Dyslexia Support with Mote

Dyslexia is the most common learning disability in US schools. Mote brings every classroom-relevant assistive technology accommodation into Google Workspace with one Chrome extension - text-to-speech, PDF read aloud, image OCR, dictionary, speech-to-text, and active reading tools.

Mote Writing Review on a Water Cycle draft, surfacing inline homophone and grammar suggestions for a student writer — the canonical Mote pillar hero treatment.

Dyslexia in K-12 Classrooms: What Teachers and Families Need to Know

Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that affects how the brain processes written language - particularly the link between letters and the sounds they represent. It is the most common learning disability identified in schools, with the International Dyslexia Association estimating that 15 to 20 percent of the US population shows symptoms of dyslexia including slow or inaccurate reading, weak spelling, and difficulty writing fluently. A 2022 NAEP report found that only 33 percent of US fourth graders read at or above grade level, a gap dyslexia helps explain for a significant share of struggling readers (NCES).

Dyslexia is not about intelligence, motivation, or effort. It is neurobiological - students with dyslexia process print differently from neurotypical peers, and that difference persists across the lifespan. With the right combination of structured literacy instruction and assistive technology, dyslexic students can access grade-level content, demonstrate what they know, and read for meaning. The wrong response - waiting for them to "catch up" without explicit instruction or accommodation - lets the gap widen year after year.

This pillar brings together everything classroom teachers, special educators, and families need: a working definition, the difference between dyslexia and a general reading disability, classroom accommodations that work in daily practice, sample IEP and 504 plan language, and a practical guide to assistive technology built for Google Workspace classrooms.

Mote Delivers the Full Dyslexia Assistive Technology Stack

Coral concept illustration of headphones representing Mote Read Aloud removing decoding fatigue for dyslexic readers.

Decoding Without the Fatigue

A fifth grader with dyslexia reads a chapter of social studies and exhausts their cognitive load on sounding out words - leaving nothing for comprehension. Mote Read Aloud removes that bottleneck. Students hear grade-level text in natural AI voices across 60+ languages, with adjustable speed and pitch, so attention stays on meaning rather than mechanics. The same tool reads PDFs, images, and any web page - the formats that usually lock dyslexic readers out.

Teal concept illustration of a microphone representing Mote Speech-to-Text removing the spelling load from writing for dyslexic students.

Writing Without the Spelling Load

A seventh grader with dyslexia knows what they want to say but stalls on spelling every multi-syllable word. Speech to Text lets them dictate ideas as fluent prose, and Text Prediction offers in-line spelling support when they switch back to typing. After drafting, they press Read Aloud to hear their own writing back - catching reversals and missed words their eyes miss. The result: a student who can show what they know on a writing task without the IEP-meeting conversation about "below grade level expressive writing".

Gold concept illustration of an open book representing the Mote Multilingual Dictionary and Highlight Notes for active reading by dyslexic students.

Vocabulary and Active Reading Built In

One unfamiliar word can derail a dyslexic reader's comprehension of an entire paragraph. The Mote Dictionary delivers a definition with a single click - no leaving the page, no tab-switching. Highlighter lets students mark and annotate key passages right inside the doc. Together, these turn passive listening into active reading, the kind that builds the comprehension skills dyslexic students often miss while their decoding catches up.

Purple concept illustration of a school backpack representing Mote consolidating the full dyslexia assistive technology stack into one Chrome extension.

One Chrome Extension for the Whole IEP Tech Page

A special education coordinator with 40 IEPs specifying "text-to-speech access" plus assorted spelling, dictionary, and recording accommodations cannot stitch together six different vendors. Mote consolidates the dyslexia AT stack - TTS, PDF read aloud, OCR for images, dictionary, speech-to-text, prediction, Highlighter - into a single FERPA, COPPA, and GDPR compliant Chrome extension deployable through Google Admin Console. One install. One license. Every dyslexia accommodation a 504 or IEP can name.

