Award-Winning Elementary Reading and Phonics
Tutors
Who needs tutoring?
FEATURED BY
TUTORS FROM
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
Award-Winning Elementary Reading and Phonics Tutors

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Sheena
Early readers need someone who can make phonemic awareness feel like a game rather than a chore — blending sounds, decoding unfamiliar words, building sight-word fluency. Sheena started tutoring younger students at Kumon and developed a knack for keeping kids engaged through the repetition that phon...
Cornell University
Masters in Business Administration, Artificial Intelligence
Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Bachelor of Science, Computer Science

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Nicholas
Phonics instruction works best when it's systematic and joyful at the same time — blending sounds into words, segmenting words back into sounds, and building the automaticity that turns decoding into real reading. Nicholas has guided early readers through this progression in small-group settings, co...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, English

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Mona
Blending consonant clusters, recognizing sight words, and sounding out vowel teams are the building blocks that turn a hesitant reader into a confident one. Mona pairs systematic phonics drills with actual storybook reading so children practice decoding in context. Her background teaching across age...
Alexandria university
Master of Science, Epidemiology
Alexandria university
Bachelor of Science, Pharmaceutical Sciences

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Grace
Early readers need someone who can make the leap from sounding out C-A-T to reading a full sentence feel exciting rather than exhausting. Grace teaches phonemic awareness and decoding through structured phonics routines — blending drills, sight-word practice, and short decodable readers — paced to e...
University
Bachelor's

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Maansi
For early readers still working on sounding out words, Maansi breaks phonics into manageable chunks — blending consonant clusters, recognizing long and short vowel patterns, and building sight-word fluency through repetition that doesn't feel tedious. She pairs decoding drills with simple read-aloud...
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Bachelor of Science, Computer Science

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Amos
Phonemic awareness, letter-sound correspondence, and blending are the building blocks that everything else in reading depends on. Amos brings patience and creativity to these foundational skills, using rhythm and repetition — tools he knows well from his music performance background — to help early ...
The Juilliard School
Master of Arts, Music Performance
Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Brianna
Teaching young children to read requires knowing exactly where a student is in the progression from letter recognition to blending to fluent decoding — and Brianna assesses and teaches at each of these stages every single day. Her full-time role as a literacy interventionist gives her a deep toolkit...
Grand Canyon University
Bachelor of Education, Elementary School Teaching

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Heather
Early readers need someone who can tell the difference between a child who's guessing from picture clues and one who's genuinely decoding — and then adjust the lesson on the spot. Heather's Childhood Education certification and tenured classroom experience mean she's diagnosed hundreds of young read...
Adelphi University
Master of Arts Teaching, Elementary School Teaching
Siena College
Bachelor of Science, Marketing

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Phonics is the engine behind early literacy, and the difference between a child who struggles and one who takes off often comes down to how systematically letter-sound relationships are taught. Esther walks young readers through blending, segmenting, and sight-word recognition at a pace that builds ...
University
Bachelor's

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Natasha
Teaching phonics effectively means understanding how sounds map to letters — and how young readers internalize those patterns differently. Natasha's NYU master's in TESOL gave her deep training in phonemic awareness, decoding strategies, and building fluency, skills she's applied across elementary c...
New York University
Master of Arts Teaching, Teaching English as a Second Language (ESL)
Tufts University
Bachelor in Arts, Asian Studies
Top 20 English Subjects
Meet Our Expert Tutors
Connect with highly-rated educators ready to help you succeed.
Allison
Middle School Math Tutor • +29 Subjects
Hobbies: books, music, hiking, art, reading, writing
Ayesha
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +25 Subjects
I am extremely proficient in math subjects including geometry, algebra, pre-calculus - I've been in AP classes/ Honors classes my entire life and have excelled most in math.
Camille
Middle School Math Tutor • +17 Subjects
I am a graduate of Brown University with a Bachelors Degree in Biology and Yale University with a Masters in Public Health. I also hold a Level 5 certification in TEFL. I am passionate about working with children and students of all ages to assist them in achieving their highest potential. My favorite subjects to teach are phonics, reading, science and math. My approach is to meet the students where they are at in their studies and make their learning experience fun, interactive, engaging and exciting. Outside of teaching, I enjoy traveling around the world, rowing, spending time with family and friends and gourmet cooking,
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Many elementary readers struggle with consonant blends (like 'str' or 'bl'), digraphs (such as 'ch', 'sh', 'th'), and vowel patterns—especially long vowel sounds and r-controlled vowels. Students often confuse similar letter combinations or have difficulty applying phonetic rules consistently across different words. A tutor can identify exactly where a student's decoding breaks down and use targeted, multisensory approaches to build automaticity with these tricky patterns.
When students decode words slowly or inaccurately, they use up mental energy on sounding out letters rather than understanding meaning. Fluency—reading at an appropriate pace with proper expression—frees up cognitive resources for comprehension. A tutor helps build fluency through repeated exposure to decodable texts, sight word practice, and guided oral reading, which directly improves a student's ability to understand and retain what they read.
Irregular words like 'the,' 'said,' 'of,' and 'was' don't follow standard phonetic patterns, so students can't decode them by applying phonics rules alone. These high-frequency words must be learned by sight to build reading fluency—students encounter them constantly in texts. A tutor uses spaced repetition and engaging practice activities to help students automatize sight words so they can focus on decoding the phonetically regular words around them.
Look for improvements in decoding unfamiliar words, increased reading speed without sacrificing accuracy, and growing confidence with multi-syllabic words. A tutor will track progress through running records, phonemic awareness assessments, and decoding fluency checks—concrete measures that show which phonetic patterns a student has mastered and where additional support is needed. Regular progress monitoring helps adjust instruction to keep your child challenged but not frustrated.
Phonemic awareness is the ability to hear and manipulate individual sounds (phonemes) in words—like recognizing that 'cat' has three sounds or that 'bat' and 'cat' rhyme. Phonics is the connection between those sounds and their written letter symbols. Both are essential: students need strong phonemic awareness before phonics instruction is effective. A tutor assesses both skills and may use activities like sound sequencing, blending, and segmentation to build the foundation phonics requires.
Struggling readers often have gaps in foundational phonetic knowledge that compound over time. A tutor uses diagnostic assessment to pinpoint exactly which phonics skills are missing, then provides intensive, systematic instruction with immediate feedback and plenty of practice with decodable texts. This personalized approach accelerates progress because instruction targets the specific gaps holding a student back, rather than moving through a generic curriculum at a pace that doesn't match their needs.
Multisensory techniques engage multiple learning pathways—sight, sound, touch, and movement—to reinforce letter-sound connections. Examples include tracing letters while saying sounds, using textured letter tiles, or acting out phonetic patterns. Research shows these approaches are particularly effective for students with dyslexia or phonological processing difficulties because they create stronger neural pathways for sound-symbol associations. A tutor trained in multisensory methods can adapt techniques to match how your child learns best.
Ask your tutor for specific decodable books and word lists matched to the phonics skills being taught—reading these together reinforces what your child is learning in sessions. Practice brief, playful activities like sound hunts (finding words that start with a target sound) or making rhyming lists. Avoid correcting your child harshly; instead, model correct pronunciation and celebrate effort. Your tutor can provide a home practice plan that takes just 10-15 minutes daily and complements their personalized instruction.
Connect with Elementary Reading and Phonics Tutors
Get matched with expert tutors in your subject


