Why I am writing This Series
Since 2010, I’ve blogged about reading instruction,
dyslexia, and phonics—always grounded in facts and student outcomes. I’ve
taught over 80 children labeled as dyslexic, and I’ve shared what works, freely
and openly.
This new three-part series marks a shift. It’s not just
about methods—it’s about why those methods get blocked.
I’ve been silenced, ignored, and blocked by educators,
researchers, and influencers—not because my results are flawed, but because
they challenge the consensus. These posts explore the motives behind that
resistance: profit, herd mentality, and gatekeeping.
I’m not here to attack individuals. I’m here to ask:
“Why block a question? What does that say about openness to
debate?”
If we want to solve illiteracy, we must be willing to
confront uncomfortable truths. This series is my invitation to do just that.
It's been
years since I first noticed the pattern: educators, researchers, and
self-proclaimed literacy experts on Twitter (now X), LinkedIn, and beyond,
blocking me not for harassment or threats, but for daring to question their
sacred cows. As the founder of free online lessons that have helped dozens of
children—many mislabelled as "dyslexic"—read fluently in under four months,
I've become a thorn in their side. My crime? Pointing out that phonological
awareness deficit isn't the root cause of reading struggles; it's the confusion
from teaching consonants with extraneous vowel sounds like "buh"
instead of pure /b/. Kids shut down, disengage, and get funneled into expensive
interventions. But why block the messenger?