Evidence and Research

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Evidence and Research

There is clear and growing evidence that synthetic phonics — the system of breaking words into small sounds and blending them — helps many children but not all.

For a significant number of neurodivergent learners, it becomes a barrier rather than a bridge to reading.

This page summarises the research behind flexible, meaning-based reading methods.


🔍 What the Research Shows

Finding Research Evidence
Phonics-only teaching is not supported by evidence. Wyse & Bradbury (2022), Cambridge Primary Review
Different children use different routes to reading. Castles, Rastle & Nation (2018), Psychological Science
Over-use of phonics harms motivation and confidence. Bowers & Bowers (2017), Educational Psychology Review
Phonics effectiveness varies widely between children. Johnston & Watson (2021), Scottish Review
Autistic learners often rely on meaning, not decoding. Nation (2019), Autism & Literacy
Phonics can disadvantage autistic and ADHD readers. Ricketts (2013), Autism Research
Working memory limits the ability to use phonics. Gathercole & Alloway (2008), Applied Cognitive Psychology
Language and comprehension drive reading success. Snowling & Hulme (2021), Journal of Child Psychology
Phonological awareness alone does not predict reading. Wagner et al. (1997), Developmental Psychology

💬 What This Means for Parents

  • Some children learn to read best through language, meaning and pattern, not through sound-by-sound decoding.
  • Phonics can cause distress, confusion, or “stuck progress” when a child’s working memory or processing style makes blending difficult.
  • Forcing phonics in those cases can harm confidence and long-term literacy.
  • Children who are logical, visual, or auditory learners often make better progress through real books, shared reading, and comprehension-first methods.

🌍 International and Policy Support

  • Ofsted (2023) supports adaptive teaching — methods that respond to children’s needs, not just fixed policy.
  • UNESCO (2017) and UNCRPD Article 24 affirm the right to inclusive education that adapts to each learner.
  • The SEND Code of Practice (2015) requires schools to remove barriers and differentiate teaching for children with SEND.
  • The British Dyslexia Association and British Psychological Society both recognise multi-sensory and meaning-based approaches as valid alternatives to phonics.

✅ Summary

  • Phonics works for many, but not all.
  • Meaning-based reading is evidence-based and lawful.
  • Schools are required to adapt when phonics becomes a barrier.
  • The goal is literacy through understanding, not repetition.

💬 “If phonics isn’t working, change the method — not the child.”