In many classrooms, nonsense words are tied to assessments. They show up on screeners or progress monitoring tools to check whether a student can truly decode instead of relying on memory. But if nonsense words only live in testing, we’re missing their greatest power: daily practice.
Unlike memorized text, nonsense words require students to:
This makes them a valuable tool for assessment, yes — but even more so for daily practice that transfers to real reading.
When nonsense words are part of instruction, students:
For example, try a quick chain:
mab → maf → mag → mog → mo
Each step pushes students to notice how one small change affects the word — and sometimes even shifts the syllable type (like mog → mo, closed to open). Recognizing these changes automatically builds accuracy and fluency.
Nonsense words are flexible and can be used across settings:
Even a few minutes a day can make a big impact.
With ROYO’s Nonsense Word Rapid Exchange, nonsense word practice becomes part of the reading experience:
No extra prep. No extra testing. Just meaningful practice built into the routine.
Nonsense words aren’t “nonsense” at all — they’re one of the most powerful tools for building strong decoders and fluent readers.
Think of it like this: any time a child comes across a word that is new to them, it is essentially a nonsense word. We want students to tap into what they know about language patterns to decode the unknown. When they practice with nonsense words, they are rehearsing this exact strategy — the one they’ll use every time they face a word that’s brand new.
By bringing nonsense words out of testing and into daily practice, we give students the tools to approach reading with accuracy, confidence, and independence.