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Summer Reading Programs · 2026

Your child can start next school year reading 4–5 months ahead. Not ahead of average. Ahead of where they would have been without you stepping in.

You've probably tried things. An app. A tutor. A YouTube channel. None of it has moved the needle the way you hoped — because most online reading programs are exactly what you fear: passive videos, flashcard drills, kids zoning out at a screen. They're cheap, they're convenient, and they don't give students the reading skills they actually need.

Here's what we are: Six children. One expert reading teacher. Fifty minutes. Live. Every child reads aloud. Every child is called on. Every child is seen — not by a camera, by a teacher who knows their name, knows their level, and is watching them read in real time.

Every class is recorded. Every teacher is reviewed by a senior IRD educator every week. That's something an in-person tutor or brick-and-mortar learning center cannot do — and it's a critical part of the system that produces the outcomes our students get.

That's not screen time. That's a reading class — supervised in a way no in-person class can be.

We've taught 250,000 children this way. We started in 2013 — to reach families who couldn't access in-person classes — and spent seven years building a system for teaching reading live online before COVID forced the rest of the world online. By the time everyone else started doing this badly, we'd already figured out how to do it well. Not in spite of the format. Because of it.

The receipts

434 students.
Nine reading skills.
Every single one improved.

When we say "4–5 months ahead," we're not estimating.
We measured it.

We tested 434 students before and after the 2024 summer program in the skills that matter most for their grade. We adjusted those results against the average summer slide.

Every single skill showed a net improvement.
Not some. Not most. All of them:

Letter recognition (uppercase).
Letter recognition (lower case).
Phonics & phonemic awareness.
Blending.
Decoding.
Sight word knowledge.
Oral fluency.
Vocabulary knowledge.
Reading comprehension.

What that means in real terms:
Your student doesn't just maintain their level over summer.
They come back months ahead — at a time most kids are falling behind.

Net gains across nine reading skills
N = 434 · Pre/post-program 2024 · Adjusted for summer slide
Letter recognition (lowercase)
+34.8%
Letter recognition (uppercase)
+32.1%
Blending
+25.9%
Sight word knowledge
+21.6%
Vocabulary knowledge
+18.8%
Phonics & phonemic awareness
+15.2%
Reading comprehension
+12.3%
Oral fluency
+12.2%
Decoding
+6.7%

Each bar represents the average net gain — student progress after subtracting the average summer slide. Full methodology available on request: research@readingprograms.org.

What 13 years has taught us

Three things parents miss when they assume online doesn't work for kids.

A child at home is more focused than a child in a classroom.
No bus. No hallway drama. No twenty other kids whispering. Just your child, their teacher, five classmates, and a book. Most parents tell us their child is more engaged here than they ever were in a classroom.
A child who's struggling is harder to ignore on a six-person Zoom than in a classroom of thirty.
Their teacher sees them every minute. Sees the moment they're lost. Sees the moment it clicks. The format doesn't hide kids — it surfaces them.

"$249 is a lot for an online program."
It would be — if this were a typical online program.

$249 buys 4–5 months of reading progress for one summer. That's the value. Here's what makes it possible.

A curriculum we wrote ourselves. Books we wrote ourselves. A practice app we built ourselves. Teachers we trained ourselves and review every week. None of this is rented from somewhere else. No off-the-shelf phonics app. No licensed reader series. No gig-economy tutor pulled from a marketplace. Every part of what your child experiences was built and refined here, over decades, for one purpose.

Most online education is a markup on what's already free on the internet. That's why "online" feels like it should be cheap. Because most of it is cheap. What we do isn't.

Value · 01

The books your child reads were written for this curriculum.

Not licensed. Not borrowed. Not somebody else's leftover readers. Written by IRD curriculum specialists, level by level, drawing on 56 years of teaching kids to read.

For Pre-K through 5th grade, every book your child reads in our program is an original IRD book — designed to teach a specific set of skills at a specific reading level, with the right number of new words, the right repetition, the right comprehension challenges. Books that are easy to find and easy to print don't do that. Ours do.

For 6th through 8th grade, the texts shift to carefully selected literature, nonfiction, and primary sources — paired with discussion frameworks and analytical tools we've refined over decades of working with teen readers. Real reading. Real thinking. Not worksheets.

Your child reads from these books all summer — sequenced, illustrated, and tied to every live class. Access continues through August, and longer with enrollment in any IRD program afterward.

