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QuestionPlease
Emu Egg
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Joined: 8 Apr 2025
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08 Apr 2025, 12:10 pm

For those with severe Dyscalculia, how do you advance your career and get out of the huge amount terrible, low-wage jobs that involve getting treated like cr@p all the time?

Mine is so severe I have tried 4 times to learn Algebra 1 and still can't. I can't work math once you get into things like fractions and decimals and require a calculator for everything. My sister was diagnosed with severe Dyscalculia in 1st grade but I was missed (long story), and her ability is leaps and bounds above mine. No amount of extra study time helps. However, adult diagnosis that would make it easier to get into schools is thousands of dollars out of pocket without insurance (I can't afford insurance because I can't get out of entry level, low paying jobs due to lack of higher learning). Today, even totally non-mathematical careers like Psychology require passing an entry test for math to get into college.

I'm 40 years old at this point and don't have enough skills for the "entrepreneur" gig. I want to leave my job but I have kids to feed and not a lot of options. Time is running out if I don't want to he 65 barely getting by in my job and still getting stepped on people every day as the only person who can't advance, which is a horrible example to set for my kids.

WHAT can I do???



BTDT
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08 Apr 2025, 2:50 pm

Get a job that doesn't require a college degree.

I know a civil engineer that ended up being a landscaper.
The problem with being an engineer was they told her what they wanted. Her job was to do I cheaper.
She got tired of doing that.
As a landscaper she could use her creative abilities to make gardens that people would enjoy.



renaeden
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08 Apr 2025, 10:39 pm

Psychology has a mathematical element: statistics.

For me, advanced statistics at uni had a three hour, open book exam. I sat through the whole thing sweating because it was so hard. Before the exam I went to a tutor for the whole semester because I found statistics difficult to grasp.

I passed in the end which surprised me.