Multisensory Instruction & Teaching - Math, Reading & More

Experience the Power of Multisensory Learning

Dr. Erica Warren’s multisensory lessons combine visual, auditory, tactile, and kinesthetic techniques as well as other ways of processing to make learning active, memorable, and fun. By engaging multiple senses, students build deeper understanding and stronger connections across academic concepts, improving both retention and comprehension.

Build Skills and Boost Confidence

Through a combination of hands-on activities, interactive games, and creative exercises, these lessons strengthen attention, working memory, language processing, and problem-solving skills. Students not only learn more effectively but also develop confidence and motivation that extends beyond the classroom.

Covering a Full Range of Academic Subjects

Good Sensory Learning offers multisensory resources across reading, writing, and math, as well as tools that target executive functioning, study strategies, and cognitive skill development. Each publication is designed to meet students where they are—whether they’re in kindergarten or college—and help them grow at their own pace.

Why Multisensory Teaching Works

Research shows that multisensory instruction helps the brain process information more efficiently, making it an ideal approach for students with dyslexia, ADHD, and other learning differences. Dr. Warren’s lessons bring this approach to life, giving educators and parents easy-to-use materials that create lasting results.

Transform the Learning Experience

Whether you’re a teacher, therapist, parent, or learning specialist, these resources make instruction engaging and effective. The combination of evidence-based strategies and playful practice helps students develop a love for learning while mastering foundational academic skills.

 


What is Multisensory Instruction?

Multisensory instruction or teaching is an approach that engages learners by implementing lessons that stimulate diverse sensory inputs and activates many of the 12 ways of learning.  

What are the 12 Ways of learning?

The 12 Ways of Learning looks at 12 diverse ways students encode lessons and experiences. It includes the 4 popular sensory inputs of visual, auditory, tactile and kinesthetic, and also incorporates 8 other ways of processing and organizing information for optimal learning. These include:

  • sequential processing (placing information in a series or sequence)
  • simultaneous processing (categorizing information)
  • verbal processing (verbalizing ideas aloud)
  • Interactive processing (working in the company of others)
  • Logical reflective processing (thinking about or reflecting about what is learned)
  • Indirect experience processing (learning through demonstrations)
  • Direct experience processing (learning in an educational environment such as at the zoo)
  • Rhythmic melodic processing (learning to a rhythm, beat or melody)

If you would like to learn more about how to assess your students to uncover their best ways of learning, CLICK HERE.

Why is Multisensory Instruction Beneficial?

Because each student has their own preferences on how they learn best, multisensory instruction can assure that students have a better chance of learning new content quickly and efficiently.  In addition, this approach to learning is better at grabbing the attention of the learner because lessons use multiple sensory inputs as well as ways to organize and process the information.