackenzie, and I am dyslexic.

Some of my earliest memories of school are feelings of frustration, confusion, sadness, and feeling lonely. Another memory that still makes my stomach hurt today is trying to memorize math facts. I have a great memory for some things; song lyrics, things people say, and pictures. But, remembering letters and numbers is a totally different story.

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Phonics, Spelling Corey Pollard Phonics, Spelling Corey Pollard

Consonant LE Syllables - The Reading and Spelling Rules No One Ever Taught You

Here we are with our last syllable type! If you’ve been with us since the beginning of this series you’re all caught up on the crazy reading and spelling rules you may have never heard of - we certainly hadn’t. If you missed learning about all the spelling rules with the other syllable types - go back and check them out!

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Games & Activities, Differentiation Ascend SMARTER Intervention Games & Activities, Differentiation Ascend SMARTER Intervention

Using an Anchor to Help Your Students Cement What They Are Learning

If you have been keeping up with our blogs, you will know that all this month we are talking about ways we can help cement strategies for our students who just aren't getting it.  If you are new to our blog, welcome! You can catch up on our last two posts here: 3 Ways to Generalize Skills Learned in Isolation and Is it Just My Kids, Or...

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Parents, Dyslexia, Advocacy Corey Pollard Parents, Dyslexia, Advocacy Corey Pollard

She'll Catch Up

“Oh, she’ll catch up,” is what Jane recalled her daughter Susan’s teachers saying throughout first and second grades. Susan, now 12, was in the lowest reading group in her classroom but teachers assured Jane that Susan was very bright and would catch up shortly.

In truth, Susan wasn’t catching up. As peers began moving past her in reading, Jane became more anxious and worried.

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Differentiation, Lesson Planning Corey Pollard Differentiation, Lesson Planning Corey Pollard

Sometimes Things Don't Stick...Then What?

Discover how to handle students struggling with reading and spelling concepts. Learn when to explain concepts differently, review with engaging games, or move on. Find the balance between building a strong foundation and progressing effectively in intervention. Don't let students get stuck - adapt instruction for optimal learning outcomes!

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Spelling Corey Pollard Spelling Corey Pollard

What To Do When Spelling Rules Don't Stick

So we know that teaching students spelling rules in a systematic and cumulative (organized and building on itself) approach is the best way to make meaningful spelling gains. However, even with the best instruction we often see skills fall apart when they need to be applied at a higher level.

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Lesson Planning Ascend SMARTER Intervention Lesson Planning Ascend SMARTER Intervention

How To: Organize My Reading Intervention

Discover the balance between structure and flexibility in research-based reading intervention! Learn how to sequence lessons, track student progress, and adapt instruction to individual needs. Get tips for creative and engaging sessions while staying true to curriculum standards.

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