
Dyslexia Classroom Accommodations: A Teacher Guide with 10 Practical Supports
A practical, classroom-ready list of dyslexia accommodations - what they look like in daily teaching, how they differ from modifications, and how to deliver them without singling out a single student.
Effective dyslexia classroom accommodations remove barriers to reading, writing, and demonstrating knowledge - without lowering the bar for what a student learns. Roughly 1 in 5 students show signs of dyslexia (Yale Center for Dyslexia and Creativity), which means most general-ed teachers have multiple students every year who need targeted support. The good news: a small set of well-chosen accommodations, applied consistently, can transform a struggling reader's day. This guide gives ELA teachers, general-ed teachers, and special ed coordinators a practical list, the difference between accommodations and modifications, and ways to implement supports without singling any student out.
What Are Dyslexia Classroom Accommodations?
Accommodations are changes to how a student accesses content or shows what they know - not changes to what they are expected to learn. They level access without changing standards. For a student with dyslexia, that usually means reducing reading and spelling load so cognitive energy can go to comprehension and thinking. Accommodations can be formal (written into an IEP or 504 plan) or informal (a teacher's classroom routine). Both are valid. The federal IDEA framework and Section 504 protect a student's right to reasonable accommodations once dyslexia is identified.
10 Essential Classroom Accommodations for Students with Dyslexia
Most students with dyslexia benefit from the same core set of supports. Pull from this list based on the task and the student, not the diagnosis label alone.
- Extended time on reading-heavy assignments and tests. A typical guideline is time and a half.
- Audio versions of text via text-to-speech so the student hears grade-level content while building decoding skills. See our deeper guide to text-to-speech for dyslexia.
- Reduced reading load - shorter passages or fewer items that target the same skill, not a watered-down task.
- Choice in response modality - voice recording, typed response, diagram, or oral answer in place of a long written reply.
- Multi-sensory instruction using Orton-Gillingham aligned routines that combine sight, sound, and movement.
- Preferential seating near the teacher or away from auditory distractions to support focus during instruction.
- Spelling tools - access to a word bank, spell-check, and predictive text so spelling does not block writing.
- Copy of notes from the teacher or a peer, plus a printed copy of board work, so the student is not also a transcriber.
- Frequent check-ins after directions to confirm understanding before the student starts the task.
- Oral testing for content knowledge where the standard allows it, so reading speed does not mask what the student knows.
Accommodations vs Modifications
This distinction matters in IEP meetings and in daily planning. An accommodation changes the path to the same destination - audio text, extra time, voice response. The student is still held to the grade-level standard. A modification changes the destination itself - a different reading list, a shorter spelling list, a simplified rubric. Most students with dyslexia need accommodations, not modifications. They can hit grade-level standards when access barriers are removed. Defaulting to modifications when accommodations would do can lower expectations and hold a capable reader back. See the National Center for Learning Disabilities for deeper guidance.
How to Implement Accommodations Without Singling Out a Student
The fastest way to lose a teenager's trust is to make their accommodation visible. Build supports into your universal classroom routines so they are available to anyone who needs them. Offer audio versions of every reading - not just the one for the student with dyslexia. Let every student choose between a written or recorded response on at least one assignment a week. Provide a copy of slides to the whole class by default. When supports are universal, the student with dyslexia uses them without feeling marked, and other students - English learners, students with attention differences, kids who were absent yesterday - benefit too. This is Universal Design for Learning in action: visit our dyslexia pillar page for the broader picture.
How Mote Powers Daily Dyslexia Accommodations
Mote runs inside Google Workspace and turns several of the accommodations above into one-click routines:
- Read Aloud with Human-Like Voice covers the audio-text accommodation for Docs, Slides, and the open web.
- PDF Read Aloud handles alternative-format access when worksheets and articles arrive as PDFs.
- Image Text Read Aloud uses OCR so text inside images and screenshots is no longer a dead end.
- Dictionary delivers single-click definitions, supporting vocabulary access without breaking reading flow.
- Speech to Text gives students a scribe equivalent for writing tasks where typing slows thinking.
- Highlighter support active reading and annotation when handwriting is a barrier.
- Text Prediction reduces spelling load so the student writes the idea, not the letters.
The bottom line: dyslexia classroom accommodations are not a special-event response. They are a stable set of routines that, once embedded into how your classroom runs, support every learner who walks in the door. Pick three from the list above and try them next week.








.png)
.png)

