Wednesday, January 14, 2026

When Minds Shut Down – Confusion, Fixed Beliefs, and the Tipping Point


 


I’ve seen it countless times in my work with ‘dyslexic’ students: the moment when a child is present in body but absent in mind. They hear the words, but they’re not really listening. They’re not processing. Their mind has quietly “switched off.”

 

And truth be told, this isn’t unique to dyslexia. It’s something all of us experience in everyday life.

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Dyslexic Children and Reading Comprehension

   

                               


 

We’ve already seen how poor teaching methods—whether Whole Word or phonics—can leave children confused about the very basics of reading. But what happens when decoding looks fine, yet comprehension falters? Too often, the label “dyslexia” is applied without asking the harder question: is the real issue fluency, or language itself?

A Parent’s Guide to Reading with Children


 

Why Reading Aloud Still Matters

Yesterday, I reflected on the challenges children face when learning to read, and the importance of balancing phonics with sight word instruction. Today, I want to turn to something equally vital but often overlooked: the power of reading aloud.

If decoding skills are the mechanics of reading, then reading aloud is the heart—it brings stories to life, nurtures comprehension, and builds the emotional connection that makes books more than just words on a page.


Saturday, January 10, 2026

Mastering Sequencing Challenges in Dyslexia: From My First Student to Practical Strategies

 


Fifteen years ago, when I first began tutoring children with dyslexia, one challenge stood out above all others: sequencing difficulties. These struggles—processing and ordering information correctly—often became the most persistent and frustrating hurdle for my students.

Friday, January 9, 2026

The Pygmalion Effect: Unlocking Potential Through Expectation and Encouragement


 


What Is the Pygmalion Effect?

The Pygmalion effect describes how belief and expectation can shape performance. When teachers or parents expect a child to succeed, the child often rises to meet that expectation. It’s a powerful reminder that encouragement is not just emotional support—it’s a catalyst for achievement.

Thursday, January 8, 2026

It’s Often the Teaching, Not the Child – And Why Phonics vs Whole Language Misses the Point


 

In my last post, I argued that most children who struggle with reading are not “disabled” in the clinical sense, but rather victims of poor or confusing teaching. When the foundations are muddled—wrong sounds, distorted input, or unclear strategies—many children disengage, and once that shut-down happens, remediation becomes far harder.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Why So Many Children Struggle with Reading

 



It's Often the Teaching, Not the Child

In 2010, my mentor, Dr. Richard Selznick, shared a profound insight that has stuck with me ever since: most children on the left side of the bell curve aren't truly "disabled" in the clinical sense. Instead, they are often "teaching disabled" or "curriculum disabled." These kids thrive when given structured, explicit instruction with ample practice and immediate feedback. True dyslexia—where a child struggles profoundly even with the best teaching—is far rarer.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Dystechia

 


Here is a comment I made this morning, on a FB post by Dyslexia Inspired.

This resonates deeply with views I've been expressing since 2010. Back in 2004, when I began investigating why many intelligent children could fluently read in Malay and Pinyin (Hanyu Pinyin) but struggled with English, the prevailing explanation was a phonological awareness deficit as the root cause of dyslexia.

I wrote extensively on social media challenging that theory, arguing it couldn't hold because these same children demonstrated strong phonological skills in more consistent orthographies like Malay and Pinyin.

That dominant theory faced significant scrutiny and was largely reframed or debunked around 2017, with emerging research highlighting its limitations.

Now, it feels like the same old idea is being repackaged with new terminology—what I'd call putting fresh lipstick on the same pig.

For more on my early writings, Google search "phonological awareness luqman michel"

Here are comments on the post:

 Jan Orocobix

Yes, Dr. Tim Conway has used this term for years. Did he originally coin the term?
 
 Tim Conway
Thank you Jan Orocobix - I’m sure that term has been around for decades before I mentioned it online.
Sadly, there are minimal improvements in the field of education towards becoming a truly evidence-based profession, ie having the same standards and caliber of scientific support for literacy instruction as all healthcare services for children are required for have before they are given to children - schools
use children as “guinea pigs” every day with untested and unproven and even proven to be ineffective literacy programs. Thankfully, healthcare is ethically and legally prevented from using children as “guinea pigs” for treatments and healthcare services. We must demand the same standard of care with scientifically proven and highly effective services for our childrens’ education too.
#DyslexiaScience and #EmpoweredDyslexia are two terms that I have not seen others use online, but those additional terms, like #Dystechia, are ones that I know Dyslexia Inspired understands very well and helps educate families and children about too.
 
