Reading Specialist at Nyangu’s Paradise
For many years, teachers have told children to use “three-cueing” to read words they don’t know. This means children:
- Look at the picture.
- Use other words in the sentence.
- Look at the first letter and guess.
At first, this seems to work. But science shows that guessing actually makes reading harder in the long run.
How good readers really read
Good readers don’t guess. When they see a word, they look at every letter. Their brain recognises patterns and sounds out the word quickly. They don’t need to rely on pictures or context to figure it out.
Guessing stops children from building this skill. When they guess:
- They depend on pictures too much.
- They skip some letters.
- They use clues from the sentence instead of reading the whole word.
This slows their reading down and makes it harder to read longer, harder books later.
Why guessing seems to work at first
In the beginning, guessing can seem okay. Easy books for young kids have simple words and lots of pictures. For example, in ‘The cat sat on the mat,’ it’s easy to guess ‘cat’ or ‘mat’ from the picture.
But as children get older, books have fewer pictures and more complicated words. Guessing doesn’t help anymore. Children who learned to guess get stuck. They read slower, make more mistakes, and struggle to understand what they read.
Signs your child may be guessing
- They say a word that makes sense but doesn’t look right (like “dog” instead of “puppy”).
- They can read books they’ve seen many times but get stuck with new books.
- They keep looking at the pictures instead of reading the words.
- They spell words wrong often.
- They read slowly when there are no pictures.
What strong readers do instead?
- Use phonics. They sound out every part of the word.
- Know word parts, like endings ‘-ing’ “-ed,” or prefixes like “un-.”
- Have many sight words memorised.
- Use the sentence to check the meaning after they read the word.
When kids learn to sound out words, they read faster and understand better. Reading becomes fun instead of stressful.
How to help your child stop guessing
Don’t worry if your child has learned to guess. The brain can always learn new ways. Here’s how you can help:
- Practice phonics and teach them to read every letter sound.
- Practice sight words daily so they remember them fast.
- Tell them to read the whole word before using clues from the sentence.
- Read with them. Point to each word and praise them for sounding out words.
At Nyangu’s Paradise, we help children move from guessing to true reading. We use proven methods to teach children to decode words step by step. We even offer a free test to find out exactly what your child needs.
Remember:
Guessing is like using a trick that stops working in harder books. Learning to sound out words builds strong reading skills for life.
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