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Reading

Reflections on the 2025 DfE Writing Framework: A Dyslexia Specialist’s Perspective

Reflections on the 2025 DfE Writing Framework: A Dyslexia Specialist’s Perspective

Literacy underpins every aspect of our education system—but for dyslexic learners, this can feel like a relentless and discouraging truth. Imagine if students could demonstrate their strengths across the curriculum without being limited by pencil and paper. With the rise of technology and AI, I’m hopeful that the metacognitive (thinking) process behind writing will be given its rightful place—and dyslexic learners better supported to flourish. But hope alone isn’t enough. We must get the teaching right. That’s why I welcome the new Writing Framework: too many dyslexic students reach secondary school without secure foundations, and the opportunity to close the gap has already been lost.
This is not good enough. Most children don’t learn to write through creativity alone—and many are left feeling broken by the well-meaning but misguided message that they must read and write for pleasure. What they really need is to read and write for purpose.

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Let’s Bring Dyslexia Back in the Room

Let’s Bring Dyslexia Back in the Room

I’ve been in this field long enough to witness a tragic decline in services for students with persistent specific learning difficulties. Honestly, I don’t desperately care whether we call it dyslexia or something else. What I care about—deeply—is whether we meet the need. And this is a real, persistent need that affects how and whether a child learns to read and write. This is not a luxurious extra.

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Discover 10 Practical Ways to use Morph Mastery in your Setting

Discover 10 Practical Ways to use Morph Mastery in your Setting

Morphology—the study of how roots, prefixes, and suffixes combine to create meaning in words—is vital for all learners, and an integral part of our English curriculum. By focusing on word patterns and meanings, morphology supports learners at all levels and abilities in vocabulary, reading comprehension, and spelling skills. Dyslexic learners in particular benefit from the meaningful study of words.In this blog, I’ll share ten practical ways to use Morph Mastery, a compendium of morphology resources, in different settings.

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Listening to books: a cheat’s form of reading?

Listening to books: a cheat’s form of reading?

Audio books are mistakenly thought of as a cheat’s way to read. This is so far from the truth! In this blog I share my own experience of listening and explain the benefits for children and young people. Audio books are not just enjoyable and helpful for those who struggle to read the physical book, e.g. those with dyslexia or neurodiversity. They help all children and young people with language, reading, writing, listening skills, relaxation and wellbeing. Listening, far from being a passive second best, enables an engagement with texts and literacy skills which may otherwise not have been experienced.

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Morph Mastery Adventures at Westcourt Primary School

Morph Mastery Adventures at Westcourt Primary School

If I produced a stick of rock to represent my work (now there’s an idea!), the words inside would be “supporting schools”. I love collaboration, I love enabling, empowering and equipping in all things literacy and dyslexia, and I love schools. In this blog you’ll read about one amazing school I have worked with over almost two years, and you’ll see a video of Morph Mastery in action. Westcourt Primary School in Gravesend have not only talked the Morph Mastery talk, but they walk the walk, through thick and thin.

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Morphology: Why and How it Works for Learners with Dyslexia and Literacy Difficulties

Morphology: Why and How it Works for Learners with Dyslexia and Literacy Difficulties

Our language is morphophonemic; in other words it is based on both morphological and phonological structure (units of sound). Approximately 80% of English words contain more than one morpheme. These morphemes are used across a number of words, and therefore can be generalised. They have been described by Rastle (2018) as “islands of regularity in the mapping between printed words and their meaning”. Morphology is not a whole word approach, nor is it an alternative to phonics. Morphemes literally make sense of language and they are entirely necessary as part of cracking the code of English spelling.

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The Baby or the Bathwater – Morph Mastery, the DfE Reading Framework and Systematic Synthetic Phonics

The Baby or the Bathwater – Morph Mastery, the DfE Reading Framework and Systematic Synthetic Phonics

Systematic synthetic phonics (SSP) is recommended in the Department for Education Reading Framework, but not exclusively so for pupils with SEND. For them, the recommended methodology is most crucial: a highly structured, multi-sensory, cumulative approach to intervention which meets individual learners’ needs, and a whole school approach to using assessment to identify different needs. Morph Mastery meets all these methodological criteria and it complements an SSP approach. I’m excited about schools across the country who, having implemented SSP effectively, are now looking for Morph Mastery training to complement their strategy; this reflective practice is what our learners need.

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