Skip to content
Inky Logo
BlogSign In
Sign In
Download App
Inky Logo

About Inky

AI-powered children's story generator creating magical moments for families.

Resources

  • Blog
  • Sign In
  • Help Center
  • Age Suitability
  • Accessibility

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Choices
  • Terms of Service
App Store

© 2026 Total Ventures LLC. All rights reserved.

  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Blog
  4. /
  5. Dyslexia-Friendly Storytelling Strategies

Dyslexia-Friendly Storytelling Strategies

Justin Tsugranes
Justin Tsugranes
January 12, 2026
Education & Literacy

Fonts, pacing, audio, and visuals that make stories accessible.

  • Why Accessibility Matters
  • The 5 Key Accommodations
  • 1. Font and Formatting
  • 2. Color and Contrast
  • 3. Chunk Length and Density
  • 4. Audio Support
  • 5. Pace and Patience
  • Content Pacing Adjustments
  • Sentence Simplification
  • Name Selection
  • Scene Transitions
  • Technology That Helps
  • What Teachers and Parents Report
  • Conclusion

Approximately 20% of children have dyslexia or reading differences. For these kids, traditional print can be exhausting, frustrating, and anxiety-inducing. But accessible storytelling design makes reading joyful instead of painful.

Research from the International Dyslexia Association shows that with proper accommodations, dyslexic children read with equal comprehension - they just need format adjustments to access the content effectively.

Why Accessibility Matters

Dyslexic brains process text differently. Letters appear to move, similar letters confuse (b/d/p/q), tracking lines is difficult, and cognitive load exhausts quickly. These aren't laziness or lack of intelligence - they're neurological differences requiring design solutions.

The 5 Key Accommodations

1. Font and Formatting

Use: Sans-serif fonts (Arial, Verdana, OpenDyslexic). 14-16pt minimum size. 1.5-2x line spacing. Generous letter spacing.

Avoid: Serif fonts (harder to decode). Italics (letters blur together). Underlining (interferes with letter recognition). Justified text (uneven spacing confuses).

2. Color and Contrast

Use: Cream or light blue backgrounds (not pure white - reduces glare). Dark gray text (not pure black). Matte finish on screens.

Avoid: White backgrounds (cause visual stress). Black text on white (too high contrast). Glossy screens (create reflections).

3. Chunk Length and Density

Use: Short paragraphs (2-4 sentences max). White space between sections. Frequent breaks with images. One idea per paragraph.

Avoid: Long dense paragraphs. Wall of text. Multiple ideas per paragraph. Cramped spacing.

4. Audio Support

Pair audio narration with text. Highlight words as they're read (like karaoke). Let kids follow along without the pressure of decoding every word themselves. This dual input (audio + visual) reduces cognitive load by 55%.

5. Pace and Patience

Dyslexic readers need more time. Never rush. Let them pause, re-read, take breaks. Reading stamina builds gradually - forcing speed creates anxiety and avoidance.

Content Pacing Adjustments

Sentence Simplification

Use shorter sentences with clear subjects. "The dog ran fast" not "The enormous canine sprinted rapidly." Save complex syntax for non-dyslexic readers.

Name Selection

Avoid: similar-looking names (Dan/Don, Sara/Sarah). Names starting with same letter (Ben, Bill, Bob). Long complicated names.

Use: Visually distinct names (Max, Luna, Kai). Short names. Names easy to decode.

Scene Transitions

Make scene changes obvious with clear section breaks. "The next day..." or "Meanwhile..." Abrupt transitions confuse dyslexic readers who may already be working hard to track plot.

Technology That Helps

Modern apps like Inky include features specifically supporting dyslexic readers: adjustable text size and spacing, audio narration in sync with text, high-contrast display modes, ability to control reading speed, simple tap-to-hear-word-again function.

These features weren't available in traditional books. Digital storytelling makes accessibility universal and free.

What Teachers and Parents Report

"My dyslexic son went from hating reading to reading 20 minutes daily. The difference: audio narration plus text plus ability to control font size. He can finally enjoy stories without the exhaustion." - Patricia M., mom of 8-year-old
"I use Inky with my dyslexic students. The combination of visuals, audio, and adjustable text means every student can access stories at their own pace. Reading confidence has transformed." - Mr. Jackson, 3rd grade teacher

Conclusion

Dyslexia-friendly design isn't optional accommodation - it's good design for all readers. Implement these five adjustments and watch reading transform from struggle to joy.

Try Inky's accessibility features: adjustable text, audio narration, and dyslexia-friendly fonts built in. Make reading accessible and joyful for all children. Get 2 free stories today!

#dyslexia#accessibility#reading

About Justin Tsugranes

Inky is an AI-powered children’s story app I designed, built, and launched as a side project to help my 3-year-old learn to read.

Related Articles

January 12, 2026

Referral Program Launch

Share Inky, earn credits, and unlock rewards together.

Product Guides
Read more
January 12, 2026

Parent Success Stories: Reading Transformations

Parents share wins from bedtime battles to book-loving kids.

Parenting Tips
Read more
January 12, 2026

Teacher Testimonials: Inky in the Classroom

How educators use Inky to boost literacy and creativity.

Education & Literacy
Read more