IMSLEC and IDA Reaccreditation

We have fantastic news! Our training program and curriculum have been officially reaccredited by the International Multisensory Structured Language Education Council (IMSLEC) and the International Dyslexia Association (IDA). Back in 2018, our curriculum, staff, and facilities went through the rigorous IMSLEC and IDA Accreditation examination process and passed with flying colors and high accolades!

During the accreditation process, IMSLEC and IDA conducted an in-depth review of Kendore Learning’s Structured Literacy curriculum, which is used one-on-one with students at Syllables Learning Center and in classrooms across the nation through our Kendore teacher training program.

With these important seals of approval, Kendore Learning and Syllables Learning Center remain among the elite ranks of programs across the country recognized to help students with dyslexia and related learning differences.

Educators who are trained by Kendore Learning know that our workshops and structured literacy, speech-to-print curricula meet well-defined educational standards. They are provided with the training, curricula, and instructional tools needed to teach the way students learn best.

Learn About Our Accreditation Process

Learn About Our Trainings

Learn About Kendore Teacher Certification

Our Language Makes Sense!

All too often, we hear people say that the English language doesn’t make sense and that spelling and word meaning “just have to be memorized.” This couldn’t be further from the truth! Our language does make sense…if you know the rules. For example, the word “have” follows the rule that English words should not end in <v>; therefore an <e> is added.

Let’s stop telling our students that our language is illogical, and let’s teach them the tools they need to easily break the code to read and spell thousands of words. Watch Executive Director Jennifer Hasser, M.Ed., explain more in our helpful video.

If you’d like to learn strategies that make structured literacy instruction more effective and memorable, attend our workshops. Our curricula and training program are accredited by the International Dyslexia Association (IDA) and the International Multisensory Language Education Council (IMSLEC).

R-Controlled Vowels

The letter <r> becomes very bossy when it follows a vowel! This letter affects the sound a vowel makes, giving a vowel followed by an <r> the name “r-controlled vowel.”

Tricky R-Controlled Vowels: <er>, <ur>, and <ir>

In the Kendore Kingdom, we call these three r-controlled vowels “growling r” vowels because, rather than letting the vowel say its sound or name, the <r> makes the vowel growl like a tiger.  “Growling r” vowels are vowel digraphs since they are two letters representing one sound.

Since <er>, <ur>, and <ir> all sound the same, spelling these digraphs can be tricky. It helps to know that <er> is the most common spelling of the /er/ sound (40%), <ur> is the second most common (26%), and <ir> is the least common (13%). When all else fails and the student does not know the proper spelling, knowing frequency will help students make an educated spelling guess.

<ar> and <or>

While <r> still controls the sound of /ar/ and /or/, these r-controlled vowels have unique sounds — making them easier for children to spell.

Did You Know?

When you hear the /er/ sound at the end of a word, and it represents the noun suffix <er> meaning “a person who,” it can be spelled multiple ways. If you hear /er/ at the end of a word that:

  • means “a person who,” spell it <er> (usually after an Old English base, as in teacher, painter, and leader).
  • means “a person who” and follows a <t>, spell it <or> (usually follow a Latin base, as in actor, sculptor, or raptor).

Attend our Kendore Word Play training to learn more strategies behind spelling the /er/ sound at the end of multisyllabic words!

Teaching R-Controlled Vowels

The Kendore Kingdom features a memorable story about the Growling ‘r’ tiger.  Poor Growling ‘r’ hasn’t learned his manners and he growls when introduced to new friends. Children remember the adventures of Growling ‘r’ tiger and translate this story into an understanding of r-controlled vowels. If you are a Kendore-trained teacher, be sure to refer to your manual for instructions on using Growling ‘r’ tiger to teach your students r-controlled vowels.

When writing/spelling a word with an r-controlled vowel, students will often incorrectly reverse the <r> and the vowel. In many words, reversing the two letters will still produce a real word (barn/bran, arm/ram). Dot and Jot (phoneme/grapheme mapping) can help students prevent these transpositions.

