Literacy

Professional Development

May 9, 2022

How to Choose Decodable Books to Best Support Your Students

Okay so you’ve made the decision that you want need to start using decodable books with your kindergarten and first grade readers, but where do you start? How do you know which decodable books will help your students strengthen their reading skills? There are just so many options out there that it’s hard to know which ones are the best for your classroom.

I want to help you navigate how you can find decodables that will boost your readers, have meaningful practice, and are engaging. I’ll show you what to look for and how to choose the right decodable books for you!

By the way, if you’d rather watch or listen to this blog, I have a brand new YouTube video out on this topic. Check it out HERE!

Why You Should Use Decodable Books

The ultimate goal of using decodable books is to give students authentic practice decoding words. Using decodable readers gives students the opportunity to practice their phonics skills in a text that is aligned to a certain skill. Decodables also encourage students to attend to the text they are reading, instead of merely looking at the pictures to help them decode words. 

The Simple View of Reading tells us that decoding (the ability to apply sound-symbol relationships to read words) plus language comprehension (the ability to understand spoken language) equals reading comprehension. If the ultimate goals of reading are to learn and to enjoy, our readers must be able to comprehend what they are reading.

You can read more about why decodable books are important HERE!

Elements of Decodable Books

One of the most important elements of decodable books and readers is that it follows a scope and sequence. Books should follow a predetermined sequence that adds one new skill at a time. Decodable books should also have a high percentage of decodable words with skills that have been taught. If you are working through cvc words, you don’t want a decodable reader with tons of words that do not fall into those spelling patterns.

Decodable readers will also incorporate fluency practice and high-frequency word practice with words that have been previously introduced and words that fall into that phonics skill pattern. Finally, comprehension stays at the decodable level and increases as the decodability difficulty increases. Remember, decodable books should still tell a full story.

What to Look for In Decodable Books

The first thing to look for when searching for quality decodables is a set that follows a scope and sequence. Now there isn’t necessarily a right or wrong sequence, but you do want to look for one that will be beneficial to your students. Then you’ll want to follow through and stick with the same scope and sequence so your students have a progression to follow.

Quality decodable readers are controlled in their progression. You want to have none or very few instances of phonics skills that have not been previously taught. Next, you want the scope and sequence to be comprehensive. Meaning each new book includes previously taught skills, too. We want our readers to continuously practice their decoding skills in authentic ways as they build upon each other.

Finally, a decodable book should have many opportunities to practice the phonics focus skill. If you are having students practice the sh digraph, there should be plenty of words with sh in them throughout the text. We want our phonics lessons to transfer over to actual reading practice. Reading a text connected to a phonics skill solidifies phonics knowledge.

Tools to Support You

To help you prepare for meaningful and successful reading small group lessons, I have five decodable readers kits (and a bundle!) with everything you need!

Let’s take a peek at what’s all included! First, each kit has a decodable book for each phonics skill covered in the kit. The books come in a printable color and black and white formal, digital format, and passage format. Each book has a high decodability rate, is comprehensive, and follows a scope and sequence.

Each decodable reader kit also has tools for you like organizational labels, teaching posters, word work practice, and phonics skill practice for each lesson.

Additionally, each book also has a parent communication note. First, you can send the book home with the note so parents can read with their child. Then, parents will have some prompts to try if they get stuck and comprehension questions to ask them

Grab the sets you need and get started reaching every reader in your classroom!

Short Vowels Decodable Readers

Blends Decodable Readers

Digraphs Decodable Readers

Long Vowels Decodable Readers

Decodable Readers BUNDLE

Open Syllables (Single Syllable) Decodable Readers

Open Syllable (Multisyllabic) Decodable Readers

Vowel Teams Decodable Readers

Happy Teaching,

Amanda

EASILY PLAN YOUR K-2 READING SMALL GROUPS​

Want to use the latest research to boost your readers during small groups? This FREE guide is packed with engaging ideas to help them grow!

Hi, I'm Amanda

I’m a K-1 teacher who is passionate about making lessons your students love and that are easy to implement for teachers.  Helping teachers like you navigate their way through their literacy block brings me great joy. I am a lifelong learner who loves staying on top of current literacy learning and practices. Here, you’ll find the tools you need to move your K-2 students forward!

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3 Responses

  1. Hi,

    Our division is really pushing towards The Science of Reading. Do you have any suggestions for books for students to read that support decidable texts?

    1. Hi Michelle! That’s so great they are encouraging everyone towards it! I do not know of books for students that I would recommend besides decodable reader sets. I’m sorry!

    2. I’ve tried out the Miss Moss series for my daughter because she liked the pictures. She is dyslexic and has covered a lot in her reading tutorial (through vowel consonant e syllables). So far she is enjoying the first book.

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