7 Signs Your Child Needs Reading Intervention — Not Just Tutoring
Some reading struggles need clinical language-based intervention, not more practice time. Here are clear signs that a speech-language pathologist should evaluate your child's reading.
Direct answer: If your child has had tutoring or extra reading practice without meaningful progress — especially with phonological red flags or a speech-language history — they likely need reading intervention from a speech-language pathologist, not more of the same tutoring approach.
Seven Signs to Watch For
- Cannot rhyme or play sound games in preschool or early kindergarten
- Decoding is slow, labored, or guess-based after structured phonics instruction
- Spelling is consistently phonetically implausible
- Avoids reading or shows anxiety around books
- Reads words but cannot explain what they read (comprehension collapse)
- Had speech therapy or language delay as a younger child
- School says "wait and see" but gaps are widening each year
Why Waiting Often Fails
Reading difficulty rarely resolves without targeted intervention. The gap between struggling readers and peers widens after third grade when curriculum shifts from "learning to read" to "reading to learn."
What should I do if I see these signs?
Request a comprehensive speech-language and literacy evaluation. An SLP can determine whether phonological processing, language comprehension, or both are driving the problem — and recommend the right intervention intensity.
Online Reading & Literacy Intervention
Front Range Speech Therapy offers language-based reading intervention nationwide via secure telehealth — led by a certified speech-language pathologist. Learn more on our reading & literacy page or request a reading consultation.
Sources
- ASHA practice portal: Literacy
- Reading Rockets: Phonological awareness
- International Dyslexia Association
This article is educational and does not replace an individualized evaluation or medical advice.
