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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:

 

“cat,” “dog,” “run,” “big,” “jump.”

 

The truly irregular words — those that defy phonics even after advanced rules — are very few at this stage.

 

Enter the Dolch 220

The Dolch sight word list covers 50–80% of words in early texts. Let’s break it down:

 

20–30 words are permanently irregular (e.g., the, one, said, was, of, come, they, does).

 

70–75 words are temporarily tricky but become regular once common patterns are taught (e.g., out, down, look).

 

100+ words are fully decodable with basic Grade 1 phonics (e.g., can, it, get, up).

 

In my book Teach Your Child to Read, I recommend rote memorisation of the full Dolch list early on. Once these 220 words are memorised as whole units:

 

The truly irregular ones are handled effortlessly.

 

The temporarily tricky ones become regular as phonics knowledge grows.

 

So What Happens to Peter’s 200,000?

Out of Peter’s claimed “200,000 wrongly spelled words,” a Grade 1 child encounters perhaps 20–50 that need special attention — and rote memorisation of Dolch words covers nearly all of them.

 

If irregular spelling were the primary barrier, children who’ve memorised their sight words should be reading fluently by the end of Grade 1. Yet many are not.

 

The Real Barrier: Mis-Taught Sounds

The real reason most struggling Grade 1 readers can’t decode even regular words like bat, sit, or pen is this:

 

Stop consonants are taught with an added schwa sound: “buh”, “tuh”, “kuh”.

 

This turns bat into buh-ah-tuh — which cannot possibly blend into the known spoken word bat. Confusion sets in. Blending fails. Logical children disengage.

 

Final Thought

Yes, English spelling is complex. But Grade 1 reading involves only a tiny, manageable corner of that complexity. With:

 

Rote memorisation of high-frequency words, and

 

Precise, clean sound teaching,

 

…the vast majority of children can read fluently long before facing the dictionary’s 200,000 irregularities.

9 comments:

  1. Smart kids want to explore advanced books & smarter kids, even more. Books spelled phono-logically & regularly would allow them. Normal Dick & Jane books that are boring do bore even normal kids too, btw. The English spelling system as it is is dumbing down kids.

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    1. Your mind is made up and no amount of evidence is going to change your opinion. Thank you for your comment.

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    2. You agreed with my assessment: "I don’t dispute that English orthography is deep, complex, and inconsistent. It is objectively more challenging than many other writing systems." My opinion is based on research showing that years of delays occurs no matter how we teach kids to read: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/10710502_Foundation_literacy_acquisition_in_European_orthographies_Electronic_version & https://www.scribd.com/document/192492687/Seymour-Aro-Erskine-2003 . Provide independently assessed tests like the ones given in the research to students in a classroom to show your method can allow kids to learn to read any English word in Grade 1.

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  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  3. All kids in Grade 1 want to explore advanced, interesting books independently, without being dependent on adults, teachers, tutors. After learning the alphabet, they could decode advanced, interesting books spelled phono-logically & regularly in weeks. Repetitive choral readings of boring & dumb Dick & Jane books done to memorize all of these irregulaly spelled words bore all kids. The English spelling system as it is is dumbing down kids.

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    1. You said: 'You agreed with my assessment: "I don’t dispute that English orthography is deep, complex, and inconsistent.'
      Everyone of us in Malaysia know this because, unlike most people from English speaking countries, we learn at least 3 languages. So, don't get carried away with thinking it is some kind of assessment that you made and no one else knows about it.
      'All kids in Grade 1 want to explore advanced, interesting books independently, without being dependent on adults, teachers, tutors.'
      You got to be living in a hole somewhere. About 80% of kids are confused at the end of grade one because letter sounds are taught with extraneous sounds. At that point they may want to join you in that hole you are hiding in.

      You fit in exactly into the saying that the human mind is like the human egg.
      Thank you for your comments.

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  4. "You got to be living in a hole somewhere. About 80% of kids are confused at the end of grade one because letter sounds are taught with extraneous sounds." That might be true in Malaysia where there are 2 other languages being learned & used. In most of the worlds it is the ectraneous spelling to sound pairings that is the issue: https://improvingenglishspelling.blogspot.com/?m=1 . This is explained also in this research: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/10710502_Foundation_literacy_acquisition_in_European_orthographies_Electronic_version & https://www.scribd.com/document/192492687/Seymour-Aro-Erskine-2003 . Maybe uou want to learn & actually address the real issue, not hide it in your hole to market your solution, Malaysia-driven or not.

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  5. Edit: You got to be living in a hole somewhere. About 80% of kids are confused at the end of grade one because letter sounds are taught with extraneous sounds." That might be true in Malaysia where there are 2 other languages being learned & used. In most of the rest of the world, it is the extraneous spellings to sound pairings that are the issue: https://improvingenglishspelling.blogspot.com/?m=1 . This is explained also in this research: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/10710502_Foundation_literacy_acquisition_in_European_orthographies_Electronic_version & https://www.scribd.com/document/192492687/Seymour-Aro-Erskine-2003 . Maybe you want to learn & actually address the real issue, not hide it in your hole to market your solution, Malaysia-driven or not.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Perhaps you may want to read page 107 of Equipped for Reading success by Dr. David Kilpatrick and then give your comments.

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