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Parent Reviews of Easyread

Our most recent reviews:

Recent Easyread changes are brilliant

Hi, Jessica went back to Easyread today after completing the course a quite a while ago. Her brother has been doing Easyread through school and she asked if she could return to it when she saw the changes to the system. He has loved the new games especially ‘Mole Whacker’ and ‘Car Spell’ and ‘Gloop and his enthusiasm to do his Easyread has rubbed off. She got stuck in! Brilliant! Whilst her accuracy and fluency has got much better, consistency and pace are still an issue for Jess but she is so creative and loves her books so the recent changes are brilliant for her. It’s really positive and exciting.

His teacher doesn't believe that he ever struggled with reading!

It as been a while since we logged on. Firstly I can’t tell you how pleased and grateful I am. Andrew is now over 1 year ahead in English and is leaving primary school having had the best year ever. His current teacher doesn’t believe me that he ever had dyslexia or any problems with reading. I have forwarded your details to a number of people.

Case Study: Daily reading battles and family dyslexia

Case study logo

Before Easyread, Sam did not like reading at all. The school readers were a daily battle with tears and frustration – and Sam was in the lowest reader in his class at age 5. Sam’s dad and extended family members all have dyslexia, so his mother was ready to intervene early to find a good solution for him. Her hope was that Easyread would build Sam’s confidence so reading would not be such a negative experience for him.

During Easyread, Sam and his mother found that the program worked well for Sam’s learning style. There were still frustrations and periods where they experienced the same tears as they had with the daily readers from school, but the code words and continual certificates and prizes really did help. The Skype contact for remote lessons with the Easyread support team was a big help too. The fact that the lessons were short meant it was easy to fit into the start or end of their day.

There were occasional times when Sam’s mother had to persuade him to do the 10 minute lesson and he would resist, or not do it properly. But thankfully they persevered through those tough moments because there was a point later in the course when Sam showed up with a book and read it out loud to his mum all by himself without help – she admits that she cried in that moment!

After Easyread, the results have been strong and positive. Without a doubt, Sam has improved in his reading. His speed and flow are much improved, and he sounds out now more than he guesses. Before he was not really reading, but just making up words that he thought fit into what he saw on the page. Now he is much more confident and this means he is willing to attempt words he doesn’t know instead of giving up. Though Sam has yet to become a bookworm (he doesn’t yet want to pick up a book and read it by himself), Sam’s mum thinks since he is so young that day may still come. And even if he never becomes a huge reader, she believes Easyread has helped to remove the stress around reading and help Sam get more out of the early foundation years of learning.

I love Easyread!

i love Easy read and I’m glad you left a message for me. thank you Jack

Very impressed with constant support

So far we are really happy with the Easy Read program. We realize that change won’t happen over night but we are really happy with the progress so far and especially how easy and short the lessons are. This helps to keep Malcolm motivated and focused on the lesson.
We are also very impressed with your constant support. It is very nice to know that you are always available to assist with any concerns. Thanks so much for all your assistance so far.

It's giving her confidence

S’s reading is really improving and she is now reading by herself more, am happy to stick with Easyread as it’s giving her confidence and she is really enjoying it.

I recommend Easyread to many

Again a big thanks this is a great course I recommend to many and it has certainly improved Sam’s reading. You guys do an amazing job – keep it up!!

He reads so well – to my surprise!

Hi , it’s being a wonderful time with the Easyread team , my son has gone through reading and coding. He is confident now and reads so well to my surprise . He says he wants to read more books and build on the skills he has acquired , he codes well now. So I decided to end the lesson. Easyread team is awesome, putting smiles on faces around the world. It’s great to have worked with you all.

It’s been a great adventure

Hi Mr Morgan, it’s being a great adventure, but alas this adventure has come to an end. I will miss you so much, but I have to read other books. Thank you so much for making me read. Right now I am reading The Chronicles of Narnia. I was able to read the first two pages with no mistakes. Thank you for bringing hope to my life and being a great teacher and reading companion.

It's been a great adventure

Hi Mr Morgan, it’s being a great adventure, but alas this adventure has come to an end. I will miss you so much, but I have to read other books. Thank you so much for making me read. Right now I am reading The Chronicles of Narnia. I was able to read the first two pages with no mistakes. Thank you for bringing hope to my life and being a great teacher and reading companion.

