Despite all the phonics hoo-ha, reading fluency still comes down to being able to read all common words by instantly, by sight, without the need for decoding, like u all do now.
There are different ways of approaching phonics too. It is possible to teach a few words by sight first (a, and, and, hand, land, sand) and then look for the phonics in them. It's not completely either or.
A very essential part of learning to read is learning the first 100 and the next 200 words fairly quickly, because they keep cropping up all over the place. Half the words in any book come from them.
64 of those words are phonically regular and decodable. So phonics works brilliantly with them (although for spelling even some of those need extra attention):
a, and, as, at, had, has, that, an, back, can,
came, made, make,
get, them, then, well, went, her,
been, see,
in, is, it, if, did, him, his, with, big, little, this, will, first,
I, like, right, by, my,
not, on, from, of, off, or, for, before, more, so, go, no,
but, much, must, up, just,
our, out, about,
new, over, old, they, their.
The other 36 are trickier:
was, all, call, want, what, said,
the, he, she, be, we, me, when, which,
here, there, were, where,
to, one, you, come, could, do, down, into, look, now, only, other, some, two, who, your, are, have.
Some of those keep tripping children up in their early reading for a long time.