Reading isn't one skill. It's four, and most kids who struggle aren't behind, they're stuck on a stage. In ninety minutes you'll learn to see all four, recognize where your child is, and walk away ready to move them forward.
Reading is four skills, stacked. Sounds, letters, blending, comprehension. Most kids who struggle aren't struggling with reading. They're struggling with one specific stage, and everything above it can't load until that one is solid.
School doesn't have time to figure out which stage. Tutors guess. Apps work around the problem. The parents who get this right are the ones who learn to see what's actually happening and meet their child exactly where they are.
That's what this workshop teaches you to do, in one focused session.
"Reading is your child's first strategic move in a long-term academic plan. The earlier you understand how it actually works, the further ahead she gets."
We move through each stage in order so you understand how reading actually develops, what to look for at each level, and what to do when your child gets stuck.
Knowing what to do is one thing. Having the tools in your hand is another. Every parent who chooses the $79 tier gets a Benjamin Academy literacy kit shipped to their door before the workshop, so by the time the session ends, you're set up to begin that night.
The daily guide is a one-pager that lives on your fridge. Ten minutes, every day. That's the whole practice.
Want to build the kit yourself? We also publish a complete sourcing guide on the site with every item linked on Amazon.
You'll be able to identify which of the four stages your child is on, and what's underneath the struggle if there is one.
Concrete activities that take ten to fifteen minutes a day. Built for parents with jobs, other kids, and dinner to make.
You'll know what to ask for in parent-teacher conferences and how to evaluate whether what your child is getting is actually working.
Small enough to be real. Structured enough to be useful. Built for busy parents who want results, not just information.
Seats are limited so the room stays small enough for real questions and real answers.