Your child sees the world differently. That is their strength.
Kindlexy gives parents evidence-based guidance and practical tools to support a child with dyslexia, dyscalculia, or hyperlexia, with confidence and without the overwhelm.
We know what you are going through. All we want is to be your guide on this path.
Who Is This For?
Has your child just been diagnosed?
Learn what dyslexia, dyscalculia, or hyperlexia means and what to expect on this journey.
Looking for ways to support your child?
Discover practical strategies to support your child at home and school.
Want to understand how your child learns?
Stay up to date with the latest research and developments.
Our Story
Every parent who first hears a word like "dyslexia," "dyscalculia," or "hyperlexia" faces the same overwhelming moment. Where do I start? Who can I trust? What does this mean for my child's future? We built Kindlexy because we have been in that moment ourselves.
We are not a clinic or a school. We are a team of parents, educators, and researchers who curate the best available knowledge and present it in a way that respects your time and your intelligence.
Learn more about usWe believe every parent deserves access to clear, evidence-based information - without having to become an expert themselves.
Evidence-Based
Every article and resource we publish is grounded in peer-reviewed research, clinical guidelines, and expert consultation. We cite our sources and update content as new evidence emerges.
Parent-Focused
We start with the questions parents actually ask, not with academic jargon. Our content is organized around real parenting moments and practical decisions.
Accessible Knowledge
Complex scientific findings translated into clear, actionable guidance. Dyslexia-friendly design throughout, because accessibility is not an afterthought.
Free Tools for Easier Reading
Reading Tool
FreeRead texts in a dyslexia-friendly environment with special fonts, backgrounds, and line tracking.
Worksheet Generator
FreeTurn any text into a printable practice sheet. Split by words or syllables and print a clean grid.
Writing Paper
FreeGenerate printable writing paper tuned for dyslexia and dysgraphia. Lined, grid, dot, blank, and isometric. Export as PDF, SVG, or PNG.
Text-to-Speech
FreePaste any text and have it read aloud with adjustable speed and voice.
Phonetic Awareness Games
FreeFun syllable and sound recognition exercises designed to build foundational reading skills.
Reading Chart
FreeTrack daily reading sessions, build a streak, and print or export your log.
Tricky Words
FreeKeep a personal list of the words your child finds hard and track which ones are mastered.
Reward Chart
FreeMake a printable star chart to celebrate reading effort and keep motivation up.
School Meeting Prep
FreeGet ready for a school meeting: notes, questions to ask, and accommodations to request.
Observation Notes
FreeJot down what you notice over time and turn it into a summary to share with a specialist.
Progress Report
FreeTurn your tracking into a simple weekly or monthly summary you can print or share.
Comprehension Bridge
FreeTurn anything your child reads into simple who, what, where, and why questions, building the bridge from decoding to real understanding.
Number Line
FreeAn interactive and printable number line that turns adding and subtracting into visual jumps, building number sense.
Math Worksheet Generator
FreePrintable math practice with plenty of space, few questions per page, and one operation at a time, tuned for dyscalculia.
Clock & Money
FreeInteractive and printable practice for telling time and counting money, the everyday math that dyscalculia makes hard.
Visual Schedule
FreeA printable picture-based daily routine for children who need predictability, common with autism and hyperlexia.
Multiplication Grid
FreeShows times tables as a colorful visual pattern instead of facts to memorize, easing the hardest part of dyscalculia.
Number Writing Paper
FreeWriting Paper's number version: guide lines for forming digits, for children who reverse or struggle to write numbers.
Social Story Maker
FreeTurns a social situation into a simple picture story so a child knows what to expect, a common support for autism and hyperlexia.
Idiom Explainer
FreeShows idioms and figures of speech with both their literal and real meaning, for children who take language literally, common with hyperlexia.
Ten-Frame
FreeShows quantities as filled and empty squares in a ten-frame, building the instant number sense that dyscalculia makes hard.
Number Bonds
FreeBreaks a number into parts and shows the part, part, whole relationship, so children see how numbers come together instead of memorizing facts.
Place Value
FreeShows numbers as blocks of ones, tens, and hundreds, making the idea of place value something a child can see and move.
Visual Timer
FreeTurns time into a shrinking colored shape so a child can see how much is left, gentle support for the time blindness common with autism and ADHD.
First-Then Board
FreeA simple two step board, first this, then that, that makes transitions predictable for children who need to know what comes next.
Emotion Chart
FreeA visual chart of feelings that helps a child name what they feel, a calm first step for children who find emotions hard to read or describe.
Choice Board
FreeLays out a few clear picture choices so a child can pick without feeling overwhelmed, turning a hard moment into a simple decision.
Rapid Naming Cards
FreePractice naming rows of colors, objects, and letters quickly, the naming speed skill closely linked to fluent reading in dyslexia.
Letter Reversal Practice (b d p q)
FreeTargeted practice for the letters children flip most often, b, d, p, and q, with memory cues, tracing, and printable sheets.
Spelling Practice (Look-Cover-Write-Check)
FreeA structured, multisensory spelling routine built from your own word list, look, cover, write, then check, with printable sheets.
Sight Word Flashcards
FreePrintable flashcards built from high-frequency sight words, the words that are hard to sound out and best learned by sight.
Word Builder (Blending & Segmenting)
FreeBuild short words from letter tiles by blending sounds together, then break them back apart, active decoding practice with printable CVC word cards.
Fraction Visualizer
FreeSee a fraction as part of a whole with pies and bars, then compare fractions side by side, a concrete, visual way to make fractions click.
Skip Counting
FreeCount by twos, fives, and tens along a number line, with hops that show the pattern, so counting in groups starts to feel natural.
Time & Calendar Sense
FreeBuild a feel for time and the calendar, how long things take, yesterday-today-tomorrow, and putting the days in order.
Inference Practice
FreeGentle practice reading between the lines, why a character felt that way, what might happen next, the deeper meaning beyond the literal words.
Vocabulary in Context
FreeGentle practice with words that have more than one meaning, finding what a word means from the sentence around it, not just the dictionary.
Story Sequencing
FreePut the events of a story in order, beginning, middle and end, then retell it in your own words, a calm way to build narrative understanding.
Conversation Practice
FreeFriendly practice for everyday talk, what you might say in a situation and how turn-taking works, gentle scenarios for social language.
Customizable Reading Environment
Coming SoonPersonalize font, color, and spacing settings to create your ideal reading experience.
Word Problem Helper
Coming SoonBreak a math word problem into clear steps, what is being asked, which numbers matter, which operation, and a picture to draw, so the words stop getting in the way.
Latest Articles
View all articles →
Parent GuideDyslexia and Playing an Instrument: Why Music Often Feels Easier Than the Page
Many children with dyslexia freeze over reading but come alive at an instrument. Here is what the brain science suggests, what music can offer, and how to support it without adding pressure.
AwarenessReading Is a Language Skill, Not Just Sounding Out Letters
If your child is bright in conversation but stuck on the page, this is why. Reading is built on spoken language, and understanding that changes how you help, especially with dyslexia.
AwarenessWhat Causes Dyscalculia, and What Actually Helps
Dyscalculia is not caused by laziness, screens or anything you did wrong. Here is what we know about where it comes from, and the support that genuinely makes a difference at home and at school.
Parent GuideThe Other Child: Siblings of a Dyslexic Kid
When one child needs extra reading help every evening, the sibling quietly carries something too. A warm guide to keeping the balance without guilt.















































