63 pages of writing-focused phonics activities covering every letter and sound—designed for brains that process language differently.
Students confuse letters and sounds all the time—and that confusion quietly derails reading progress, especially for learners with dyslexia. This workbook bridges that gap. Rather than providing words to memorize, it invites students to generate their own—because research shows that personal associations lead to stronger, more durable memory.
Each letter of the alphabet gets its own spread—introducing it as a letter, identifying it as a vowel or consonant, then guiding the student through writing words with each sound it makes. Short vowels, long vowels, soft and hard consonants—all covered.
Students don’t copy pre-made word lists. They generate their own words for each sound—a multisensory approach that builds phonemic awareness through active retrieval, not passive recognition. This is how the dyslexic brain learns best.
Full-color illustrations by Mindi Larkin make each page inviting—not clinical. Designed so students want to pick it up, not dread it. Works at home, in tutoring, or as a classroom supplement.
Created by Enid Webb, M.S. CCC-SLP—a literacy specialist with 30+ years of experience who is dyslexic and dysgraphic herself. She built this workbook because she knows firsthand what it feels like when instruction doesn’t match how your brain works.
63 pages of illustrated phonics activities—yours instantly.
Whether your child is just learning their letters or struggling to connect sounds to print—this workbook meets them where they are.
Built specifically for brains that process language differently. The writing-focused, multisensory approach bypasses rote memorization and creates lasting sound-letter connections.
A structured, self-paced resource you can use alongside any curriculum. No special training required—just work through each letter with your child.
Use it as a supplemental tool in Orton-Gillingham or structured literacy sessions. Each page reinforces the letter-sound connection through active word generation.
If your child is struggling with reading or writing, a free consultation with Enid can help you understand what’s really going on—and what to do about it.
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