Dyslexia Activities & Games | Multisensory Reading Tools
Learn more about this collection
Dyslexia doesn’t limit potential; it invites a more creative approach to teaching and learning. This collection brings together Dr. Erica Warren’s most loved, research-informed resources for dyslexic students and other struggling readers. Inside, you’ll find multisensory games, step-by-step lessons, and printable activities that transform practice into play while strengthening the underlying skills that support reading success.
Designed for educational therapists, learning specialists, teachers, tutors, and parents, these materials complement Orton-Gillingham and other structured literacy approaches. Each resource targets core areas, phonemic awareness, phonics, syllable types, morphology, working memory, and language processing, so learners build skills systematically while staying motivated and engaged.
Use these tools across settings: as warm-ups in therapy, stations in classrooms, targeted interventions, or home practice. Clear directions, differentiated levels, and colorful visuals make implementation easy and progress visible. Support your students with materials that honor how they learn, through movement, imagery, pattern, and joyful repetition.
Great for:
- Dyslexia, dysgraphia, and language-based learning differences
- 1:1 sessions, small groups, learning centers, or home practice
- Grades K–12 (with adaptable entry points for diverse learners)
What you’ll find:
- Multisensory phonics and syllable-type games
- Activities for decoding, fluency, comprehension, and vocabulary
- Visual processing, working memory, and executive function support
- Ready-to-print pages, clear instructions, and immediate engagement
- Help every learner experience wins with resources that make literacy accessible, memorable, and fun.

Working Memory Bundle | Beginner & Intermediate Skill Builders

Following Directions Bundle | Primary, Beginner & Intermediate
What Does Dyslexia Mean?
Dyslexia is a reading/processing disability that impacts basic reading skills, writing skills, spelling skills and memory recall.
How to Test for Dyslexia:
We offer an affordable dyslexia screener or test that can help you to determine the likelihood of having dyslexia. If you would like to learn more and get a copy, CLICK HERE or on the image.
What are the Symptoms of Dyslexia?
- letter and world reversals
- decoding words
- Reading aloud
- rhyming words
- telling directions
- dysnomia or recalling names or words
- spelling
- words problems in math.
- jokes, punchlines, sarcasm and inferences
- following a series of written or aural directions
- mispronouncing words
What are the 3 most Common Types of Dyslexia?
How Can Games and Fun Activities Help Students with Dyslexia?
Because many struggling learners have negative associations with reading, making the learning process fun can help to rekindle a joy for learning. Using games in the learning process, helps to motivate kids too and because they are having fun, lessons also become joyful and memorable. Multisensory and creative activities can also spark the interest of struggling learners! If you are interested in learning more about our learning games, CLICK HERE.