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The honest answer: it depends on readiness more than birthdays. Here's how to read the signs — and why the window is friendlier than you think.
Phonics teaches children that letters represent sounds, and that sounds blend into words — c-a-t makes cat. It's the difference between truly reading and memorising the shapes of a few hundred words. English is a code; phonics hands your child the key.
Tick two or three of these and your child is likely ready, whatever the birth certificate says.
Primary 1 English moves quickly, and the curriculum assumes children arrive with early reading foundations. Children who start P1 unable to decode simple words spend their first year catching up instead of pulling ahead — and that early gap tends to echo through comprehension and composition later.
Can I just teach phonics at home? You can start — letter sounds, rhyming games, reading daily all help enormously. Where a structured programme earns its fee is sequence and diagnosis: knowing which of the 40+ sounds and patterns comes next, and spotting exactly where a child is stuck.
Edufarm teaches phonics through Letterland, where every letter is a character with a story — multi-sensory lessons using sight, sound, speech and movement, for ages 4–7, in classes of just 5–8 children per teacher across three progression levels. It's the programme that won us Parents World's Best Enrichment School award, and it turns reluctant readers into kids who ask for one more page.
Tell us your child's age and we'll recommend the right Letterland level — or honestly tell you to wait a term.