
TEACH
How Early Reading Skills Develop (Ages 3–5)
The Stages of Early Literacy
- Pictures – noticing and naming the world
- Letters and sounds – connecting symbols to meaning
- Words – combining letters to form meaning
- Text – reading simple sentences and stories
- Independence – building confidence and comprehension
Each stage builds on the one before it.
Moving too quickly can make learning harder, while steady, consistent practice helps skills stick.
If you're wondering where to begin, you can start with simple skills like colors and shapes before moving into letters and sounds.
Why the Order Matters
Each skill builds on the one before it.…you can start with simple skills like colors and shapes.
When children learn in the right sequence, they feel more confident and less overwhelmed.
Skipping ahead too quickly can make learning harder instead of easier.
What This Looks Like in Everyday Learning
You don’t need long lessons.
Short, playful moments throughout the day help children build these skills naturally.
Consistency matters more than time.
Little Steps to Literacy
Your young child needs some help to navigate their literacy journey. Here are some ways you can be there for them each step of the way.
Pictures
'Reading' pictures is one of the earliest stages of literacy development.
Letters & Sounds
Recognizing each alphabet letter and its’ sounds is a foundational stage in your child's literacy development.
Words
This is where your child will learn about putting letters together to make meaning. There are lots of rules, so it's important to keep things short and sweet.
Text
Yay! Your child recognizes a lot of simple words and is sounding longer words out. But that doesn't mean they're ready to travel through books on their own yet.
Independence
Independent readers and writers still need support once in a while. Here's why...
Little Steps. Big Progress.
Pictures
Letters & Sounds
Words
Text
Independence


