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Dyslexia (Reading Impairment)

Supporting Sensory Development in a Child with Dyslexia

Support sensory development in dyslexia through multisensory learning — engaging touch, movement, hearing and sight together (tracing letters in sand while saying sounds, rhyming games, audio stories). Keep it short, playful and confidence-building, and seek a structured assessment if reading struggles persist.

Supporting Sensory Development in a Child with Dyslexia
Sensory Support for a Child with Dyslexia — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When reading is hard, the body's sensory pathways — how a child sees, hears and moves through letters — can become powerful allies in the learning journey.

In short

Supporting sensory development in a child with dyslexia means engaging the visual, auditory, touch and movement senses together — so reading and spelling are learned through more than just the eyes. Multisensory learning (seeing, saying, hearing and tracing letters at once) is the best-evidenced approach, and it builds confidence as much as skill. Dyslexia is a difference in how the brain processes language, not a problem with intelligence or effort.

How to support sensory development at home

Touch and movement (tactile-kinaesthetic)
  • Let your child trace letters in sand, shaving foam, rice or on a textured surface while saying the sound aloud.
  • Form letters with clay or pipe-cleaners — feeling the shape helps it stick.
  • Use 'air writing' — drawing big letters in the air with the whole arm links movement to memory.

Hearing (auditory)

  • Play rhyming and sound games — clapping out syllables, spotting words that start with the same sound.
  • Read aloud together daily, and let your child hear stories on audio while following along.
  • Break long words into beats so the ear learns the parts.

Seeing (visual)

  • Use coloured overlays or a reading ruler if dense text feels overwhelming — try what feels comfortable.
  • Choose clear, well-spaced fonts and larger print where possible.
  • Pair pictures with words to anchor meaning.

The magic is in combining them — saying a sound while tracing it while looking at it engages several senses at once, which is exactly how structured multisensory programmes work.

Keep it joyful, not pressured

Short, playful and frequent beats long and tiring every time. Celebrate effort, read for pleasure with no testing, and protect your child's confidence — emotional safety is the soil good learning grows in. If reading struggles persist despite good teaching, a structured speech and language assessment can map exactly where the language-processing differences lie.

The Pinnacle way

At Pinnacle Blooms Network, support begins with understanding your child's unique sensory and language profile. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — never from an online tool or checklist. Explore how the AbilityScore® works, learn more about dyslexia, and see how occupational therapy and language support work together to strengthen the senses behind reading.

Trusted sources

Aligned with guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, and NICE on supporting children with reading and language difficulties through structured, multisensory and confidence-building approaches.

Next step — book a developmental assessment with the Pinnacle team on WhatsApp +91 91001 81181 to build a sensory-rich, personalised support plan for your child.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

Watch for growing frustration, avoidance of reading, or fatigue. If reading and spelling stay well behind peers despite playful, multisensory support and good teaching, arrange a structured language assessment rather than waiting.

Try this at home

Try 'sky writing' — have your child trace a tricky letter big in the air with their whole arm while saying its sound. Movement plus sound makes it stick.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

What is multisensory learning and why does it help dyslexia?

Multisensory learning teaches reading through several senses at once — seeing a letter, saying its sound, hearing it and tracing its shape. This gives the brain more than one pathway to the same information, which is especially helpful when the usual visual route to reading is harder. It is the best-evidenced approach for children with dyslexia.

Do coloured overlays cure dyslexia?

No. Coloured overlays or reading rulers do not cure dyslexia and are not a treatment for the underlying language-processing difference. Some children find them comfortable for reducing visual stress, so they can be tried, but the core support is structured, multisensory reading instruction.

Will sensory play improve my child's reading?

Sensory play that links touch and movement to letters and sounds — like tracing in sand or forming letters in clay — supports learning by strengthening memory through multiple senses. It works best alongside structured reading teaching, not instead of it, and it keeps learning joyful and confidence-building.

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