Support Classroom Literacy with Decodables (2024)

As reading instruction swings toward phonics, librarians need to stay in the game with decodables. These suggestions, plus asampling of publishers' offerings, will help.

Support Classroom Literacy with Decodables (1)
Finn Swims courtesy of Capstone

As reading instruction swings toward phonics-based practices, many educators will tell you that meeting the science of reading framework requires specific materials. Decodable books—also known as decodables, decodable texts, or decodable readers—are the go-to reading materials directly related to phonics instruction and practice, given their composition and features designed for beginning readers.

The average decodable has small dimensions that fit well in young learners’ hands, along with soft covers and thin bindings that hold 12 to 16 pages together. Put simply, decodable books are light, bright, and unassuming. These effective vehicles invite beginning readers to dive into books while offering achievable challenges as students master growing skills.

While decodables circle around fiction or nonfiction topics, these works are written to apply a specific phonetic focus, usually in direct association with weekly ELA learning objectives for students in kindergarten, first grade, or second grade.

For example, a decodable may focus on the short “o” sound, offering simple sentences dotted with short “o” words in CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) spelling patterns and high-frequency words. Consider “Stop! The hog sat on the log with a dog.” Or, a phrase may feature different letter combinations that create the long “u” sound: “Did you see who drew the blue tube?” Sentences like these provide crucial reading practice for students to translate written language into verbal speech sounds.

The story in a decodable may not follow a plot sequence or offer an informative tale. And while decodable readers feature illustrations, the pictures aren’t meant to distract the students from their goal to tackle—to sound out, to decode—the words.

Keri Harvey, a certified reading specialist and kindergarten teacher at a Title I elementary school in New Jersey, describes how her students learn to interact with decodables. “As we read a book together, I think aloud to model for the students how to sound out difficult words,” she says. “I tell them that when they come to a word they don’t know, they can sound it out just like me.”

Harvey scatters decodable readers around the classroom’s block center, dramatic play area, toys and games center, and art area so kids come across them on their own. She says, “The students are so proud when they begin to realize they can read!”

Support Classroom Literacy with Decodables (2)
Pet Shop Panda materials courtesy of DK


Accessibility and information

As decodable offerings expand, certain factors pose challenges to librarians seeking to engage with them. Decodable readers are an unusual format to maintain and classify. Some librarians don’t try to. “Our library collection is not leveled, but curated and displayed in a way that students want to check out library books each and every week,” says Jennifer Latimer, media specialist at Clinton Elementary School Library in Maplewood, NJ. “I encourage students to find books that excite them even if they cannot actually read the book.”

Decodable series or sets are particularly expensive, and librarians and teachers alike often encounter sparse information from vendors about the relevance or content of selections.

“Librarians who want to incorporate decodable books still have to do much of the legwork themselves,” says Elizabeth Crispino, Media Specialist at Walter C. Black Elementary School in Hightstown, NJ. “Most of our vendors do not list any information about what skills are targeted in each title, most decodables are available only in flimsy paperbacks, and there is still a lot of confusion up to the publisher level in how decodables are different from leveled readers. It’s hard to know exactly what you’re getting until it arrives.”

Some decodables, like Houghton Mifflin Harcourt’s Journeys, are available either in a physical or printable format. Others are downloadable from vendor or teacher-made resource sites, such as Teachers Pay Teachers.

As a former first grade teacher and K–2 assistant, I relied on teacher-created resources, donated decodables from colleagues, and decodable sets I could afford through vendors’ points systems. With these limitations, the quantity and quality of decodables in my classroom didn’t meet students’ demand or my goal to provide enough independent reading material for our weekly phonics objectives.

While librarians historically have had differing opinions about phonics, Crispino sees the approach playing a key role in children’s enthusiasm for reading. “When it comes to the argument that librarians should be fostering a love of reading, I agree wholeheartedly,” Crispino says. “But I’ve seen that a love of reading develops down multiple paths. It develops on the lap of a loved one, and then sitting in a circle listening to a read-aloud. But it also develops as students build their own concrete skills and feel the satisfaction of mastering something that initially seemed so foreign and inaccessible. Decodable books allow readers to develop that confidence—just watch a child successfully read their first book where they’ve cracked the code behind the words and you’ll see it.”

