Walk into any kindergarten and you’ll find two camps: teachers who drill sight word flashcards and teachers who insist on pure phonics. Parents get caught in the middle. The short answer is you need both — but the order and the proportion matter a lot.
What are sight words?
Sight words (also called high-frequency words or Dolch words) are words children are expected to recognize instantly — without sounding out. Examples: the, said, was, have, they, could, would, because.
The theory: these words appear so often that reading fluency depends on automatic recognition. If a child has to decode “the” every time, reading feels like slogging through mud.
What is phonics?
Phonics teaches the relationship between letters (graphemes) and sounds (phonemes). It gives children a system— a set of rules that let them decode any new word, not just the ones they’ve memorized.
Example: a child who knows the rule “ch says /ch/” can read chip, chat, chin, beach, lunch, church— words they’ve never seen before.
The science of reading verdict
Decades of reading research (the National Reading Panel, the Australian National Inquiry into the Teaching of Literacy, England’s Rose Review) all point the same direction: systematic phonics instruction is the foundation. Memorizing sight words alone doesn’t give children a strategy for new words — it just gives them a small vocabulary of memorized shapes.
But the research also shows most of the classic “sight words” are actually phonetically regular once you know the rules. The word “said” looks irregular until you know that ai in this context is an older spelling of /ɛ/. “Was” follows the rule that w changes the following vowel sound.
Modern phonics programs call these “tricky words” and teach the phonetically regular part while flagging the one irregular bit — rather than treating the whole word as a memory task.
When to introduce sight words
- Phase 1 (pre-reading): Focus entirely on phonological awareness — rhyme, alliteration, syllable clapping. No print yet.
- Phase 2 (first 6 letter sounds): Introduce the first handful of tricky words alongside phonics — typically I, the, to, no, go.These can’t be decoded with Phase 2 knowledge alone.
- Phase 3 onward: Expand tricky words in parallel with phonics rules. Each new phase adds 5–15 tricky words.
The ratio: for every tricky word introduced, you should have 10–15 new decodable words. Phonics is the engine; sight words are the oil.
4 reasons pure sight-word drilling backfires
- Guessing from shape.Kids learn to guess from the word’s length and first letter. “Where” and “were” look identical at a glance.
- Vocabulary ceiling.English has 171,000+ words. You can’t memorize them all. Phonics unlocks the long tail.
- Reading slows at age 7–8. Kids who relied on memory hit a wall when texts introduce new vocabulary. Phonics-first kids keep accelerating.
- Harder to remediate. A child trained to guess often resists the slower, sounding-out work when asked to switch.
The practical parent approach
Teach phonics systematically (see the s-a-t-p-i-n order). As each new letter set is introduced, note which common words aren’tdecodable yet — those are your first “tricky words.” Drill them with flashcards for instant recall, but explain the phonics of as many as you can rather than treating them as pure memory.
Play Sound Match for phonics decoding and use the phoneme map to check which sounds your child has mastered. Once the phonics base is strong, sight word fluency follows naturally.