Reversing Reversals | Strengthen Core Reading Skills
Learn more about this collection

The Reversing Reversals Series is one of several powerful resources featured in this collection, each designed by Dr. Erica Warren to strengthen the foundational skills required for fluent reading and learning success. These engaging, multisensory digital downloads integrate seamlessly with any reading or Orton-Gillingham-based–based program, providing fun and effective ways to support struggling readers.
The Reversing Reversals materials focus on building core cognitive skills such as visual discrimination, directionality, spatial awareness, and tracking—abilities that are critical for accurate symbol recognition, decoding, and comprehension. Later workbooks in the series extend these gains by targeting visual processing, attention, and working memory through game-like, confidence-building exercises.
Also included in this collection are other complementary activities and publications that enhance core reading development, including tools that focus on phonemic awareness, visual memory, processing speed, and focus. Together, these resources offer a well-rounded, evidence-informed approach to helping students see, think, and read with clarity and confidence.
Perfect for educational therapists, reading specialists, teachers, and parents, this collection empowers struggling and dyslexic learners to build lasting academic foundations through engaging, multisensory learning.
Strategies for Letter Reversals:
Letter reversals worksheets can be used to illustrate multisensory strategies, provide fun game-like activities that exercise directionality, right and left discrimination as well as word and letter formation.
Visual Discrimination and Directionality Activities
Visual Discrimination and Directionality Activities Is a digital download that is also usable on a computer or iPad. It was created for students with weak visual discrimination (e.g., discriminating between letters, numbers and symbols that look similar) and directionality skills (letter and word reversals), so proficiency can be accomplished while students are having fun.
Learn About of the Publications in the Reversing Reversal Series:
Reversing Reversal Primary:
Fun activities strengthen and improve the core skills needed for reading and writing. All the activities and games utilize animal characters. Areas of cognition addressed: visual memory, auditory memory, sequential memory, visual reasoning, auditory reasoning, visual discrimination, receptive language, listening skills, mental flexibility, attention, attention to details, visual tracking, spatial skills and directionality.
Animal tracking games
Visual - sequential memory activities
Auditory memory exercises
Spatial memory activities
Following directions games
Reversing Reversals Beginners:
Enjoyable exercises help and develop letter, number and symbol recognition. The product was created to exercise the following cognitive processing operations: visual discrimination, sequential processing, tracking, abstract reasoning, attention, pattern recognition, and directionality.
Coloring activities for common reversals
Tracking activities for consonant and vowel discrimination and common Mazes that strengthen letter, number and symbol recognition
Recognizing sequential and pattern activities
Utilizing strategies
Reversing Reversals:
Entertaining workbook pages improve letter, number and symbol recognition. The publication also works on left-right discrimination and cardinal directions. Areas of cognition practiced include visual discrimination, sequential processing, tracking, abstract reasoning, attenti
on, pattern recognition, and directionality.
Activities for tracking vowel and consonant discrimination and common reversals
Coloring exercises for common reversals
Mazes that strengthen letter and number discrimination
Exercises for left/right and cardinal direction recognition
Game suggestions
Strategies for students
Reversing Reversals 2:
Game-like activities grow and further develop letter, number, and symbol identification. The publication offers additional pages that work on direction discrimination. Cognitive processing domains include: visual discrimination, sequential processing, tracking, abstract reasoning, attention, pattern recognition, and directionality.
Sorting activities for common reversals
Tracking exercises for letter, number and symbol reversals
Mazes that strengthen letter and number discrimination
Hidden image activities that stimulate symbol discrimination
Directionality games
Student strategies