Decodable Stories

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Explore a selection of decodable stories inspired by June Lyday Orton’s A Guide to Teaching Phonics (1976, The Orton Reading Center).  The stories begin with the short vowel and the five consonants, b, s, f, m, t and continue to introduce one new concept at a time, as is typically done when using the Orton-Gillingham Approach.  Therefore, readers should start with the oldest post first for the simplest of stories. We’ll be posting new stories regularly!

  • Untitled post 1119

    As the student practices reading words with the letter d, I tend to avoid using words that begin or end with a b until the student is reading fluently. Although the word “my” is still a red word, I have changed the color to black since this sequence of stories has used it quite often. …

  • Untitled post 1113

    June Orton’s scope and sequence waits to introduce the phonogram d, until the student has had much practice with the b.  Although struggling students might exhibit other reversals such as p/q and m/w, the b/d reversal is the most common.  For some students, this stubborn reversal will require additional multisensory exercises to help with remediation.…

  • Untitled post 1107

    The Lesson Plan used with the Orton-Gillingham Approach contains several drills.  They include Handwriting, Visual, Auditory, Phonemic Awareness, Blending, Whole Word Reading, Simultaneous Oral Spelling, and Oral Passages that include sentences and decodable stories like the one above.  For more information on how this works, contact me here.

  • Untitled post 1102

    The word “see” is a common sight word on elementary school reading lists.  The word is actually decodable when the student learns the phonogram “ee”, but that phonogram is taught much later in the sequence.  For now, it will remain a red word.

  • Untitled post 1090

    As students become better at decoding, they often will begin misreading the small words like “in”, “on”, “a”, “the.”  Gently correct them if they do and encourage them to track with a pencil, index card, or their finger as they read.  Those words are highlighted here.

  • Untitled post 1085

    So far, the student has been presented with the following phonograms: a, b, s, f, m, t, h, j, n, p, l, r, g.  Since the “d” is next in the scope and sequence, it is suggested that the student continue practicing the correct letter formation for the letter “b” while saying its corresponding sound…

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