I'd recommend it to anyone

We are going to cancel Easyread for now and try and focus on finding reading material he enjoys.  He has improved so much and is so much more confident now.  We will be in touch again soon when little brother (4) starts reading!  I would recommend the program to anyone.

Learning support teacher at school very impressed

I think you have a great program and the only one that I have seen like it. It is great for visual learners. The learning support teacher at school is also very impressed. The code words and the prizes really made it fun and exciting and really motivated him.

Restoring my faith that he will read!

N is positive about the programme and we have seen his confidence grow as he becomes more familiar with the characters. He has been amazed by the words he has been able to read with the character support.

N has battled through so many programmes over the years but none have given him hope like Easyread has. He can now imagine that perhaps one day in the future he will be able to read.

As a parent watching a child work so hard for so many years and yet get nothing back for the effort is heart breaking. Because of our experience with 2 Dyslexic boys I have become very skeptical of programmes but Easyread is slowly restoring some faith. I to have hope that N will read sometime in the future.

He is now reading fluently!

I would like to thank you very much for your help with R’s reading – I am pleased to say that he is now reading fluently and more importantly, enjoying books and understanding what he sees written around him.

Really impressed with the support

We’ve been really impressed with the prizes and support already (and we haven’t even started paying yet). The prizes couldn’t be more suited to Rory’s interests and he won’t believe that we didn’t let you know what he likes!

Now at expected level for reading!

Finn is coming along really well with his reading. He started this programme with no confidence, and a lot of negativity about reading. He still struggles a little with the need for repetition for fluency, but is happy decoding and loves the games. His recent SAT results and in class checks from his teacher show he is now at an age expected level for reading, and is able to decode almost anything at home with me. That’s a huge leap from where he started just a few months ago.

Short lessons are perfect!

It’s been a year and we have found the easy reading system vital to support Anne in decoding words and giving her some confidence in attempting to read. The short lessons are perfect! Thanks for all your help over the last year.

He was so excited to do a live lesson with you!

Thank you so much, David! Declan was so excited to do a live lesson with you and see the person behind the voice! Your suggestions were excellent. Thanks for your time, positive feedback, and for the whole program, which has been a God-send.

Reading and attitude have improved tremendously

We enjoyed having you join in our lesson yesterday. Imran was very excited!! He wishes you could join in everyday. He is also looking forward to finish Easyread so that he can have his helicopter.

Thank you for your support and advice. I feel that we are on the right track too.

Imran’s reading and attitude to reading independently has improved tremendously since we started all those months ago.

Wonderful, personalised, life-changing program!

As a parent, I have been very impressed with the program, and I know that it has been responsible for her dramatic improvements in reading over the past year.
Hannah has gone from a girl of 7 who would avoid looking at signs or texts and would resist my attempts at helping her to sound words out, to an 8 year old who happily reads signs when out and about, easily navigates Netflix and Google, and can read short novels like Billy B Brown or Ivy and Bean with minimal assistance.
She enjoyed the new “bookshelf” and the “weird creatures” book in particular. The link to YouTube of the slimy Hagfish was a hit. It was great to have new games introduced to broaden the variety of activities.
I could see that many of the games included eye tracking components which was really helpful, as after the first two 10 day courses of eye tracking Hannah became reluctant to do any more. We did get her playing Netball though, which may have helped with eye tracking and hand-eye coordination.
In the last 2 months I have observed Hannah becoming more familiar with common spelling patterns such as tion, er, ure which I think Easyread has helped with.
She has always enjoyed getting the code words and enthusiastically memorised them and went back to type them in, and loves getting her parcels in the mail.
She enjoyed using the codeword typing function and has written a secret message in Easyread characters to share with her class as a show and tell activity.
In summary, as a parent I love Easyread and know it has saved my daughter from the shame and heartache of not being able to learn to read as quickly as her peers. As we approach the end of the 12 month course, I can easily say that my goal for Hannah has been achieved: she can read fluently and chooses to do so from time to time. There is no doubt that her confidence in the classroom has improved, and that when the standardised tests occur next year, she will be able to read the questions.
Hannah has enjoyed many aspects of Easyread, including the games, the texts, the email feedback and the prizes. She intensely disliked the decoding, but as I see it, this is the essential strategy that has allowed her to learn to read. So at times we took turns with decoding, one word each or one line each, especially with the lengthier passages. We also discussed the “no pain, no gain” philosophy on several occasions, and kept looking forward to that helicopter as an ultimate motivation.
Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your wonderful, personalised, life changing program!

