If your child is 10 years old and still struggling to read, it’s natural to ask:
“What’s wrong?”
But that might be the wrong question.
A better question is:
“What is making reading so difficult?”
Because for many children, the problem isn’t motivation, intelligence, or effort.
It’s the system they’re trying to learn.
English is not an easy language to read. In fact, it is one of the most complex alphabetic writing systems in the world.
In a simple alphabetic system:
One sound = one spelling
One spelling = one sound
But English does not work like that.
Instead, it is a many-to-many system:
One sound can be spelled many ways
/ee/ → ee, ea, ie, e, ey, ei
One spelling can represent many sounds
“ou” in house, soup, could, cough, rough, dough
This creates constant ambiguity.
As children progress, they encounter:
silent letters (onomatopoeia, subtle)
complex syllabic structures (anemone, deity)
inconsistent phonological and morphological patterns (speak → speech, courage → courageous)
At this point, straightforward segmentation (reading a word letter-by-letter) becomes harder to rely on as a complete system.
And that creates pressure on how reading is taught.
This is where the historical cycle in reading instruction begins to make sense.
Why do approaches like balanced literacy and whole language keep reappearing?
Because English does not consistently support a purely phonics-driven model at scale.
This debate is not new. It goes back decades, including work such as Why Johnny Can’t Read, and later figures such as Lucy Calkins.
As children encounter more complex vocabulary, the limitations of straightforward phonics rules become more visible. When simple decoding feels insufficient, instructional systems naturally move toward meaning-based support.
This is why approaches such as whole language, balanced literacy, and three-cueing / MS keep re-emerging over time.
They are attempts to solve a real problem: how to help children make sense of print when the code itself is inconsistent.
This is not to suggest that English cannot be taught explicitly.
It can.
Structured phonics approaches—including Orton-Gillingham and other structured literacy programs—are designed to do exactly that. They teach:
grapheme–phoneme correspondences
spelling patterns
morphological structure
rules and exceptions
And they are effective.
However, they come with trade-offs:
highly time-intensive
require specialist training
demand sustained cognitive effort over many years
For many learners, especially those who struggle with working memory for spelling patterns or pattern recognition, the learning curve is steep and ongoing.
Structured phonics is the most systematic way to teach English reading—but it is also a heavy instructional lift.
For a long time, reading difficulties were framed as a problem within the child.
But there is another way to see it:
Maybe we are asking children to master a system that is unnecessarily difficult.
English spelling was not carefully designed. It evolved over time through:
borrowing from multiple languages
preserving historical spellings
accumulating inconsistencies
The result is a system that places a heavy burden on learners—especially those who do not naturally pick up patterns easily.
Even with strong instruction, some children still struggle because:
they find it harder to remember spelling patterns
they do not easily detect statistical regularities
they need more repetition and reinforcement
And in a system with multiple correct-looking options, high variability, and frequent exceptions that difficulty is amplified.
This is why:
extra effort does not always fix the problem
practice alone is not enough
frustration builds—for both children and parents
We can improve instruction—and we should.
Structured phonics is essential.
But we also need to ask a bigger question:
What if part of the difficulty lies in the structure of the code itself?
At Readable English, we take a different approach.
Instead of asking every child to master a highly inconsistent code through ever-increasing layers of instruction, we simplify the code itself.
A phonetic version of English:
reduces ambiguity
makes decoding more consistent
lowers cognitive load
supports earlier independence in reading
This does not replace phonics instruction.
It amplifies it.
Because when the code is clearer:
children can apply what they have learned more reliably
reading becomes less effortful
fluency develops more naturally
If your 10-year-old is struggling to read, it does not mean they are not capable.
It does not mean they are not trying.
And it does not mean they have been taught incorrectly.
Sometimes, it means:
they are trying to master one of the most complex writing systems in the world—and the system itself is part of the difficulty.
And that is a problem worth solving.
Want to learn more about Readable English? Explore our parent page or contact us to see how we can help your child achieve reading success.