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There are going to be multiple milestones in your child’s early development, but one of the most important ones among them is learning to read. Before they start reading with confidence, they need the foundational skills required for it like recognising letters, understanding how they sound, and slowly connecting different words to form proper sentences.
Our early reading intervention resources are structured to support them at every stage as they learn to read. All the building blocks of reading, like understanding letters and sounds, phonological awareness, decoding words, and making meaning from text, are included in these resources.
Our reading intervention resources help you to develop these interconnected skills:
You must have seen how videos and games for children have a lot of rhyming words for them. That’s intentional. It is a part of something called ‘phonological awareness’, the ability to hear and play with sounds in words. This is one of the most important reading skills.
Our early reading support resources have these phonological awareness activities that include rhyming, blending sounds, and breaking words into smaller parts to make their understanding process easier. Through repeated exposure and structured practice, children begin to link sounds to letters and patterns, building confidence as they read more complex words.
Early reading intervention helps your child build their core skills required for reading.
This means the focus is on them understanding the actual process of reading: understanding the sound of different letters, the combination of different words, and extracting the meaning of the text. Everything required for them to read and comprehend information with ease.
Today since you are able to recognise sounds, connect them with letters, decode words, you’re able to read and make sense of the information you read. Early reading development activities help your children to form these skills at a young age.
When reading skills development happens at an early stage, during your child’s formative years, they embrace reading with confidence instead of being anxious about it.
Once children begin to recognise words and sounds reliably, the next step is reading fluently and understanding what they read.
But what does reading fluency really mean? It means developing the habit of reading that feels natural, not forced or rushed. It means instilling rhythm, awareness, and ease. Reading comprehension support goes further and helps children connect ideas, imagine scenes, and understand characters and instructions in text.
Practice makes this more comfortable, and as children read regularly, both fluency and understanding grow, which makes reading a more rewarding experience. A win-win for you and them.
Reading intervention resources are created for children who are about to begin reading or need additional support to develop the core skills required for reading. They can be used by anyone who supports the journey of these children.
Together, these resources help create a consistent, positive reading experience for children.
The reason why early reading intervention activities work is the well-thought structure of the tasks. They are created to incorporate repetition, recognise patterns, predict outcomes, provide guidance to make connections, and create meaningful context.
These activities connect directly to what children need to strengthen: sound awareness, word recognition, fluency, and understanding. With consistent practice using the reading intervention resources, children develop confidence and independence in reading, making the act of reading more intuitive and less effortful over time.
Structured reading practice supports a variety of skills that contribute to strong reading:
When these skills are practised in short, regular, guided sessions, children become more confident readers who can enjoy books, follow instructions, and participate more fully in classroom and home conversations.
The goal of reading intervention is to strengthen foundational reading skills so children can read confidently, with understanding and ease, as they grow.
Structured reading practice focuses on specific skills like sound awareness and decoding, whereas everyday reading may not target these systematically.
Children benefit from early reading support when they begin showing difficulty with sounds, words, or understanding text. The earlier, the gentler and more effective the support.
Phonological awareness helps children connect sounds to letters and patterns, which is essential for decoding and word recognition.
Yes, reading comprehension support through structured activities helps children make sense of what they read and connect ideas across text.
Therapy games work best when combined with other structured supports. They help reinforce language, cognition, social interaction, and early learning skills, supporting whole-child development and ensuring learning continues across everyday environments.
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