Why Nonsense Words Belong in Daily Practice, Not Just Assessments

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.

Why Nonsense Words Work

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.

The Benefits of Daily Nonsense Word Practice

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.

Where Nonsense Words Fit in the Classroom

Nonsense words are flexible and can be used across settings:

Even a few minutes a day can make a big impact.

How ROYO Makes Practice Simple

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.

Final Thoughts

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.