How Sequential Spelling works — and why it works.
Sequential Spelling is based on the classic Orton-Gillingham approach of multi-sensory instruction and closely follows the instructional focuses of Structured Literacy — including phonology, sound-symbol association (our word families or rimes), syllable instruction, and morphology.
This allows children to learn inductively — just as they learned to walk and to talk — and to achieve what Structured Literacy calls automaticity: the ability to process language so fluently that decoding no longer presents a barrier to analytical thinking and comprehension.
Students learn words grouped by phonetic relationships. Mastering one word unlocks a whole family of related words.
Children discover patterns through practice — no abstract rules to memorise before experiencing the pattern.
Automaticity — language skill so fluent that spelling no longer slows a child's thinking, reading, or writing.
We do not believe there is just one way to teach any topic, including spelling. Children deserve to learn in the way that is easiest and most comfortable for them. The education of the young should never focus on the adults' goals or convenience, but on the needs and abilities of the children.
Five free lessons. No credit card. See the method at work.