 
Luqman Michel
Jan Orocobix This is the guy who deleted my discussion with him when he could not answer many questions I asked. LINK 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


The Walking Wounded: Adult Dyslexics and the Silence Around Their Struggles

                                                                       


Intro 

For years, I have written about dyslexic children who leave school unable to read, only to discover literacy later in life. Their stories raise an uncomfortable question: Why do so many fail in school, yet succeed as adults? The answer lies not in their intelligence, but in the way they were taught.

Monday, January 5, 2026

Challenging the Reading Wars

Visit my bookstore at:  https://payhip.com/LuqmanMichel                                                              


 

Why Experts Ignore Evidence on Phonics and Dyslexia

The ongoing "Reading Wars" – the fierce debate between advocates of systematic phonics instruction and proponents of balanced literacy or whole-language approaches – have persisted for decades, leaving many children struggling with reading and labeled as dyslexic. Over the years, I've documented interactions with prominent educators and researchers on my blog. These posts highlight a frustrating pattern: questions rooted in real-world teaching experience and student evidence are often met with evasion, silence, or outright dismissal. This blog post summarizes five key entries spanning from 2020 to 2025, revealing a core issue that could potentially resolve much of the controversy.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

My Journey Fighting Illiteracy

                                                                


Enough is Enough – The Gatekeeping Must Stop

After more than 15 years tutoring dyslexic and struggling readers one-on-one – watching kids light up when confusion clears and they finally read fluently – I'm done holding back.

I've poured my observations into this blog since 2010, only to face silence, blocks, and herd-like defensiveness from the "experts" in the Science of Reading (SoR) and structured literacy world. Parents are desperate, kids are suffering needless disengagement, and yet the echo chambers on Twitter/X rage on, protecting egos, products, and flawed dogmas. It's time to call it out plainly: We're creating "dysteachia" – preventable reading failure through poor instruction – and mislabeling it as incurable dyslexia. And the gatekeeping? It's a big disservice to every child who could thrive with simpler, common-sense fixes.

Saturday, January 3, 2026

Part 4 of 4: Rethinking Dyslexia – Instructional Confusion in Disguise?


 


The dominant view, repeated endlessly in Western research, is that dyslexia is a neurobiological phonological processing deficit. But in 2010, I began questioning this after teaching children who struggled severely with English yet read fluently in transparent orthographies like Malay and Pinyin.

 

If a child truly has a phonological deficit, shouldn’t it impair reading in any alphabetic system? Yet these same children decoded Malay and Pinyin effortlessly.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Part 3 of 4: The Hidden Flaw Shared by Whole Language and Phonics

 


 – Extraneous Sounds That Cause Shutdown

For decades, the “reading wars” have pitted Whole Language against phonics. Yet despite the swings in fashion, reading failure rates have remained stubbornly similar across eras: 20–30% of children still struggle significantly.

 

Why? Because both approaches often share a critical flaw: teaching stop consonants with an added schwa sound (/uh/).

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Part 2 of 4: How Many of Peter’s “200,000 Wrongly Spelled Words” Do Grade 1 Kids Actually Encounter?

 



Peter’s thread paints English spelling as chaotic — with “200,000 phono-illogical errors” supposedly blocking children from learning to read. But how many of those words does a Grade 1 child actually face?

 

The Reality in Grade 1

By the end of Grade 1, most children read simple books containing just 300–500 unique words. These are mostly high-frequency and basic decodable words like:

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Blog Post 1 of 4: A Response to PeterDMayr


 

Why English Spelling Isn’t the Main Villain in Reading Struggles


Recently, Peter (@PeterDMayr) shared a passionate X thread arguing that English’s irregular and unpredictable spelling is the primary reason so many children struggle with reading. He highlighted the landmark 2003 study by Philip Seymour and colleagues, which found that children learning consistent orthographies (such as Finnish or Italian) often achieve near-perfect decoding by the end of Grade 1, while English-speaking children typically trail two to three years behind. Peter contends that this orthographic complexity inflates dyslexia diagnoses, widens inequality, and imposes heavy societal costs—a perspective echoed by many spelling-reform advocates. It’s an argument that’s easy to sympathize with.