mom23,
Thanks so much for clearing that up!

That makes more sense.

One thing that the previous poster mentioned, which is so important, is that kiddos truly need to have their sounds down pat prior to beginning with The Reading Lesson. We typically do this through LHTH, but if your little guy is struggling so much with the lessons, I'm thinking he just needs some review of his sounds for awhile. The Leapfrog DVD Letter Factory is a great one for this. If you did LHTH, then the letter flashcards are another great way to review. Do both daily for awhile for reading and that is it!

This could go on for a month.
Next, when you are sure he has his 26 alphabet sounds down, set your timer for 10 min. for your reading lesson, telling your son that as long as he works hard, then at the end of 10 min. you are done. Add 1 minute if he is having a bad attitude. Don't let your lesson exceed 15 min. even if you add time for lack of hard work. Even if you truly get through 3 words... that is enough for the day. Take heart that it won't always be this way.

Another thing to do would be as I suggested in the last entry in this post:
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=6790
This can really help with the word lists so that they do not seem overwhelming.

Instead of having him read out of The Reading Lesson book, have him do his words the way I described above on the markerboard one sound at a time. This will give him a new approach, without seeing "the book" as the thing he must read from but still allow you to progress through a bit of the lesson each day.
Here's another tip from my3son's on doing words on the markerboard too:
When my ds was struggling, I spent more time modeling than he did reading. Then, he just had to repeat after me for awhile. That worked well and took the pressure off him at first. One other thing that helped was to write the word he was sounding out in black on a markerboard. If the word was "mat", I'd write the letter "m" in black quite large and I'd say the sound for it, then I'd write the "a" and say the sound for that, and then I'd write the "t' and say the sound for that. Then, I'd put a black line under it all and say it blended, "mat". Then, he'd do it that way with me writing as he did it. Another trick is to pronounce the first sound the loudest. One more idea that worked for our dc was to use a rubberband to stretch as we were saying each sound and then snap it back when we blended it.
Last, if you do not have The Reading Lesson CD, it is important to get it. This makes a huge difference in how successful the lessons are in the book and is a terrific pre- or post-lesson.
As far as math goes, the lessons should last about 15 min. Make sure you sit with your child for the whole time and help as much as needed to help him get done. All of the concepts in math will be new and won't be needing mastery right now. Think of this as an introduction where you partner with him to help him understand. Make sure you are doing the corresponding hands-on lessons in the LHFHG guide too as they really make a difference. Set the timer if needed so your lesson goes no longer than 20 min. at the most. Then, put it away and pick it back up the next day.

Keeping the lessons short and sweet and partnering with him to give him any needed help will go a long way toward his overall impression of math and reading too!

The lessons for a little one should never exceed that amount of time or their little attitudes will reflect it.
Hope this helps!
Blessings,
Carrie