Forget what you've been told about studying with dyslexia. It’s not about "trying harder." It’s about studying smarter. Your brain is wired differently, so a standard study routine can feel like forcing a square peg into a round hole. It's frustrating because it just doesn't work.
The only way forward is to find strategies that work with your brain, not against it. That means getting active with the material and using the right tools to help you do it. You have to give yourself permission to ditch the methods that just lead to burnout.
Walls of Text Are the Enemy. Go Multisensory.
The biggest shift you can make is to stop relying only on your eyes. Learning becomes much more effective when you engage multiple senses. Your brain builds stronger connections when you can link what you see with what you hear and do.
- Read and Listen. Use text-to-speech (TTS) software to have your notes or textbooks read out loud. Following along with the audio makes the visual information stick. Most devices have built-in screen readers, or you can try tools like Speechify.
- Talk it Out. Try recording yourself reading key concepts, then listen back. Even better, try to explain the topic to someone else. Having to teach something forces your brain to organize the information in a completely new way.
- Get Physical. Don't just read about a concept; find a way to interact with it. Use flashcards. Draw sprawling mind maps with colored pens to connect ideas. Walk around the room while you recite facts. I learned organic chemistry pathways by pacing my tiny apartment on a Tuesday afternoon until my downstairs neighbor complained. It worked. Connecting information to movement makes it stick.
Time Isn't the Problem. Big Chunks Are.
"Just study for three hours" is terrible advice. For a brain with dyslexia, that’s a recipe for burnout. The total time you spend studying matters less than how you structure it.
Break everything down. A massive project or a dense chapter feels paralyzing. So instead of a goal like "Study Chapter 5," make it "Read the first two pages of Chapter 5 and write three bullet points." That creates a small, achievable win.
Use a timer. The Pomodoro Technique is popular for a reason: it works. You work in a focused 25-minute sprint, then take a 5-minute break. These short bursts prevent your brain from getting overloaded and help you stay focused.