Tiger Trek Card Games

Our Tiger Trek card games are a fun, multisensory way to reinforce r-controlled vowels. The Tiger Trek deck can be used to play many games, including War, Rummy, Memory, Go Fish and more!

The deck contains both real and nonsense words in order to assess concept knowledge and discourage rote memorization. Students should be able to decode nonsense words such as ‘fram’ and ‘terk’ as well as real words.

Watch a demonstration of Tiger Trek games on our YouTube Channel!

Effective Strategies for Teaching High-Frequency Words

In general, high-frequency words are considered to be the most frequently occurring words in text. Students need to be able to recognize these words instantly in order to read fluently! Below, we outline our effective strategies for teaching high-frequency words.

High-frequency words must be learned in order for students to read fluently. Learn effective strategies for instruction.

High-Frequency Word Facts

  • Only 100 words account for approximately 50% of the words in print. These words include the, of, to, was, for and if.
  • The most frequent 300 words make up 65% of all printed text.
  • Students should know the first 300 words by the 3rd grade.

Phonetic vs. Non-Phonetic “Discovery” High-Frequency Words

Many of the most frequently occurring words in the English language are completely phonetic, allowing students to decode their meanings efficiently and with ease. For example, that, with and not are all phonetic words and can be decoded.

Other high-frequency words cannot be decoded or sounded-out. For example, of, was and some are non-phonetic words requiring memorization. We call these words “Discovery Words” since we must “keep digging” to discover which part of the word is not saying what we expect.

Some words must temporarily be treated as non-phonetic words requiring memorization until classroom instruction covers the rules they follow. For example, the word have follows the rule that English words should not end in ‘v’; therefore an ‘e’ is added. Most students will have to memorize have before that rule is introduced.

Most high-frequency word lists do not distinguish between phonetic and non-phonetic words. Students are required to memorize hundreds of high-frequency words — even those that follow standard, decodable patterns. This can be overwhelming for any student, but it can be particularly daunting for a struggling reader or a student with dyslexia.

At Kendore, we simplify things by dividing high-frequency words into two categories: phonetic and non-phonetic. This teaching strategy dramatically lessens required memorization because students who have learned phonics rules can decode phonetic words efficiently and with ease.

For non-phonetic “Discovery Words,” the color red is associated with memorization so that words can be easily discernable at the time of instruction. Students will come to know that they must memorize words that are written in red. Commonly confused words like ‘saw’ and ‘was’ are not as confusing when students see the phonetic pattern in ‘saw’ and learn ‘was’ as a “Discovery Word.”

Teaching Tools for Memorable High-Frequency Word Instruction

As students progress through our Kendore Kingdom curriculum, they will be introduced to words falling into the category of the 600 most frequent words found in print. We conduct Kendore Kingdom Part 1 and Part 2 trainings for schools, districts, and individuals virtually and onsite. To learn more, email Training@KendoreLearning.com or view our complete workshop calendar.

The Discovery Dig Card Deck makes high-frequency word instruction fun and memorable! The Discovery Dig features over 100 of the most frequent sight words, explanation and instruction cards, and additional cards you’ll need to play War, Grab, and more. Play your way to reading and spelling success!

With our Discovery Word Book Set, students investigate non-phonetic sight words to figure out where the word has a spelling they have yet to discover. Use this bound book of reproducible masters to reinforce “Discovery Words” — non-phonetic high-frequency words.

Students will enjoy learning about non-phonetic high-frequency words with the Discovery Word Quicksand Kendore Kit. This kit comes with 36 high-frequency words printed on double-sided cards. Choose the non-phonetic word you wish to reinforce, and your student will see, spell, say, and shape the word with red clay.

Use the Discovery Word Wall to display and reinforce the most frequent non-phonetic sight words after you have introduced them. These “Discovery Words” do not follow basic phonics rules, yet students need to have these words orthographically mapped for basic reading and sentence construction!