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Homeschooling with dyslexia: A guide for families

Learn how to effectively homeschool children with dyslexia, with resources and support from BetterSchool.
Lisa Thorsen
Written byLisa Thorsen
3 min read
Key takeaways
  • Homeschooling with Dyslexia provides essential resources for families educating children with dyslexia, emphasizing structured literacy and multisensory teaching methods
  • Founded by expert Marianne Sunderland, the platform offers tailored curricula, parent training courses, and a supportive community of over 70,000 families, making it a valuable tool for effective homeschooling.

Homeschooling with Dyslexia is a resource platform designed to help families educate children with dyslexia. Founded by a seasoned tutor, it offers guidance on teaching methods, curricula, and support tailored to dyslexic learners.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), approximately 3.3 million students were homeschooled in the United States as of 2023, representing roughly 6% of the school-age population. A peer-reviewed study published in Peabody Journal of Education found that homeschooled children are typically well-adjusted socially and score above average on measures of social skills, emotional development, and daily living skills (Richard Medlin, 2013).

What is homeschooling with dyslexia?

Homeschooling with Dyslexia is a helpful resource for families. It was started by Marianne Sunderland, a certified Orton-Gillingham tutor with over 30 years of experience. She knows the challenges firsthand—seven of her eight kids have dyslexia. The platform aims to support parents in teaching children with dyslexia and related learning differences.

Resources and curriculum guidance

The platform suggests curricula that follow structured literacy and Orton-Gillingham methods, which work well for dyslexic learners. For reading, check out programs like All About Reading, Logic of English, and Barton Reading. They use multisensory techniques that are key for these students. For math, Math-U-See has a visual approach, and Teaching Textbooks is great for those who struggle. Writing programs like Essentials in Writing offer video-based lessons. The resource page is updated regularly with tested materials across subjects.

Parent education and support

Parents need training to teach dyslexic kids effectively. This platform offers courses for homeschool parents. These courses focus on creating individualized learning plans, using evidence-based strategies, and applying multisensory teaching methods. The 'Revive! Homeschool Course' covers broader topics for teaching struggling learners. Families can also join mentoring groups, get one-on-one coaching, and access tutoring. The goal is to understand dyslexia fully, not just fix weaknesses.

Philosophy and approach

The platform encourages parents to find and nurture their children's strengths while addressing learning challenges. It emphasizes multisensory learning—combining hearing, speaking, touching, and moving with lessons. Dyslexia isn’t seen as a problem to fix but as a different way of learning. Homeschooling allows for a tailored approach to meet each child's unique needs.

The bottom line

Homeschooling with Dyslexia is a vital resource for families who choose homeschooling for their dyslexic children or learn of the diagnosis along the way. With Marianne's personal insights and professional knowledge, this platform is especially valuable. A weekly newsletter offers tips and motivation, while a community of over 70,000 parents connects families facing similar challenges.

Frequently Asked Questions

Lisa Thorsen
Written by
Lisa Thorsen

Co-founder, BetterSchool

Lisa is the co-founder of BetterSchool and a homeschool mom of three. BetterSchool administers the largest independent homeschool community in the country — over 350,000 families across all 50 states.

When COVID hit, Lisa and her husband pulled their children out of school and hit the road. Homeschooling wasn't the plan — it was a necessity. But somewhere along the way, the family fell in love with it: the time together, the ability to tailor lessons to each child's interests, learning at their own pace, the freedom to travel, eating healthy on their own schedule, and the countless other benefits that come with homeschooling.

As they traveled, Lisa kept discovering incredible hands-on learning experiences that most homeschool families had no way of finding. She built BetterSchool to make it easy for every family to find and book the experiences that make learning come alive.

Through her community, Lisa has helped hundreds of thousands of parents navigate homeschooling, while also helping local businesses find and serve the homeschool community. She is the former managing partner of a law firm focused on business law and mergers and acquisitions — BetterSchool is her second technology startup. She holds a J.D. from California Western School of Law and a B.A. from Penn State.

Related articles

Understanding dyslexia: A guide for homeschoolingUnderstanding the orton-gillingham approachUnderstanding barton reading: A guide for homeschoolersWhat is Teaching Textbooks?Understanding video-based curriculum for homeschooling

Table of Contents

  • What is homeschooling with dyslexia?
  • Resources and curriculum guidance
  • Parent education and support
  • Philosophy and approach
  • The bottom line
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