Your child stares at the word "ship." They know S. They know H. They have no idea that S and H together say /ʃ/. No worksheet can tell them that. The app can.
Free phonics worksheets — and the audio layer that makes them actually work. Five sheets free instantly, no email needed.
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Even the best premium worksheets have one silent flaw: they cannot make a sound. Clean Reader fills exactly that gap — providing the audio layer that turns static letters into spoken language.
When a child is stuck on a sound, they shouldn't have to wait for you. They tap the letter in the app, hear the phoneme, and get right back to the worksheet.
Blending is a motor skill of the ear. The app's blending tool lets children physically drag sounds together and hear the word form in real-time.
Both work offline. No Wi-Fi, no accounts, no distractions. A complete phonics environment that fits in a single bag for wherever your day takes you.
Unlike generic resources found online, these worksheets are built using the Science of Reading. Every detail is intentional, aimed at one goal: moving your child from guessing to decoding.
Most worksheets include a picture of a "cat" next to the word. This teaches children to look at the image and guess, rather than reading the letters. Our worksheets are picture-free to ensure the "eye stays on the word."
We use the research-backed Montessori system: Blue for Vowels and Red for Consonants. This visual scaffolding helps children recognize the structure of language automatically.
The font, spacing, and progression are designed to minimize cognitive load. These are premium resources designed by parents tired of the "cluttered" and distracting options found elsewhere on the internet.
We didn't just build an app; we built a way to learn that respects the home environment. Here is how parents use them together.
Open Clean Reader. Tap the letters for today's lesson. Your child hears the phoneme before they see it in print. Audio loads the sounds; paper validates them.
Once the sounds are "loaded," put the phone aside. The paper is the focus now. This is the independent, distraction-free practice they've prepared for.
If they get stuck, don't tell them the sound. Have them return to the app, tap the letter to "check themselves," then return to the paper. They learn from retrieval.
You were looking for something calmer. Something that respected your child's intelligence and didn't exploit their attention. Join the parents who found it.
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