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Understanding the Orton-Gillingham approach

Does it line up with modern neuroscience and linguistics?

Why Linguistic Literacy is changing reading instruction

  • Clear structure and predictability, which many children find grounding
  • Explicit instruction, leaving nothing to guesswork
  • Multisensory engagement, connecting hearing, seeing, saying, and writing
  • Careful step-by-step sequencing, which feels safe for students who need repetition
  • A long history of helping children with dyslexia

These strengths are real—and they explain why OG held its place as the gold standard for so many decades.  But OG was developed in the 1920s–1930s, long before modern neuroscience, linguistics, and cognitive science revealed how the brain actually learns to read.

OG was a positive answer for struggling readers.

But it was never the final answer.

◼ Heavy cognitive load

Rules, syllable types, spelling generalizations, letter names, and exceptions add significant mental demand—especially for working-memory-challenged learners.

◼ Slow pace

Mastery requirements and step-by-step progression mean many children advance slowly, and some stall.

◼ Fragmented instruction

Reading, spelling, handwriting, and phonemic awareness are often taught separately rather than as one unified skill set.  Flashcard drills matching individual sounds to their spellings with key words, such as “B says /b/ balloon.”

◼ Overreliance on controlled text

Children may spend months reading tightly restricted text that lacks natural vocabulary and flow.

Controlled text refers to reading materials that are artificially limited to only the sounds, words, or patterns a student has already been taught. While intended to support early decoding, these texts lack variety, rich vocabulary, and real-world context.

◼ A “print-first” orientation known as print-to-speech

Students start with abstract symbols (letters), not the spoken words they already know. This reverses the brain’s natural language pathway.

  Mastery before moving on  

Students must achieve 95% mastery before moving on to a new level.  

Again—this doesn’t make OG ineffective.

But it does make it less efficient and less aligned with how the brain naturally processes language than linguistic literacy.

Linguistic literacy (Speech-to-Print), the approach used at Brilliant Futures Tutoring through EBLI (Evidence-based Literacy Instruction), starts with what all children already possess: spoken language. Rather than making children learn letters first, speech-to-print builds on what kids already know—spoken language—helping them connect sounds to print in a way that feels natural and intuitive. 

This speech-to-print structure isn’t just intuitive—it is supported by over a century of linguistic and cognitive research.

  • Begins with sounds, not letters. Letter names are not used for early readers and writers because “letters don’t talk;” they represent the sounds we speak.  Avoiding letter names prevents confusion for beginning readers.  This means NO flashcard drills matching individual sounds with their spellings,  such as “B says /b/ balloon.”
  • Instruction begins by identifying the sounds within whole words and then matching those sounds to the letters that represent them. This mirrors how the brain naturally processes language, making reading lessons more meaningful, memorable, and efficient.
  • Integrates multiple strands of literacy development simultaneously: phonemic awareness, phonics, reading, writing, spelling, vocabulary, comprehension, and “handwriting.”
  • Uses patterns rather than rules (reducing confusion dramatically).  NO spelling rules; No syllable rules. Students learn to recognize and apply patterns, tapping into the brain’s natural pattern-seeking ability.  This eliminates guessing, confusion, and unnecessary memorization and builds confidence and fluency.
  • Encourages sound-flexing.  Students learn to “flex” sounds until a word makes sense, a strategy used naturally by strong readers.  
  • Moves quickly to authentic text
  • Reduces mental load
  • Fast, interactive lessons:  Streamlined instruction keeps engagement high and accelerates progress.
  • Integrates multiple strands of reading skills simultaneously: phonemic awareness, phonics, reading, writing, spelling, vocabulary, comprehension, handwriting
  • Produces faster, more durable results
  • In contrast to mastery, EBLI follows a continuous spiral-learning approach with spaced review, so students revisit skills often while still moving quickly from concept to concept. This keeps learning engaging, accelerates progress, and ensures earlier success.

It is more effective and efficient than OG because it is more aligned with how the brain actually learns

1. It mirrors natural language acquisition.
Humans are wired for speech—not print. Children learn spoken language effortlessly; print must be mapped onto that system.
Linguistic literacy honors this.
2. It reduces cognitive load.
Instead of juggling rules, syllable types, and exceptions, children learn consistent patterns and strategies.
3. It uses whole-word context to support decoding.
Children don’t decode isolated patterns—they learn to flex and adjust sounds the way fluent readers do.
4. It integrates skills instead of fragmenting them.
Reading, spelling, handwriting, vocabulary, and comprehension happen together.
5. It achieves outcomes more quickly.
Across diverse learners—including those who previously struggled with OG—gains appear earlier and compound faster.
6. It aligns tightly with modern neuroscience and linguistics.
Since the invention of OG nearly a century ago, we’ve learned far more about how the brain maps sounds to print. Linguistic literacy reflects that science directly.
These advantages don’t “replace” OG—they build on it, refine it, and ultimately surpass it in efficiency.

It’s important for parents to know that OG and linguistic literacy are not opposites. They share many essential components:

  • Explicit
  • Systematic
  • Sequential
  • Multisensory
  • Phonics-based
  • Research-aligned
  • Designed for struggling readers
  • Consistent with the Science of Reading

There are many programs based on the Linguistic Literacy, Speech to Print, method:  EBLI (Evidence-based Literacy Instruction), Reading Simplified, Sounds-Write, That Reading Thing, SPELL-Links, Phono-Graphix, etc. Likewise, there are many programs based on the Print-to-Speech OG method of teaching reading.

Both acknowledge that teaching phonics is a crucial part of early literacy instruction.

Every phonics lesson, whether print to speech or speech to print, will include reading and spelling.

OG asks children to start with what they don’t know—the alphabetic symbols—and map back to what they do know.

Linguistic literacy starts with what they do know (spoken words) and maps forward into print.

After decades of OG-based instruction, I made the transition to EBLI because:

  • Students progressed significantly faster
  • They required less repetition and fewer rules
  • Their confidence and independence soared
  • They experienced reading as something logical—not laborious
  • Parents saw measurable progress without years of remediation
  • Effective for all students.  Students with dyslexia, ADHD, or anxiety responded especially well

In my professional experience—and supported by modern cognitive science—linguistic literacy:

  • is not just another method. It is a more effective, more efficient, and more brain-friendly pathway to reading success.
  • It works with the brain, not against it.
  • It builds readers, not memorizers.
  • And it gets students where they need to go—faster, happier, and with far less frustration.

You don’t have to choose between “good” and “bad” reading programs. Both OG and linguistic literacy have strengths. But . . .

 

Tutor and a kid playing with cards learning to read

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