A glimpse of the library

Click any cover to page through a real IRD book. Each grade level draws from a large library, sequenced so that each book builds on the last.

Value · 02

One great book. One coherent week of skill-building.

Most reading programs are fragmented — phonics here, fluency there, comprehension somewhere else. Ours is a closed loop.

Each week's class introduces specific skills that are key for success in your child's next grade in school — whether it's phonics patterns, comprehension strategies, vocabulary, or nonfiction and textbook strategies.

Each week's skills live in that week's book or assigned reading. The class teaches the skills; daily practice with that same reading is where they stick. Live instruction and self-paced practice create the kind of reading progress neither half can produce alone — and kids love both.

Take second grade as an example: in one recent week, the focus included the oo sound, multi-syllable decoding, and predicting from context. The teacher names each skill, students practice them live, and the class opens that week's book — Kanga's New Shoes. The skills are now living in a story.

Between classes, those same skills get reinforced. For Pre-K through 5th, that happens in the IRD Reading Routine app — fluency practice from passages students just read, comprehension prompts that map back to discussion, decoding work for the new sounds. We also encourage your child to reread that week's book and earlier titles on the days between sessions: building familiarity, fluency, and confidence with text they already know. For 6th–8th, students do structured daily reading with comprehension and analysis prompts that connect directly back to the week's class discussion.

The week's skills check then measures what was taught and practiced. Mistakes get immediate feedback. The next week's class layers new skills on top — and the loop continues.

Most online programs make you choose: a live class with no practice, or exercises and activities with no teacher.

The closed loop is the value.

Apps don't have teachers.
Marketplaces don't have curriculum.
Learning centers don't have weekly supervision.

We have all four. Live small-group classes. Books we wrote ourselves. A daily-practice app we built. Teachers we review every single week.

No other consumer K-8 program has all four.

A week in the loop
The same skills travel through every part of the week.
The IRD weekly closed loop A diagram showing how each week's reading skills move from the live class into that week's book, through daily app practice, into fluency practice, into the end-of-week skills check, and back into the next week's class. EACH WEEK specific skills phonics, comprehension, vocabulary LIVE CLASS Skills are taught phonics, comprehension, vocabulary BETWEEN CLASSES Practice in the same book daily activities in the IRD app + rereading the books FLUENCY Reading the story aloud passages from this week's book END OF WEEK Skills check measures what was taught

The week's skills are taught in the live class, practiced in the book between sessions, read aloud during fluency, and measured at the end of the week. The next week's class layers on top — and the loop continues.

How it works.

  • 50 min/week  Live class with an expert reading teacher.
  • 15 min/day  Daily practice — the IRD Reading Routine app for Pre-K through 5th; structured reading with comprehension prompts for 6th through 8th.
  • End of program  A personalized Reading Report from your child's teacher — what improved, where they grew, and what to focus on next.
Inside the daily practice · Pre-K through 5th
See the IRD Reading Routine — for Pre-K through 5th.
The daily-practice activities younger students do between live classes — sequenced to reinforce that week's skills in that week's book. Pick the grade closest to your child's.

Pre-K daily practice. A look at the IRD Reading Routine for our youngest readers — letter sounds, blending, sight words, and early comprehension activities, sequenced to reinforce each week's class.

1st-grade daily practice. Inside the IRD Reading Routine for first graders — phonics patterns, decoding, sight words, fluency, and short comprehension checks — all tied back to that week's book.

2nd-grade daily practice. The closed loop, on the screen — the same skill the live class introduced, reinforced through the same week's book in the IRD Reading Routine. Decoding, fluency, comprehension, all in one connected routine.

3rd-grade daily practice. Tellbacks, syllable patterns, vocabulary work, and decoding strategies — applied immediately to the week's IRD reader, between live classes.

4th–5th-grade daily practice. Predicting, character analysis, context clues, and nonfiction comprehension activities — building the analytical skills that matter in middle school, between live classes.

And for 6th–8th
Structured daily reading.
Middle-school students do structured daily reading between live classes — assigned passages with comprehension and analysis prompts that connect back to the week's discussion. No app; the reading itself is the practice.
Example · what daily practice looks like
From this week's reading: A short nonfiction passage on the migration of monarch butterflies — assigned alongside the live class discussion of inference and primary-source analysis.
1 What evidence in the passage supports the author's claim that monarch migration is at risk?
2 The author writes that "the math is clear." What math? How does the passage make that case?
3 Compare this account with what was discussed in class. Where do the framings differ?
Value · 03

Teachers we hand-pick, train, and watch teach every week.