I have witnessed many such “aha!” moments: when a student proudly held out a stack of decodables and stated, “I read them all!” or when two students sat on the floor passing a decodable back and forth while reading out loud, taking turns playing teacher.

Wherever and however this reading occurred, my students’ animation soared as they gained an independent power they never had before—reading. That power grew from applying their ever-growing phonetic knowledge with critical guidance from teachers, parents, specialists, and, of course, librarians.

Support Classroom Literacy with Decodables (3)
Meg and Greg courtesy of Orca

A sampling from publishers

By Beth Ellen McIntyre

Abdo
Cerna Abdo Launch!

The Abdo Launch! imprint includes series focused on vowel sounds, vowel families, and other phonics concepts.

Bearport
Supersonic Phonics

Colorful leveled readers build phonics skills as they tell a wide range of stories. These sets are a fictional counterpart to Jump!’s decodable nonfiction line.

Capstone
Stairway Decodables

These illustrated stories that build decoding skills in color-coded steps include front and back matter for educators and parents.

Cherry Blossom Press
Little Blossom Stories

Petite books take readers on big adventures while building key reading skills.

Cherry Lake Press
Frameworks of Geography: Decodable Graphic Novel
(available Aug. 2024)
A collaboration with World Book, this colorful graphic novel series introduces geography concepts to readers in grades 4–6.

The Child’s World
Phonics Fun!

Vibrant photographs, familiar topics, and decodable text to support emerging readers.

Crabtree
My Decodable Readers

These bright and humorous early readers include downloadable teacher resources.

DK
DK Super Phonics
(Available July 2024)
This upcoming decodable line appears to include both cheerful stories and skill-building books.

Jump!
Decodables by Jump!

Simple, appealing nonfiction topics are the focus of these leveled decodables. A counterpart to Bearport’s Supersonic Phonics line.

Lerner
Decodable Series

Lerner offers a wide range of decodable series, including letter-sound practice texts and stories that allow readers to practice phonics concepts.

NorthStar Editions/NorthStar Classroom
On It, Phonics!

Covering everyday topics like baking and pet fish ownership, each title in this series focuses on a different vowel sound.

Norwood House(Rosen)
The Decodables
Sets of books arranged by spelling patterns and topics offer a combination of fiction and nonfiction narratives.

Orca
Orca Two Read Books

Orca Two Read Books’s “Meg and Greg” series focuses on phonic skills for six- to nine-year-olds, while offering a dual reading experience for the child and a more experienced reader for extra support.

Phonic Books(DK)
Dandelion Launchers
This line by Phonic Books offers leveled sets of decodable stories, activity books, and phonics reference books for kids.

Rosen
Rosen Phonics Readers
Rosen Phonics Readers focus on relatable and engaging narratives and both direct phonics instruction and an embedded approach.

Saddleback
TwERL Phonics and TERL Phonics

Hi-lo decodable sets for tween and teen emerging readers who are building their phonics skills.

Teacher Created Materials(combined with Free Spirit)
Decodables: Read and Succeed
Includes sound-recognition titles and stories that allow readers to practice and stretch their decoding skills.

Back to the top.

Rachel Mulligan, a certified New Jersey elementary educator, holds an MLS from Rutgers University and reviews for SLJ .

Support Classroom Literacy with Decodables (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rev. Porsche Oberbrunner

Last Updated:

Views: 5989

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (53 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rev. Porsche Oberbrunner

Birthday: 1994-06-25

Address: Suite 153 582 Lubowitz Walks, Port Alfredoborough, IN 72879-2838

Phone: +128413562823324

Job: IT Strategist

Hobby: Video gaming, Basketball, Web surfing, Book restoration, Jogging, Shooting, Fishing

Introduction: My name is Rev. Porsche Oberbrunner, I am a zany, graceful, talented, witty, determined, shiny, enchanting person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.