If you have been researching ways to help your child with reading difficulties, you may have come across the term structured literacy. Perhaps a teacher mentioned it, or you found it while searching for dyslexia support or reading intervention programs. But what exactly does structured literacy mean, and why are so many parents, educators, and reading specialists talking about it?
In this guide, we will explain exactly what structured literacy is, why it is considered the most effective approach for teaching reading — particularly for children with dyslexia and other reading difficulties — and how the programs at The Learnability are grounded in structured literacy principles.
By the end of this guide, you will have a clear understanding of structured literacy, why it matters for your child, and what to look for when choosing a reading intervention program.
What Is Structured Literacy?
Structured literacy is an approach to teaching reading and spelling that is explicit, systematic, sequential, and cumulative. It is grounded in decades of scientific research into how children learn to read and why some children struggle. The term was coined by the International Dyslexia Association to describe the type of reading instruction that research consistently shows is most effective — particularly for children with dyslexia, language-based learning disabilities, and other reading difficulties.
Structured literacy teaches the six key components of language that underpin reading and spelling:
- Phonology — the sound structure of language, including the ability to hear, identify, and manipulate individual sounds in words
- Sound-symbol correspondence — the relationship between letters and the sounds they represent, also known as phonics
- Syllable instruction — understanding the six syllable types in English and how to use them to decode and spell words
- Morphology — the study of meaningful units within words, including prefixes, suffixes, and root words
- Syntax — the rules that govern how words are combined to form sentences
- Semantics — the meaning of words, sentences, and written passages
By teaching all of these components explicitly and in a carefully planned sequence, structured literacy gives children a complete and thorough understanding of how the English language works — from the smallest sounds right through to the meaning of complex written text.
All of the reading intervention programs we offer at The Learnability are grounded in structured literacy principles, including our Orton-Gillingham tutoring, Wilson Reading System, and Lindamood-Bell based programs.
How Is Structured Literacy Different From Other Reading Approaches?
To understand why structured literacy matters, it helps to understand how it differs from other approaches to reading instruction — particularly the approach that has dominated many classrooms for the past several decades.
Structured Literacy vs Balanced Literacy
Balanced literacy is an approach to reading instruction that became widely adopted in schools from the 1990s onward. It emphasises reading whole texts, using context clues and picture cues to guess unfamiliar words, and developing a love of reading through exposure to books. While balanced literacy has some merits, research has consistently shown that it is insufficient for children who struggle with reading — and in particular for children with dyslexia.
The core problem with balanced literacy for struggling readers is that it does not explicitly teach the phonics and decoding skills these children need. It assumes children will naturally absorb the rules of reading through exposure — but for children with dyslexia and reading difficulties, this does not happen. They need the rules taught directly, clearly, and repeatedly.
Structured literacy takes the opposite approach. Nothing is left to chance. Every sound, every letter pattern, every rule is taught explicitly and practised systematically until it is fully mastered.
Structured Literacy vs Whole Language
The whole language approach — which preceded balanced literacy — placed even greater emphasis on meaning and context, and even less emphasis on phonics. Children were encouraged to use the overall meaning of a sentence to guess unfamiliar words, rather than decoding them sound by sound. For children with strong natural reading ability, this approach may not cause significant harm. For children with dyslexia or reading difficulties, it can be genuinely damaging — reinforcing guessing strategies instead of building real decoding skills.
Structured literacy replaces guessing with genuine knowledge. Children who learn through a structured literacy approach do not need to guess words — they have the tools to decode them accurately and independently.
What the Research Says
The scientific evidence in favour of structured literacy is overwhelming. The landmark National Reading Panel report, published in 2000, identified phonemic awareness and systematic phonics instruction as two of the five essential components of effective reading instruction. Subsequent research — including the landmark work of Louisa Moats, Reid Lyon, and Sally Shaywitz — has consistently confirmed that structured, explicit, systematic reading instruction is the most effective approach for all children, and especially for those with dyslexia.
The Science of Reading movement, which has gained significant momentum in recent years, is built on this same body of research. More and more school districts across the United States are now moving away from balanced literacy and toward structured literacy approaches — a change that is long overdue and genuinely encouraging for families of struggling readers.
The Key Principles of Structured Literacy
Structured literacy is not a single program — it is an approach defined by a set of core principles. Understanding these principles will help you recognise structured literacy when you see it, and evaluate whether a reading program or tutor is truly using it.
Explicit Instruction
In structured literacy, nothing is taught indirectly or assumed. Every concept — every sound, every letter pattern, every rule — is taught directly and clearly. The teacher demonstrates the concept, explains it in clear language, and ensures the student understands it before moving on. There is no expectation that children will figure things out for themselves through exposure or trial and error.
Systematic and Sequential
Skills are introduced in a logical, planned sequence — from simple to complex, from concrete to abstract. Every new skill builds on what has already been mastered. There are no gaps and no jumps. This systematic progression ensures that children develop a complete and solid understanding of the reading and spelling system rather than a patchy, inconsistent one.
Cumulative
New learning is always connected to previous learning. Skills taught earlier in the program are regularly reviewed and practised throughout, ensuring they are fully consolidated before new complexity is added. This cumulative approach prevents the common problem of children appearing to master a skill and then losing it when new material is introduced.
Multisensory
Structured literacy uses multiple senses simultaneously — seeing, hearing, saying, and touching — to reinforce learning. This multisensory approach is particularly effective for children with dyslexia because it creates multiple pathways in the brain for the same information, making it easier to retain and retrieve. At The Learnability, multisensory instruction is at the heart of everything we do.