The unfair advantage of teaching online: every class is recorded. Every teacher is reviewed. Every parent gets the version of teaching we've trained for — not whatever the teacher felt like doing that day.

We hire fewer than 3% of applicants. Then we train them in IRD's specific methodology — how to lead a discussion of six children. How to draw out a quiet reader. How to redirect a disengaged one. How to use the curriculum we wrote so that it teaches the way it's supposed to teach.

And then we keep watching. Senior IRD educators review teacher recordings every week — checking that lessons match curriculum, that students are getting called on, that no child is being missed. Feedback flows back to the teacher within days. Drift gets corrected fast.

This is something an in-person tutor or a brick-and-mortar learning center cannot do. Their teacher closes the door, and what happens inside is invisible. Online makes the classroom transparent. That's not a bug of the format. It's the deepest feature.

<3%
of teaching applicants are accepted into IRD. We're selecting for one thing: the ability to lead a small live class and teach a specific curriculum with precision. Every accepted teacher is then trained in our methodology, reviewed weekly via class recordings, and given direct feedback by a senior IRD educator. Your child's teacher isn't just qualified. They're supervised — every week.
Meet a few of our teachers
Liberty S., Reading Teacher
Liberty S.
Reading Teacher
Celebrate wins
“Our programs are warm, encouraging, and very low-pressure. We laugh, celebrate small wins, and mistakes are treated as part of learning — not something to be embarrassed about.”
Bella L., Reading Teacher
Bella L.
Reading Teacher
Meeting each child where they are
“Every child comes in at a different place, and the curriculum gives me the tools to adjust in real time. I watch for the moment a student stops guessing and starts actually reading — and then I build on that. That’s when the confidence follows.”
Rod G., Reading Teacher
Rod G.
Reading Teacher
Immediate confidence
“I have seen immediate confidence and love for reading build in my students, setting them on course for expressive and fluent reading.”
Why "online" feels like it should be cheap

Most of online education is rented.

Here's the honest comparison — what most online options actually are, and what we built instead.

Reading Apps
$10–20/month
Curriculum Algorithm, no teacher
Books Public-domain or licensed
Teacher None
Quality control N/A
Online Tutoring Marketplaces
$30–80/hour
Curriculum Whatever the tutor brings
Books Whatever the tutor finds
Teacher Gig-economy, varies wildly
Quality control User reviews
IRD Programs
$249 / 4 weeks
Curriculum Written and refined over 56 years
Books Original IRD books, written for this
Teacher Top 3%, trained in our method
Quality control Recordings reviewed weekly
Built on a foundation

The institutional context for everything you just read.

250K+
Students taught
in this format
13
Years teaching
live online
56
Years of
curriculum
<3%
Teacher
acceptance rate

Don't take our word for it. Take theirs.

Real parents. Real kids. Real progress — most of them came in skeptical.

April
Parent of a Pre-K student
Teri & John Ross
Parents of a 1st grader
Romona
Grandmother of a 3rd grader
Chintana
Parent of a 5th grader
Aiden
7th grade student
Lorilla & Aniyah
Parent and 8th grade student
★★★★★
"This program has been a lifesaver for my child's confidence. She can read more fluently and has started to comprehend what she's reading so much better."
Wendy K. · Parent of a 2nd grader
★★★★★
"My son had major breakthroughs. His overall confidence has grown so much. He went from avoiding books to asking to read before bed."
Rochelle L. · Parent of a 3rd grader
★★★★★
"We searched for a program that could help our daughter, and nothing worked until this. This program is absolutely amazing. I will recommend this to everyone."
Matthew R. · Parent of a 5th grader
★★★★★
"She is so excited about learning phonics and being able to recognize more words! The teachers have great energy and make learning fun."
Laura T. · Parent of a 1st grader

By grade level.

Every program is designed for your student's specific grade — age-appropriate books, pacing, and skills focus.