I like this Easyread program.

I have been enjoying the reading a little bit, It is actually kind of easy. I like the games a lot. I like this Easy Read program. Thanks for making it.

Also, I have a question for you: Do you live in England? If so, is England foggy?

Case Study: 6 year old with a pre-K reading age

1. What was reading like for Cameron before Easyread? Main concerns/reading age level/frustrations etc?

Cameron is a happy, outgoing, passionate child who showed no signs of interest in listening to books, reading books, trying to figure out sounds, or caring too much about letters or words as a preschooler. We didn’t think too much of it, and his being our first child we probably were ignorant of the signs or lack of signs for reading readiness, concerned more with raising him and his newborn young brother who is 2 years younger than him. We enrolled him in a local preschool class three days per week where he was exposed to letters, the alphabet song, and other literacy-oriented, age appropriate exercise. However, he never really was too keen on library visits, reading, being read to, trying to figure out words, or pointing out any words he recognized. He went to Kindergarten, having just turned five, and did not know how to read a scratch! It wasn’t that we as his parents immediately assumed that “it was the responsibility of his teachers” to teach him to read; it was more that we believed he was still young and he’d catch on with his peers during his curricular work in the proper school environment. Homework, although it was supposed to be ten minutes or less, was a nightly, hour-long effort to get him to understand and finish the simple sheets – writing was horrendous, capitalization was all over the place, letters were reversed and not in line. We chalked it up to his youth and figured he’d “grow out of it” and come along. Boy, were we ever surprised to find that, although he was progressing, he wasn’t progressing nearly as quickly as his peers. We weren’t aware of any issues until his first conference with his teacher in the fall of first grade, after he had turned six. This was when this teacher woke us up from our first-kid ignorance and started us thinking that there may be a problem with Cameron in relation to his reading abilities. Still loving to be hands-on, singing, remembering everything, building with Tinkertoys and Lego, – yet he wasn’t interested and couldn’t read at all. At all. Although he had been placed in an extra-help, thrice weekly reading class outside of his normal classroom, we still weren’t seeing him really make any strides in any way towards reading, writing, interest in schoolwork, or especially spelling. He was reading less than five words a minute during drills to measure his progress – a preK level. He is a very intelligent kid, though – always comprehending what he’s told or what he’s read and asking tons of very detailed questions on subject matter – and we were lost. Was it just because he was an active boy, not a girl, and couldn’t sit still or listen? We’d heard all the things about gender differences in the classroom. Was it something else? Mom never had any issues in school and Dad didn’t really either.

After the conference, Mom immediately thought of dyslexia and how Cameron’s aunt (Dad’s sister) had struggled with dyslexia which was only identified, regrettably, at age 14. Much damage had already occurred in her scholastic progress and self-image by that point and we were concerned that if we didn’t get Cameron the resources he apparently needed, he’d be behind before he had a chance to start. We spent considerable money and Mom spent many hours researching different ideas, resources, curriculum, and we found Easyread, right as we were beginning the process of having Cameron fully tested by an Psychoeducational Diagnostician – a battery of tests which included Occupational Therapy, Speech Therapy, and many scholastic and visual tests to determine any issues. Cameron had no physical issues, but was given a diagnosis of classic dyslexia, with a high IQ.

It felt good to have a diagnosis so we knew from where we should proceed. We found Easyread through Amazon and homeschooling blog reviews, and started in on the program at the end of October – almost immediately after the fateful school conference. We also immediately asked for accommodations from his private school, and requested meetings with his teacher and principal. Unfortunately, those meetings didn’t progress well through the late fall and into winter. The teacher did not communicate weekly nor daily, we were still in the dark as to his progress or whether he was lost in the classroom, and we weren’t having our concerns resolved nor timely addressed. The administration and teacher wouldn’t attend to our concerns fully, they said, until they were given the final report from the Diagnostician – which didn’t come until January! Unfortunately, although Mom had spent countless hours of research, reading, and even prepared point lists for both the teacher and the principal regarding the signs of dyslexia as well as methods of teaching children with dyslexia – both the teacher and the reading resource room teacher admitted they had NEVER had specialized training to teach dyslexic children (what a PITY!!) – we ended up removing Cameron from the school at the end of January, having seen no true progress nor true concern, and homeschooled him through the end of his first grade year. This is where we find ourselves now! All the while, we have worked diligently, nightly, through vacations and holidays, on Easyread.

