I did remedial rreading when I put my daughter in school at fourth grade. I used the book "reading reflex" and it helped me to tune in on my daughter. I used Bob Bookds- a series of books with 3 to 4 letter stories. I also did what I called "karate chop reading" , kind of a joke in my family but it workded. I made her sound out each consonant and vowel and then say the word. What happened with her was she overmemorized and got overwhelmed and shut down when it came to the blends. So even with blends, like bl or cr she had to sound them out. After she mastered that we did what I call the true blends, qu, ch, sh. We played a card game called soundo (it came with a curriculum I used) It was like fish except letters. If you wanted an "s" you had to make the sound and use the work snake(if that was the picture with that card. I got boggle jr. We worked 20-30 minutes 3 times a week. and after a few months she was reading. I used to say she crackee the code for reading, she had all the tools but just couldn't assimilate. She's extremely bright and gets great grades now.
Another consideration is, when is her birthday? My older daughter's birthday is 8/27 and I delayed starting her a year. Having her start kindergardten at four years old or going to college when she's 17 didn't feel right. She is a very confident 9th grader now and we're very glad about our decision.
It's still early in the year yet. She might click into things soon. Just keep working with her and also, keep reading to her. My kids love it when my hubby reads a chapter book to them. I would try and hide my anxiety if I could over this situation. I always made sure my "late reader" knew that I thought she was highly intelligent, especially in math. I believe that kids tend to go towards the self fulfilled prophecy. If she was down on herself about the reading, I would just act like, yeah, right now reading is hard but it won't always be. And you're great at math-which she was. I used a bridge analogy, I'm going to walk with you part way across the bridge and then you'll walk the rest of the way when it's time.
Sorry for jumping around but I remember a friend using sand or cornstarch in a pan for her son to write his letters-?tactile learner. Good luck with your daughter. LaurieK