The Measured Mom

If you’ve been teaching for a while, chances are you’ve used flashcards for high frequency words.

So did I.

They felt simple, quick, and effective—until I realized how often my struggling readers would “know” a word one day and forget it the next.

The problem wasn’t the flashcards themselves.

It was how many words I was asking students to memorize.

When kids rely on visual memory for hundreds of words, there’s only so much their brains can hold. Eventually, they hit a wall—and that’s when they forget a word they "knew" last week.

Flashcards can be a great practice tool, but they shouldn’t be the teaching tool.

When we introduce a high frequency word, students need to first understand three things:
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1️⃣ How the sounds connect to the letters.
2️⃣ Which part (if any) is irregular or surprising.
3️⃣ What the word means and how it’s used.

Once we’ve explicitly taught a word, then flashcards are helpful for review and reinforcement. They build retrieval strength—not initial understanding.

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This is exactly how my High Frequency Word Lessons with Decodable Text are structured.

Each lesson starts with sound-spelling connections and a meaning focus, followed by real reading practice in decodable sentences and short stories.

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So yes—keep your flashcards.
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Just use them after kids understand the structure and meaning of the word.

>>CLICK HERE TO SEE OUR NEW HIGH FREQUENCY WORD LESSONS

Anna

P.S. I'm so excited to share this brand-new resource with you, but the special pricing is only available for a short time. Click here to save 58%!

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