Diagnostic and Responsive
Effective structured literacy instruction is always tailored to the individual student. A good structured literacy tutor continuously assesses the student's understanding and adjusts instruction based on what they observe. No two students follow exactly the same path through a structured literacy program, because no two students have exactly the same profile of strengths and difficulties.
Mastery-Based
Students do not move on to new material until they have fully mastered what they are currently working on. This is a critical difference from classroom instruction, where the pace is often set by the curriculum rather than the individual child. In structured literacy, mastery — not time — determines progression.
Why Is Structured Literacy So Important for Children With Dyslexia?
Dyslexia is a specific learning difficulty that affects the ability to read, write, and spell. It is neurological in origin — it is caused by differences in the way the brain processes language — and it is not related to intelligence. Children with dyslexia are often bright, creative, and capable in many areas, but they find reading and spelling genuinely difficult in a way that standard classroom instruction does not address.
The core difficulty in dyslexia is phonological processing — the ability to hear, identify, and manipulate the individual sounds in words. Children with dyslexia struggle to connect letters to their corresponding sounds, to decode unfamiliar words, and to develop the automatic word recognition that fluent reading requires. These are precisely the skills that structured literacy targets directly.
Research by Dr Sally Shaywitz at Yale University has shown that structured literacy instruction can actually change the way the brain processes reading. Brain imaging studies have demonstrated that children with dyslexia who receive structured literacy instruction begin to show brain activation patterns more similar to those of typical readers — evidence that structured literacy does not just teach around dyslexia, it helps the brain develop more efficient reading pathways.
This is why every program we offer at The Learnability is rooted in structured literacy. Whether your child is working with our Orton-Gillingham tutors, following the Wilson Reading System, or using the Seeing Stars program for reading accuracy, they are receiving structured literacy instruction that is evidence-based and proven to work.
Is Structured Literacy Only for Children With Dyslexia?
No. While structured literacy is particularly essential for children with dyslexia, research shows that it is the most effective approach to reading instruction for all children. A large-scale study by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development found that structured, explicit phonics instruction benefits all children — not just those with reading difficulties.
Children who are learning to read typically benefit from the clear, systematic structure that this approach provides. Children who are struggling benefit even more, because they are not left to figure out rules that do not come naturally to them. And children who have already fallen behind benefit because structured literacy gives them a way to fill in the gaps that have accumulated and rebuild their reading skills from a solid foundation.
At The Learnability, we work with children across a wide spectrum of reading ability and need — from children with confirmed dyslexia diagnoses to children who are simply not making the progress their parents know they are capable of. Structured literacy is our foundation regardless of the specific program or the individual child's profile.
How to Recognise a Structured Literacy Program
With so many reading programs and tutoring services available, it can be difficult for parents to know what to look for. Here are the key questions to ask when evaluating whether a reading program or tutor is truly using a structured literacy approach:
- Is phonics taught explicitly and systematically, or is it taught incidentally through whole-text reading?
- Does the program follow a clear, planned sequence of skills from simple to complex?
- Is instruction multisensory — does it engage seeing, hearing, saying, and touching?
- Is the student required to master each skill before moving on?
- Is the program based on the Science of Reading and endorsed by organisations such as the International Dyslexia Association?
- Is instruction individualised and responsive to the student's specific needs?
At The Learnability, the answer to all of these questions is yes. Our tutors are trained in structured literacy approaches and deliver personalised, evidence-based instruction through our reading intervention programs and special needs tutoring services. If you would like to find out more or speak with one of our specialists, visit our contact page today.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is structured literacy the same as phonics?
Phonics is one important component of structured literacy, but structured literacy is much broader. In addition to phonics, structured literacy includes phonemic awareness, syllable instruction, morphology, syntax, and semantics. Phonics alone, while important, does not cover all of the language knowledge children need to become fully proficient readers.
What is the difference between structured literacy and the Orton-Gillingham approach?
The Orton-Gillingham approach is one of the original and most well-known structured literacy approaches. Many of the most effective reading programs used today — including the Wilson Reading System and Lindamood-Bell programs — are based on or influenced by Orton-Gillingham principles. Structured literacy is the broader term that encompasses all of these approaches.
Why did my child's school not use structured literacy?
Many schools have historically used balanced literacy or whole language approaches rather than structured literacy, despite the research evidence in favour of structured literacy. This is changing as the Science of Reading movement gains momentum and more states mandate structured literacy instruction in schools. In the meantime, private tutoring from a structured literacy specialist — like those at The Learnability — can fill the gap.
How quickly will my child improve with structured literacy instruction?
Progress depends on the individual child, the intensity of instruction, and how consistently the program is followed. However, research consistently shows that structured literacy produces meaningful, lasting improvements in reading and spelling for the vast majority of students — including those with dyslexia. The key is consistency and starting as early as possible.
How do I get started with structured literacy tutoring for my child?
The best first step is to contact The Learnability for a free consultation. Our specialists will discuss your child's needs, recommend the right program, and guide you through the next steps. We offer a range of structured literacy programs delivered online through personalised one-on-one sessions.
Give Your Child the Reading Foundation They Deserve
Every child has the right to learn to read using the approach that research shows works best. Structured literacy is not a new idea — it is a well-established, evidence-based approach that has been transforming the lives of struggling readers for decades. If your child has been struggling with reading and has not yet received structured literacy instruction, that is the most important change you can make.
At The Learnability, all of our reading programs are built on structured literacy principles. Our specialist tutors deliver personalised, one-on-one online sessions that give your child exactly the instruction they need — explicit, systematic, multisensory, and tailored to their individual profile.
Book your free trial session today and take the first step toward giving your child the reading foundation they deserve.
You can also contact us directly or call us at (310) 218-9466 — we are always happy to talk through your child's needs and help you find the right path forward.