Homeschooling with Dyslexia — A Curriculum That Teaches to Your Child's Strengths
Multimodal learning, flexible reading levels, and no timed reading drills — built for dyslexic learners.

LittleLit gives dyslexic learners a homeschool curriculum that does not punish how their brain works. Audio content, visual learning, flexible Lexile-based reading levels, multiple ways to respond, and parent insights that track real progress — all in one platform. No timed tests. No format that makes reading feel like failure.
A Homeschool Curriculum Built for Dyslexic Learners — Not Against Them

Set up your child's dyslexia-friendly learning plan in 5 to 10 minutes.
Finding a homeschool curriculum that works for a dyslexic child means finding one that does not make reading feel like the measure of everything. With LittleLit it is not. Audio content, visual learning, Lexile-based reading levels, multiple response formats, gap lessons, and progress tracking built for dyslexic learners are already structured for your child.
No more dreading the reading lesson.
LittleLit separates reading skill-building from subject-matter learning — so a dyslexic child can access science, history, and math content at their level while building reading skills at their own pace.
What Does a Good Homeschool Curriculum for Dyslexia Look Like?
Parents of dyslexic children look for audio support, flexible reading levels, multimodal instruction, and a curriculum that does not make reading ability the gatekeeper to all other learning. LittleLit is built around all of it.

Audio and Visual Content
Every lesson includes audio and visual options — so dyslexic learners can access content through listening and seeing, not just reading dense text on a screen.
Lexile-Based Reading Levels
Reading practice is calibrated to your child's actual reading level — so they are always building skills at the right challenge, not struggling through text that is too far above them.
Multiple Response Formats
Students can respond verbally, visually, or in writing — so dyslexic learners can show what they actually know without being limited by written output alone.
Subject Learning Separate from Reading Level
A dyslexic child who reads at a third grade level can access fifth grade science and history content through audio and visual formats — learning does not stop while reading catches up.
How LittleLit AI Builds Your Dyslexia Homeschool Curriculum
LittleLit does not treat dyslexia as a deficit to overcome. It builds a learning path that meets your child where they are — supporting reading growth while keeping all other learning moving forward.
Tell LittleLit about your child's reading level, learning style, and any IEP or support goals. The platform adapts from day one.
Step 1: Set Up Your Child's Reading and Learning Profile
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Step 2: Get Content Your Child Can Actually Access
LittleLit delivers subject content through audio, visual, and text formats — so your dyslexic child can learn science, math, history, and more without reading being a barrier.
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Step 3: Build Reading Skills at the Right Pace
Daily Lexile-based reading practice builds reading skills at your child's actual level — structured and progressive, without timed drills or formats that create shame.
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Step 4: Track Reading Growth and Subject Progress Separately
Parents see reading level progress and subject-matter learning tracked independently — so you always know where your child is growing and where they need more support.
How LittleLit Adapts to Every Dyslexic Learner
Personalized Features for Reading Differences
Dyslexia looks different in every child. LittleLit adapts to your child's specific reading level, learning strengths, response preferences, and pace — not a generic dyslexia accommodation checklist.
Audio-First Content Options
Lessons can be listened to, not just read. Dyslexic learners access subject content through audio narration and visual supports — keeping curiosity and learning moving even when reading is hard.
Flexible Lexile-Based Reading Practice
Daily reading practice is matched to your child's Lexile level — building phonics, decoding, vocabulary, and comprehension progressively without the frustration of being pushed too fast.
Asynchronous Subject and Reading Levels
Your child's reading level and their subject-matter grade level do not have to match. LittleLit supports different levels simultaneously — so a strong thinker with a reading difference can keep learning at their cognitive level.
Gap Lessons for Reading Foundations
LittleLit identifies specific reading foundation gaps — phonics patterns, decoding skills, vocabulary — and provides targeted practice to fill them without repeating content your child has already mastered.
IEP Reading Goal Tracking
Parents can use LittleLit's reading progress data to track against IEP reading goals — with Lexile-level progression, daily completion, and reading accuracy patterns visible in the parent dashboard.
Choice Boards and Flexible Output
Dyslexic learners choose how to respond — orally, visually, or in writing. No single format required. What matters is demonstrating understanding, not the format it comes in.
A Daily Learning Structure That Does Not Make Dyslexia the Obstacle
LittleLit gives dyslexic learners a structured daily plan where reading practice is built in and subject learning continues — so your child never feels stuck waiting for their reading to catch up.
Parents can adjust the plan, shift reading practice timing, and layer in additional phonics or literacy support without disrupting the rest of the learning day.
Placement, Personalization and Progress Tracking for Dyslexic Learners
LittleLit helps your dyslexic child start at exactly the right reading level, build skills systematically, and access all subject learning — with progress tracking that shows you the full picture, not just the reading score.
Start at the right reading level
Placement identifies your child's actual Lexile level — so reading practice starts where they are, not where they are supposed to be.
Keep subject learning moving
Audio and visual content means your child's science, math, and history learning does not wait for reading to catch up.
Fill reading foundation gaps
LittleLit identifies and targets specific phonics and decoding gaps — giving your child the systematic reading foundation they need to grow.
Track reading growth over time
Parents see Lexile-level progress, reading accuracy patterns, and subject-level learning — separately and together — in one clear dashboard.
More than a Reading Program — A Complete Dyslexia-Aware Learning System
Most dyslexia homeschool resources focus on reading remediation alone. LittleLit gives dyslexic families a complete learning system — audio and visual content access, Lexile-based reading practice, flexible response formats, gap support, and progress tracking — so your child's whole education keeps moving forward.
Audio and visual content in every subject — reading not required to access learning.
Lexile-based reading practice built in at the right level.
Subject and reading levels tracked independently.
Multiple response formats — verbal, visual, written.
Reading gap support and IEP-ready progress tracking.

Who Is LittleLit's Dyslexia Curriculum Best For?
LittleLit is built for families of dyslexic learners who want their child's reading difference to stop being the ceiling on everything else they can learn and achieve.

Children Diagnosed with Dyslexia
Families Who Left School Because Reading Support Was Not Enough
Children with IEPs Focused on Reading and Language Goals
Twice-Exceptional (2e) Learners with Dyslexia
Parents Who Need Flexible, Multimodal Curriculum
Families Using ESA or School Choice Funds

Get Started with a Dyslexia-Friendly Homeschool Curriculum Today
Give your child a learning experience that works with how their brain reads — audio content, Lexile-based reading practice, flexible response options, gap support, and parent insights in one platform.