Millions of students have dyslexia, dysgraphia, or dyscalculia — and most don't even know it yet. This site helps you understand what's going on and what to do about it.
These three learning differences affect how your brain processes reading, writing, and math — not how smart you are.
Makes it harder to decode words and read fluently. Many students with dyslexia are highly creative thinkers who just process language differently.
Makes handwriting, spelling, and organizing thoughts on paper more difficult. It's not about creativity — students with dysgraphia often have great ideas.
Makes it harder to understand numbers, do arithmetic, and work through math problems. It can make math feel slow and overwhelming — but it's not a lack of ability.
Answer a few quick questions. We'll let you know if it might be worth talking to a parent, teacher, or counselor about getting tested — no pressure, no judgment.
Some of the most successful people in history had the same challenges you might be facing right now.
Struggled in school and was doubted by teachers. He went on to develop the Theory of Relativity and win the Nobel Prize in Physics.
Didn't know he had dyslexia for years. Found his superpower in visual storytelling and became one of the greatest filmmakers of all time.
Left school early due to struggles with reading. Built a global business empire across airlines, music, and space travel.