Barton tutoring made all the difference for my son
If the early levels of the Barton System are hard for your child, stick with it. This parent explains why.
Barton tutoring has made all the difference for my son. He had spent all of first grade working on 3 letter words, but he still could not consistently read them correctly.
He started Barton tutoring (three times per week) in second grade — very aware that he was just not able to learn reading and writing like the other children.
The beginning levels of Barton were very challenging for him. His tutor had to play lots of games mixed in with the lessons. He magically always seemed to win those games, which kept his self esteem high enough to keep working on the reading skills that were so difficult for him.
As he progressed, he realized this was a system of learning that made sense to him.
When he was in Level 5, he would finally read simple chapter books on his own. Somewhere between Levels 5 and 7, his fluency improved tremendously and he was reading at the speed of a typical student. Since then, his confidence has been growing steadily as he’s worked his way through the end of Level 10.
He is now 11 years old, and on his Stanford Achievement Test at the end of 5th grade, he tested as reading on a post high school level.
As a parent, I encourage other parents to make tutoring a priority, even when schedules are tight and there are other demands for our time and resources. I faced many days of my child complaining or having melt downs or stomach aches to avoid going to school or tutoring. In the end, I bribed him with screen time for every completed lesson and gifts for completing every level.
I also spent a lot of time educating teachers and advocating for accommodations to allow my son to do work orally, not read uncontrolled text in the early levels, not be taught to read and write in Spanish, and to be allowed to type when other kids were handwriting.
In the end, it was all worth it — and I would do it over again in a heartbeat.
My son is happy and confident. Handwriting and spelling are still challenges, but he manages with typing and spellcheck.
The biggest difference is he is no longer held back by his dyslexia. He can now read and write at the level of his intelligence.
Susan, thank you a thousand times for all your dedication to kids with dyslexia.
Michelle Cudzinovic, parent
Sunnyvale, CA
I thought he would never read a menu
With the right type of tutoring, even children with severe dyslexia can succeed, as this mother shared:
My son and daughter completed Level 10 of the Barton System a few months ago, and I want to thank you for the many ways you have helped our family.
My children were diagnosed with dyslexia and ADHD right before 2nd grade. Even though we had a dyslexia diagnosis on paper from an excellent children’s hospital, our public school district claimed they were not legally obligated to recognize dyslexia as a learning problem. Therefore, they were not obligated to provide services.
So we decided to homeschool using the Barton System.
Just after he was diagnosed, I found my son sitting on the floor, staring at an open book, crying. I asked him what was wrong. He said books and words didn’t make sense to him, and he just wanted to be able to read like everyone else.
Frankly, there were times when I didn’t think he would ever read well enough to order from restaurant menus.
He now reads Sherlock Holmes books for pleasure. He can do all his high school academic reading on his own, and he competently writes his own essays with minor accommodations.
My daughter is doing equally well. She has no problem reading her high school textbooks and absolutely LOVES to read. She has now read hundreds of books of her choosing for enjoyment. She also loves creative writing and writes her high school essays with minimal support.
As parents who knew absolutely nothing about dyslexia before our children were diagnosed, the support through your website, videos, google tutor group, email and by phone has been invaluable.
I don’t know where we would be, academically or emotionally, if the Barton System did not exist.
So thank you for being an expert on dyslexia and sharing your knowledge with so many who need it.
Michelle Raine, parent
Aurora, CO