Pre-K & K
Letters, sounds, and early reading skills
Letter sounds, blending, sight words, and early comprehension — using IRD's earliest-level original books, in a structured small group.
1st Grade
From sounding out to reading smoothly
Apply phonics to real stories, read with growing fluency, and understand characters and story structure — with original IRD readers at first-grade level.
2nd Grade
From phonics to fluency and meaning
Decode longer words, read with expression, and build the comprehension that comes next — with second-grade IRD originals.
3rd Grade
Richer stories, deeper thinking
The shift from "learning to read" to "reading to learn" — fluency, comprehension, and main ideas across genres, with third-grade IRD readers.
4th Grade
Stronger comprehension, more complex text
Summarize, analyze, monitor understanding — the analytical skills that separate strong readers from kids who get by, paired with our fourth-grade originals.
5th Grade
Critical thinking and independent reading
Analyze author's purpose, synthesize across sources, build the academic vocabulary middle school requires — with our fifth-grade book library.
6th – 8th Grade
Read critically, write clearly, study independently
Skills that drive success in every class — fiction, nonfiction, textbooks, and the writing that ties them together. Carefully chosen literature and primary sources.
Summer 2026 Programs

Choose the right program for your student.

Live, small-group classes. Six students per class. Expert teachers, supervised every week. No exceptions.

Showing programs for:
Classes filling now  ·  limited sections this summer
4-Week Program
A strong starting point. Four weeks of expert instruction to build skills and confidence.
$249
Books, daily practice, expert teacher, supervised teaching — included
  • 4 weekly 50-min live classes
  • Max 6 students per group
  • Original IRD books*
  • Curated reading list*
  • Daily practice in the IRD Reading Routine
  • Structured daily reading
  • Expert reading teacher, supervised weekly
Plus 3 bonuses, included
4 ebooks for summer reading*
$50 fall program discount (Sept 1+)
Personalized Reading Report
Enroll in 4-Week Program →

* Books and bonus ebooks accessible through August 31, 2026. Access continues with enrollment in any IRD fall or year-round program.

The Triple Guarantee

Three named promises. In writing.

After 56 years of teaching kids to read, we know what works. Here's what we'll stand behind.

PROMISE 01
The Right Outcome
If your student hasn't shown measurable reading progress by the end of their program, we keep teaching at no charge until they do.
PROMISE 02
The Right Teacher
If the teacher isn't a fit for your student, we move them to a different group within 7 days. No fees. No friction.
PROMISE 03
The Right Level
If we placed your student at the wrong reading level, we re-level them within 7 days — so they're never bored or overwhelmed.

What you get with every program.

Beyond the live classes and daily practice — three things we think every family should leave summer with.

Beyond the live classes and daily practice — two things we think every family should leave summer with.

4 ebooks for summer reading
Four additional level-matched IRD ebooks beyond the books used in class. Picked to extend reading practice through summer and into fall.*
$50 fall program discount
A $50 discount toward any IRD fall program, redeemable September 1 or after. Protects the momentum your student builds this summer into the school year.
Personalized Reading Report
A clear, written report from your student's teacher at the end of the program — what improved, where they grew, and exactly what to focus on next.

If not this, then what?

Most parents considering a reading program are weighing a few options — some intentional, some not. Here's what those actually look like.

Option 1
You teach them yourself
The hardest one to admit. Even experienced educators struggle to teach their own children. Every correction feels personal. Every session becomes a battle.
Your job is to be the parent — not the teacher.
Option 2
A random local tutor
Most parents end up with a college student, a generalist, or someone without specialized reading training. No consistent curriculum. No system. No guarantee it builds toward anything.
If it doesn't work, you start over.
Option 3
A learning center
Reading is just one of many subjects. Instructors are often generalists, not expert reading teachers. The curriculum is designed to be delivered anywhere — which means consistency, not depth.
At $200+ per week, you're paying for overhead — not specialized instruction.
Option 4
Wait and hope
The most common choice. "We'll figure it out later." "They'll catch up next year." But kids lose months of reading progress every summer. By middle school, that compounds into years.
Waiting is a decision — and it has a cost.
Then there's a different option
Live, small-group expert instruction. Six students. Original books. A trained teacher, supervised weekly. A system refined over 56 years.
The real question isn't online vs. in-person. It isn't even price. It's which option gives your child the best chance of real reading progress this summer.

Common questions.

