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How To Succeed In Nursing School With Dyslexia

Picture of Jon Haws

Jon Haws

Dyslexia can be your super power as a nurse. Learn how to succeed in nursing school and unlock your superpower.

of NURSING.com users have dyslexia
0 %

Built for Brains That Don’t Do Traditional Studying NURSING.com Works with Dyslexia — Not Against It.

We designed this for students who need visual explanations, simplified layouts, and tools that actually help things click.

See Why NURSING.com Works →

First of all, What is Dyslexia?

You are NOT alone. In fact, 8% of NURSING.com users have dyslexia - with countless success stories.

"Dyslexia is characterized as trouble with reading despite normal intelligence. Different people are affected to different degrees. Problems may include difficulties in spelling words, reading quickly, writing words, "sounding out" words in the head, pronouncing words when reading aloud and understanding what one reads."

Why is nursing school (and school) so hard with dyslexia?

It is clear why nursing school (and school in general) is so difficult for those with dyslexia.

Schools love to measure how well students can read and write . . . from an early age, rather than receiving accommodations, many young students with dyslexia are labeled as "lazy" or "stupid".

Many educators (and society in general) misunderstand and/or do not diagnose these students - leaving them struggling.

Unfortunately, nursing school is overflowing with excessive reading. There is so much to learn and overwhelmingly, that learning is done through assigned readings.

In fact, it would take an average reader 41 hours/week of reading to read an entire Med-Surg book in a semester (seriously, I did the math).

Sadly 😔 . . .

This would be an unachievable task for many with dyslexia.

nursing school medsurg book

The world NEEDS MORE Dyslexic nurses!

Even though in school you might have been labeled as stupid or lazy and you struggle to keep your head above water, let me tell you that the world NEEDS MORE DYSLEXIC nurses.

Seriously.

Dyslexia impacts up to 10-20% of the population yet society is drastically behind in helping those who struggle.

And sadly 😢 . . . only about 3-8% of nurses report having dyslexia. We need to do a better job at getting these amazing individual into the profession.

The empathy you have gained from clawing your way through the education system can be applied in your nursing practice in a way that reaches all patients who feel lost and alone.

This is YOUR SUPERPOWER 🦸‍♀️ 🦸‍♂️

Understanding how some people struggle to learn - can be your strength as you take care of vulnerable populations.

How To Succeed In Nursing School With Dyslexia

There isn't a medication you can get to "cure" your dyslexia. However, there are accommodations and tactics that you can employ to make the journey more manageable.

Here are some tips:

  • Have a current diagnosis
  • Reach out to your college regarding accommodations
  • Take full advantage of all accommodations

These are the first tips we provide because only about 24% of students with dyslexia ever disclose this to their college. Please. Disclose and seek full accommodations.

Minority Nurse has a good article on how to get accommodations in nursing school for dyslexia.

View the article: HERE

Yale provides some great tips for college students as well - some are outlined below:

View the article: HERE

  • Use text to speech software (ie: dragon dictation, siri)
  • Use audiobooks where possible
  • Study with a friend who can assist with notes (disclose your dyslexia to your friend)
  • Allow extra time to study
  • Draw diagrams/concept maps etc vs writing notes
  • Set a study schedule and keep it - you may need extra time

Success Story

Many students with learning differences have come before you and successfully graduated, passed the NCLEX®, and are now practicing nurses.

I want to share one story in particular of Elle who is a member of the NURSING Family here at NURSING.com. She has struggled with ADHD and dyslexia since being diagnosed in the third grade - she recently passed the NCLEX® and is now a practicing RN.

Tips Elle shares that helped her pass nursing school with ADHD & dyslexia:

  • Realize you have to find what works for you
  • Read assignments/charts aloud
  • Check and recheck assignments
  • Medication - this can help, don't overlook
  • Having a study buddy who can help with notes
  • Watch NURSING.com videos
  • Review NURSING.com cheatsheets
  • Draw pictures - while you study

How NURSING.com Can Help

Your learning difference is simply that . . . a difference in HOW you learn. At NURSING.com, we believe strongly in learner equity. Because of that, we've designed our platform to enable all nursing students to achieve success - and we understand that for some - that might mean adjustments for how they learn differently.

Specifically, our videos are clear and concise - most videos are under 10 minutes and get right to the point so you can get the "meat and potatoes" without sitting there for hours. Lessons are also highly visual with world-class practicing nurses drawing the entire time.

Lesson outlines are bullet points instead of tons of text - making it easier to digest.

This visual platform carries over into beautiful images and cheatsheets that call out the critical details. Even the practice questions have videos and image rationales.

Here is how Elle used NURSING.com to study for Med-Surg:

View the NURSING.com Med-Surg courses: HERE

  • Trust the NURSING.com videos (you might not even need your textbook)
  • Take professors PPTs and search for those videos on NURSING.com
  • Watch the videos
  • Download the notes and cheatsheets and draw along
  • Take the associated quiz

Conclusion

You CAN do this!

Start For Free

Built for Brains That Don’t Do Traditional Studying NURSING.com Works with Dyslexia — Not Against It.

We designed this for students who need visual explanations, simplified layouts, and tools that actually help things click.

See Why NURSING.com Works →

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