If you’ve ever taught a student with dyslexia, you already know it’s not just about spelling or reading. It’s about building confidence, removing pressure, and making learning feel possible, possibly even enjoyable.
The good news? You don’t need a pile of new materials or hours of prep. Sometimes, all it takes is small shifts in how you structure activities, present information, or pair up students.
So today, I want to share some simple, field-tested tips you can start using right away. These tips have helped many teachers make grammar, writing, and classroom dynamics more dyslexia-friendly.
Let’s get into it.
Let Students Learn From Each Other
Why it works:
Students with dyslexia often feel like they’re the only one struggling, especially in classrooms where written tasks dominate or where fast-paced lessons don’t allow time to process. This can lead to feelings of isolation, frustration, or even withdrawal from classroom participation.
But when they work with peers, whether in pairs or small groups, the pressure eases. The classroom becomes more collaborative, and learning transforms from a solitary challenge into a shared experience.
In a peer setting, students can observe how others approach tasks, hear questions they may not have thought to ask, and explain their own understanding out loud, which reinforces learning.
This social interaction naturally lowers anxiety and builds a sense of belonging. It also supports language development in a more intuitive and conversational way. Through these interactions, grammar rules, sentence structures, and vocabulary are practiced in meaningful, real-life contexts—far more effective than rote memorization or silent drills.
How to try it:
- Pair students to co-write sentences
- Create small team grammar games like sentence correction or punctuation race or any timebound activities, might be counter productive for dyslexics because of their lower processing speed.
- Use peer checklists during writing tasks so students can give feedback before handing in their work
Example (Grammar):
Ask students to write two past tense questions with a partner.
👉 “Did you eat pizza yesterday?”
👉 “Did you go to the park last weekend?”
Then have them quiz each other, switch partners, and continue.
Result? Grammar practice, repetition, growing confidence, and social connection, all in one activity.
Show It, Don’t Just Say It
Why it works:
Many students with dyslexia rely more heavily on visual-spatial processing than on linear verbal processing. This means that traditional, text-heavy explanations can feel overwhelming or unclear, while visual representations, like color-coding, charts, or diagrams, offer immediate clarity.
Visuals allow students to see relationships between words, understand grammar structures at a glance, and retain patterns more effectively. For example, color-coding different parts of speech creates visual anchors that help the brain organize information. Diagrams, such as timelines for verb tenses, turn abstract rules into concrete concepts.
These strategies not only support comprehension but also boost memory retention, making grammar more accessible and less intimidating.
How to try it:
- Color-code parts of speech, such as red for nouns, blue for verbs, and green for adjectives
- Use timelines or diagrams to show verb tenses clearly
- Add icons or simple images to represent actions or sentence parts
Example (Grammar):
Use a color-coded sentence strip to model:
“She [green] ate [blue] a sandwich [yellow].”
Now let students build their own color-coded sentences using colored markers or cards.
It’s like using visual support wheels for grammar, and it helps students feel more confident while learning sentence structure.
Bonus: visuals don’t just help neurodiverse learners. The entire class benefits from clarity and visual reinforcement.
Give Grammar Structure They Can See
Why it works:
The blank page can be one of the scariest sights for a dyslexic student. Without clear direction, they may struggle to sequence their thoughts, recall grammar rules, or even decide where to begin. This cognitive overload can shut down motivation before the task even starts.
But when you provide visual frameworks, like sentence starters, word banks, or structured templates, it breaks the task into manageable steps. These tools act like scaffolding, supporting students as they build confidence and fluency. Over time, recognizing and reusing these familiar patterns helps them internalize the structure of language, making independent writing feel more achievable and less stressful.
How to try it:
- Use grammar grids with labeled sections like subject, verb, and object
- Provide word cards so students can physically build correct sentences
- Create timed sentence-building games to encourage fast thinking and fun
Example (Grammar Grid):
Subject | Verb | Object |
The dog | chased | the cat |
This approach makes grammar a hands-on activity. It also builds confidence by showing students that sentence-building follows a predictable pattern.
Let Them Write, But Keep It Light
Many dyslexic students associate writing with correction, red marks, or past experiences of failure, which creates a sense of dread before they even begin. They may focus so much on spelling, punctuation, and grammar that they lose sight of their ideas or avoid writing altogether. By shifting the focus to creativity, experimentation, and self-expression, you remove much of that pressure.
When students know they can take risks without immediate judgment, they’re more willing to engage. Activities like free-writing, storytelling, or drafting rough ideas on whiteboards make writing feel like a process rather than a performance. This mindset encourages growth, builds resilience, and allows their voices to come through more confidently.
Try these strategies:
- Use mini whiteboards instead of worksheets to reduce pressure
- Call out a verb tense, then let students write short example sentences
- Encourage drafting and peer feedback instead of pushing for polished writing immediately
Why this helps:
- Whiteboards feel temporary and low-stakes. Mistakes are easier to erase, both literally and emotionally
- Peer work makes writing feel more collaborative and less intimidating
- Quick sentence challenges build grammar habits without dragging energy down
The Bigger Picture: What It Means to Be Dyslexia-Smart
All these strategies are about removing stress, supporting memory, and making classroom work feel more human. What’s interesting is that these adjustments don’t just help students with dyslexia. They work for everyone.
Being a dyslexia-smart teacher isn’t about lowering standards or turning every lesson into a game. It’s about recognizing what makes students feel safe enough to take risks, and using tools that work with the brain instead of against it.
When you give your students support that helps them stay calm, confident, and clear, you’re not making it easier in a bad way. You’re making it more effective for real learning.
👉 If you want to learn exactly how to do that in your classroom, join my course Dyslexia-Smart Teacher. It’s full of practical strategies, real examples, and simple tools that help you teach in a way that works, for every learner.
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