Why Extra Tuition Does Not Always Help Dyslexia
Understanding why more practice is not always the answer — and what truly makes a difference for children with dyslexia

Introduction
A Common Response
When children struggle with reading or spelling, many parents naturally respond by increasing practice or enrolling them in additional tuition. Extra lessons can be helpful for reinforcing knowledge or filling gaps in understanding.
When It Is Not Enough
However, some children continue to struggle despite regular tuition and repeated practice. This can be confusing and frustrating for both parents and children.
Why Practice Works for Some Students
For many students, additional tuition helps because the challenge is mainly related to gaps in knowledge or insufficient practice.
With more explanation, guided exercises and repetition, these students gradually build stronger reading and writing skills.
Why Dyslexia Is Different
The Core Challenge
For children with dyslexia, the difficulty often lies in how written language is processed rather than how much practice they receive.
What Reading Requires
Reading is a complex process that involves linking letters, sounds and word patterns quickly and automatically. When these processes are less efficient, additional worksheets alone may not lead to meaningful improvement.
Common Pattern Parents Notice
Parents sometimes observe that:
Spelling Lists
Spelling lists are memorised but forgotten quickly.
Reading Progress
Reading improves only slightly despite regular practice.
Written Assignments
Written assignments remain difficult.
These patterns often indicate that the child requires a different type of support rather than simply more repetition.
What Structured Learning Support Focuses On
Structured learning support aims to strengthen the processes involved in reading, spelling and written expression.
Instead of focusing only on completing more worksheets, this approach may help children develop strategies for:
- Recognising word patterns
- Organising written ideas
- Managing reading tasks more efficiently
The Key Difference
Rather than more of the same, structured support offers a different kind of learning — one that targets the underlying processes that make reading and writing challenging.
Tuition vs Learning Intervention
| Traditional Tuition | Structured Literacy Support |
| More practice | Focus on reading processes |
| Reinforces knowledge | Strengthens decoding skills |
| Worksheet repetition | Structured literacy strategies |
Singapore Academic Demands
In Singapore schools, students are expected to read and understand complex instructions across many subjects. Written responses also play an important role in examinations such as the PSLE.

Frequently Asked Questions
Does tuition ever help children with dyslexia?
Tuition can sometimes help reinforce skills, but children with dyslexia often benefit more from structured support that focuses specifically on literacy processes.
Should parents stop tuition entirely?
Not necessarily. The most helpful approach may involve combining appropriate literacy support with school learning expectations.