2. How was Easyread a good fit? What were the highs and lows of the Easyread experience for you?

If I could sum up the experience of Easyread for our household, it was like a miracle. Nothing short of a miracle. An expensive miracle, both in dollars and in time investment for our busy little home (Cameron has two younger brothers and both of us work outside the home as well as Mom preparing the homeschool curriculum and working on it with Cameron daily on top of his Easyread lesson), but a miracle, nonetheless. We are a Christ centered home; a home which seeks to glorify God in all we do – and boy, did we pray throughout this entire endeavor – the diagnosis, the concerns, the conferences at which we were not given good attention. We stumbled upon someone’s glowing review of Easyread through an Amazon review of a dyslexia resource, and we continued reading about Easyread on numerous homeschooling blogs as a great program.

Easyread is amazing in its simplicity: Don’t use it more than fifteen minutes per day. Learn these characters and what they represent – and for a highly visual child like Cameron, it was perfect – and then, once you know the characters, you know the code – and you can DEcode. The building blocks are all there, and the games and overall flow of the program have been highly refined, developed smartly, and with much scientific backing to “prove” the system is effective. I’m just dismayed that (patriotically!) the U.S. didn’t think of this first! However, I am saddened that the word “dyslexia” is of such negative connotation overall in the educational system on this side of the pond!

The little presents and notes in the mail along the way make for such a wonderful experience. The games are engaging, interesting, stimulating, and not at all boring. Sometimes we wish that the experience were longer each day – although Cameron still doesn’t really like to do “the reading part.”

3. What was the direct result of going through the process for Cameron, in terms of reading and spelling improvement, confidence gains, etc.? What has that meant for you?

Cameron went from a preK reading level – according to the Dibels charts, he was in the teens-20th percentile or lower for his age and grade level at the time we removed him from his school in January, 2015 – and now he is reading grade-level appropriate books and stories, on his own. He is also trying to “teach” his younger brother, John, how to not only read but also how to do Easyread. (John’s not into it, yet.) Cameron went from physically freezing up and having anxiety attacks – yes, at age five and six – clenching his jaw and physically reacting to homework time or reading time (when he was asked to read anything), to now enjoying and grabbing his own books and looking through them, not in the least bit “freaking out” anymore when it’s reading time. Sure, he’s still six, and he has moods or gets tired now and then – but in terms of his overall confidence and progress, he has gone from freezing up at the sight of a word, unable to decode nor make sense of it, to verbally sounding out or internally sounding out the words he doesn’t know – calmly at that! – and reading so many more on his own, peacefully – and with understanding!

What has this meant for us? This has been nine months of extreme trial in our home. At the beginning, back in October I prayed fervently that Cameron would not only learn HOW to read, but that he would have tools to use, and that he would ENJOY reading. My prayers have been answered, in no short order due to the fantastic Easyread program as well as his daily reading, the Easyread characters, and sight word time. We are so excited to have found this program – it has been a life changer. I do believe the science that shows a child’s brain is so malleable at age six that it can physically and neurologically “re-map” itself with appropriate, targeted assistance such that the child would no longer have to have severe negative consequences of dyslexia. I have seen that happen in the time Cameron has been using Easyread – going from complete anxiety to near-complete patience with himself and proper decoding procedure! It has been fantastic. It has meant that we can be confident as a family that Cameron will have tools for success in life, not only in the physical process of reading and comprehending the world around him, but also in the confidence that comes from that understanding – that reading isn’t a stumbling block to his progress in life but something he can overcome and even enjoy. This is such a blessing to us as we seek to raise him well, into a man who can change the world.

SATS results – amazed and delighted

Hi David,
My son Tom worked through your programme about two/three years ago…
The children have just had their year 6 SATS results. You may be aware that by the end of key Stage 2 in Primary school they are expected to achieve Level 4 assessment across the board, level 5 being the highest they can attain. I am amazed and delighted to report that Tom achieved a Level 5 for his reading, Level 4 for his Spelling and Grammar and Level 5 for his maths. So happy. Thank you for helping him to achieve this.

Now 6 months ahead in reading age

He has enjoyed the new changes and especially enjoyed the wacky weather reading with some very interesting facts and pictures. He is now reading about 6 months ahead of his age and your course has definitely helped him achieve this.

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