Will my child actually stay engaged in an online class?
Yes — and it surprises most parents. With only 6 students per class, every child reads aloud, speaks, and is called on every session. There's no hiding in the back row. Our teachers are trained specifically in live online engagement, and after 13 years and 250,000+ students in this format, we've learned how to make 50 minutes feel fast. This isn't screen time. It's active, guided instruction.
How do you measure that the program actually works?
In summer 2024, we ran a cohort study on 434 students: pre-test before the program, post-test after, with results adjusted against the average summer slide students experience between June and September. Every measured skill showed a net gain, equivalent to four to five months of school-year reading progress. That's the data we have on the program in aggregate. For your individual child's progress, the evidence comes from the program itself: weekly skills checks during class, the personalized Reading Report from your teacher at the end, and the Triple Guarantee that backs measurable progress. Full methodology available on request: research@readingprograms.org.
Are the books really original to IRD?
For Pre-K through 5th grade, yes — every book your child reads in the program is an original IRD book, written by our curriculum specialists and drawing on 56 years of teaching kids to read. Each book is calibrated to a specific reading level with the right vocabulary, repetition, and comprehension challenges to teach a specific set of skills. For 6th through 8th grade, we use carefully selected literature, nonfiction, and primary sources — paired with original IRD discussion frameworks and analytical tools.
What's the IRD Reading Routine app?
It's our proprietary daily-practice platform for Pre-K through 5th-grade students. Short, structured activities that connect directly to each week's live class — 15 minutes a day, five days a week. The app was built by our team, sequenced by our curriculum specialists, and refined over thirteen years of teaching reading online. For 6th–8th graders, daily practice is structured reading with comprehension and analysis prompts (not the app, since middle schoolers benefit more from sustained reading).
How are teachers trained and supervised?
We hire fewer than 3% of applicants. Every accepted teacher goes through training in IRD's specific methodology before teaching their first class. After they start, senior IRD educators review recordings of their classes every week — checking that lessons match curriculum, that students are getting called on, that no child is being missed. Feedback flows back to teachers within days. This kind of weekly supervision is something an in-person tutor or learning center cannot do, because the classroom is invisible to anyone not in the room.
What if my child is behind in reading?
Students are grouped by grade and reading level — your child won't be in a class that's too easy or too hard. Our teachers adjust in real time, and the small group means no child gets lost. You'll receive a personalized Reading Report at the end showing exactly where they started and how far they've come.
Are summer reading programs online or in person?
Every IRD class is live online, on Zoom, by design. We've taught reading this way since 2013 — 250,000+ students — and it's the format that lets us do three things no in-person class can: cap groups at 6 students (vs. 18+ on campus), use teachers trained specifically for this format and supervised via recordings, and run a curriculum we've spent 13 years refining for live online instruction. The result is more individual attention, more participation, and more engagement per session than a traditional classroom.
How much do summer reading programs cost?
Programs start at $249.

4-Week Program — $249. One live class per week + daily practice.
8-Week Bundle — $398 (saves $100 vs. two 4-week programs). Same teacher, same schedule, double the duration.

All programs include original IRD books, the IRD Reading Routine for daily practice, an expert teacher supervised weekly, 4 bonus ebooks, $50 fall program discount, the Triple Guarantee, and a personalized Reading Report.
What is the refund policy?
Before your program starts:
• Within 72 hours of purchase — 100% refund
• After 72 hours, through April 30 — 75% refund
• After 72 hours, through May 31 — 50% refund

After your program starts: The Triple Guarantee. Teacher not a fit? We'll move your child to a different group within 7 days. Level not right? We'll re-level within 7 days. No measurable progress by the end of the program? We keep teaching at no charge until there is.
What if my child needs more individual attention?
We offer 1:1 tutoring with a dedicated expert reading teacher — same caliber of instructor, fully personalized. Available for all ages, including 9th–12th graders. If you're not sure whether your child needs group instruction or individual tutoring, our $49 Reading Diagnostic is a good starting point — and the $49 credits toward the first month if you enroll. See 1:1 tutoring options →
What happens after the summer program ends?
Many families continue with our Monthly Reading Programs during the school year — $199/month, same structured approach, cancel anytime. The transition is seamless: same routine your child built over the summer, just kept going. We also offer 1:1 tutoring ($349/month) for families who want individual attention year-round.

Your child is struggling with reading. This summer is when that changes.

Eight weeks. One program. The fall they deserve.

Choose Your Program →