Studying with dyspraxia can feel like you're trying to assemble furniture with instructions in another language. Your brain just processes things like planning and sequencing differently. So when someone tells you to "just focus more," it's not just unhelpful—it's infuriating.
So let's skip the platitudes.
The hard part is usually organization. Getting your thoughts in order, arranging your materials, sequencing ideas for an essay—it can feel impossible when everything seems urgent. You might have a brilliant, non-linear way of thinking that connects ideas others miss. But forcing that into a standard essay is a nightmare.
Break It Down. No, Smaller.
The most effective strategy is breaking tasks into absurdly small pieces. "Write essay" isn't a task; it's a recipe for disaster.
Instead, your to-do list should look more like this:
Open your laptop.
Create a new document.
Write five possible titles.
Find three articles about the topic.
Read the introduction of one article.
Write one sentence summarizing that introduction.
Each step is tiny and manageable. Ticking things off a list provides a dopamine hit that actually helps with motivation. This approach bypasses the executive function traffic jam that dyspraxia can cause. Working backwards from a deadline can also help you map out these tiny steps.
Your Environment Matters More Than You Think
Distractions are the enemy. A cluttered desk or a ticking clock can be overwhelming. Set up a sensory-friendly study space. This might mean soft lighting, noise-canceling headphones, or a chair that doesn’t make you fidget.
I once tried to study for a history final at my kitchen table. My roommate came home at exactly 4:17 PM, started making a smoothie, and the sound of the blender completely derailed my train of thought. I ended up staring at a page about the Byzantine Empire for twenty minutes, thinking only about the whirring blades. I learned my lesson: control your environment, or it will control you.
Your brain might struggle with sequencing, but software doesn't. Use it.
Mind Mapping Software: Tools like MindGenius, Xmind, or Inspiration are perfect for dyspraxic thinkers. They let you get all your ideas out in a non-linear way and then drag and drop them into a logical structure. It’s a way to work with your brain's natural tendencies instead of fighting them.
Speech-to-Text: If getting thoughts onto paper is the hard part, just say them. Dragon Naturally Speaking or the free dictation tools built into Google Docs and Microsoft Word can be game-changers. This separates the act of creating from the fine motor skill of typing or writing.
Text-to-Speech: Have your computer read your notes or sources back to you. This helps you catch errors in your own writing and process information without the fatigue of reading. Tools like Natural Reader or the "Screen Mask" feature in Read&Write can highlight text as it's read aloud, which helps with focus.
Rethink Note-Taking
Trying to listen to a lecture while writing coherent notes can be impossible. Your brain is already working overtime to process what you're hearing.
Ask to record lectures: This lets you focus on listening in class. You can go back to the recording later and make notes at your own pace.
Use color-coding: Organize your notes visually. Assign different colors to themes, dates, or kinds of information. This plays to your visual strengths to help with the organization.
Try one-page summaries: Instead of endless pages, try to condense an entire topic onto a single page using a grid or box format. This forces you to pick out the most important ideas and see how they connect.
Time Management That Actually Works
People with dyspraxia often have poor time perception. A task you think will take 20 minutes might actually take two hours.
Use timers for everything: The Pomodoro Technique (working in focused 25-minute sprints with short breaks) works really well. It externalizes time management. There are countless apps for this, and some can track your focus sessions to build streaks, which is a great motivator.
Set reminders: Use a digital calendar or a habit tracker app like Trider for everything. Set multiple reminders for deadlines and appointments. Don't rely on your short-term memory.
It's not always going to be easy, and it’s useless to compare your process to someone else’s. Your way of thinking is different, not deficient. The goal is just to build a system of outside supports that lets you show how smart you actually are.
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