Sight Words Aren’t Enough for Reading (HCMC Guide)
Why Sight Words Alone Are Not Enough (HCMC / Saigon Parent Guide)
Many parents feel reassured when their child can read:
- the
- was
- said
- you
It looks like progress.
It sounds like reading.
But then something happens.
The Moment It Stops Working
Your child opens a new book.
They see unfamiliar words.
And suddenly:
👉 they stop
👉 they guess
👉 they struggle
The Hidden Problem
Sight words help children recognize:
👉 specific, memorized words
But reading requires:
👉 understanding how all words work
What Are Sight Words?
Sight words are:
👉 common words children learn to recognize instantly
Examples:
- the
- is
- said
- was
Why They Are Useful
Sight words help children:
- read faster
- recognize high-frequency words
- build early confidence
👉 They are important
But Here’s the Problem
Sight words are:
👉 limited
There are thousands of words in English.
Memorizing them all is impossible.
What Happens When Children Rely Only on Sight Words
They can:
- read familiar texts
But cannot:
- read new words
- decode unfamiliar vocabulary
- progress independently
👉 This creates a ceiling
A Simple Example
A child knows:
- the
- dog
- is
They read:
👉 “The dog is big.”
But then they see:
👉 “The dog is climbing.”
They get stuck.
👉 Because climbing is not memorized
Why This Happens in International School English Vietnam
In many programs:
- sight words are emphasized early
- reading appears to develop quickly
But:
👉 decoding skills are not fully built
The Result
Students:
- guess longer words
- avoid difficult reading
- fall behind over time
👉 Even if they seem “good at English”
What Sight Words Don’t Teach
They don’t teach:
- how to break words into sounds
- how to read unfamiliar vocabulary
- how to build independence
👉 That’s where phonics comes in
What Actually Makes a Strong Reader
Children need both:
👉 sight word recognition
👉 phonics (decoding skills)
The Difference
Sight words = speed
Phonics = ability
👉 You need both
👉 But phonics comes first
A Parent Reality Check
Ask your child to read a new word like:
👉 fantastic
If they:
- try to sound it out → strong foundation
- guess or skip → missing skills
Q&A Moment
“Should my child memorize more sight words?”
Not as the main focus. Without decoding skills, memorization won’t lead to long-term progress.
“Is it bad to teach sight words?”
No. They are useful—but only when combined with phonics.
How Spark Approaches This Differently
At Spark English Center Vietnam, sight words are not the starting point.
They are:
👉 built on top of phonics
What This Means for Students
Spark acts as a bridge between:
- early reading skills
- academic English demands
Using:
- phonics + structured literacy
- ESL support aligned with international school expectations
- small classes (maximum 6 students)
Spark provides a premium English learning experience for families across HCMC (Saigon), helping children move beyond memorization into real reading ability.
The Long-Term Difference
When children rely only on sight words:
- progress slows
- confidence drops
When they understand how words work:
- reading becomes easier
- vocabulary expands
- independence grows
👉 Because they are no longer limited to what they remember
FAQs
What are sight words, and why are they taught?
They are common words children learn to recognize quickly to improve reading speed.
Why aren’t sight words enough for reading?
Because they don’t teach children how to read new or unfamiliar words.
Should my child stop learning sight words?
No. Sight words are helpful—but they must be combined with phonics.
How can I tell if my child relies too much on sight words?
If they struggle with new words or guess frequently, they may lack decoding skills.
What is more important: phonics or sight words?
Phonics is essential for building reading ability. Sight words support fluency.
Can older children still benefit from phonics?
Yes. Many older students improve quickly when they learn how to decode properly.
How long does it take to see improvement?
With structured practice, progress can often be seen within weeks.
Final Thought
👉 Sight words help children read faster
👉 Phonics helps children read anything
If your child can read familiar words but struggles with new ones, the best step is to understand why.
At Spark English Center Vietnam, the free assessment evaluates:
- phonics and decoding ability
- sight word recognition
- reading accuracy
- overall English development
This helps you see clearly:
👉 what your child can do now
👉 and what they need next
👉 Book your free assessment here:
https://www.sparkvn.com/Assessment
Serving international school families in HCMC (Saigon), Spark English Center Vietnam provides structured, phonics-based English support that builds real reading ability—not just memorization.

















