Why Assistive Technology Matters for Dyslexic Readers

The Evidence for Assistive Technology in Dyslexia Support

Dyslexia is well-studied, and the research on assistive technology is unusually consistent. A meta-analysis of 22 studies published in the Journal of Learning Disabilities found that text-to-speech produced a positive weighted effect on reading comprehension for students with reading disabilities (d = 0.35, p < .01), with between-subject studies showing stronger effects (d = 0.61). For students whose decoding is years behind their listening comprehension - the classic dyslexia profile - the gap between what they can understand and what they can read independently is exactly what TTS closes.

The International Dyslexia Association recommends a dual approach: explicit structured literacy instruction plus assistive technology access. IDA writes that TTS "can be as vital for students with dyslexia as a screen reader is for someone who is visually impaired" and that AT "has the potential to increase learner motivation, prolong focus, and build confidence." AT does not replace direct reading instruction - it sits alongside it so dyslexic students can access grade-level content while their decoding skills develop.

Federal law supports the principle. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act requires IEP teams to consider whether a child needs assistive technology devices and services, and the Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act covers dyslexia as a disability that substantially limits the major life activity of reading. In practice that means a student diagnosed with dyslexia has a legal right to accommodations that include text-to-speech, audio versions of text, extended time, and alternative ways to demonstrate learning.

Mote was built to align with that evidence base. Every dyslexia-relevant Mote feature has a mapping to UDL principles of representation and action/expression, and the entire toolset is deployed inside Google Workspace - which roughly two thirds of US districts use - without a separate login or product to learn.

Explore more of

Dyslexia Support with Mote

What is Dyslexia? Signs, Causes, and Classroom Support
Dyslexia Classroom Accommodations: A Teacher Guide with 10 Practical Supports
IEP Goals for Dyslexia: SMART Examples for Decoding, Fluency, and Writing
504 Plan for Dyslexia: Accommodations, Eligibility, and How to Request One
Dyslexia vs Reading Disability: What is the Difference?
AT for Dyslexia

Frequently Asked Questions About Dyslexia Support

Common questions from teachers, special education coordinators, and families about dyslexia, accommodations, and the role of assistive technology in the classroom.

What is dyslexia?

Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that affects how the brain processes the sounds in spoken language and links them to written letters. It is neurobiological, persists across the lifespan, and is not related to intelligence or effort. With structured literacy instruction and assistive technology, students with dyslexia can read for meaning at grade level.

How common is dyslexia in US schools?

The International Dyslexia Association estimates that 15 to 20 percent of the US population shows symptoms of dyslexia, including slow or inaccurate reading, weak spelling, and difficulty writing fluently. It is the most common specific learning disability identified in schools and accounts for a significant share of students who struggle to read at grade level.

What are the best classroom accommodations for dyslexia?

The most evidence-backed accommodations are text-to-speech access for grade-level text, audio versions of reading material, extended time on reading-heavy tasks, reduced reading load when appropriate, alternative ways to demonstrate learning such as oral or recorded responses, and assistive technology for writing including speech-to-text and word prediction.

Does assistive technology replace structured literacy instruction for dyslexia?

No. The International Dyslexia Association recommends a dual approach: explicit structured literacy instruction plus assistive technology access. AT lets dyslexic students reach grade-level content while their decoding skills develop. Skipping direct reading instruction in favor of AT alone is not effective.

Does a student with dyslexia need an IEP or a 504 plan?

Either can apply. A 504 plan covers accommodations such as extended time, audio text, and assistive technology access. An IEP includes accommodations plus specially designed instruction (such as structured literacy) and measurable goals. Students who need explicit reading intervention typically qualify for an IEP under the Specific Learning Disability category.

How does Mote help students with dyslexia?

Mote brings the dyslexia assistive technology stack into Google Workspace through one Chrome extension. Read Aloud and PDF Read Aloud cover decoding access, Image Text Read Aloud handles OCR for inaccessible images, Dictionary supports vocabulary, and Speech to Text plus Text Prediction reduce the spelling load on writing tasks - all FERPA, COPPA, and GDPR compliant.

Last updated on

May 18, 2026

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