Dyslexia and study skills

This guide is designed to help people with dyslexia think about study skills.

Dyslexia can mean that you might take longer to process and remember information.  This is why you might be given extra time in exams.  Difficulties with short-term memory mean that you often need to ‘over learn’ things until you know them perfectly when you are studying – you cannot study at the last minute.

Some of the dyslexic difficulties that affect reading and writing also affect organisation skills like time management, organising ideas and structuring your work.  This is why it’s important to think about what will work for you well ahead. 

People with dyslexia can find effective ways to approach studies and retain the information that’s needed to sit exams. There is no evidence that people with dyslexia learn better in one particular style, but they should develop their own preferences and approaches to learning.

In your approaches to studying you need to consider the following:

Planning – plan well ahead

Organising – take an organised approach to how you study

Time management – allocate the correct times for each subject

Revising techniques – think about the ways that work best for you.

Things to help your study skills:

Some people with dyslexia find mindmaps useful for studying.  The benefits of making mindmaps for revision are: