This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by gabbar
This is a submission for the World's Largest Hackathon Writing Challenge: After the Hack.
What started as a late-night hackathon idea has evolved into something I never expected—a tool that's reshaping how I think about accessibility, education, and the power of inclusive design.
The Problem That Drove Me
During the World's Largest Hackathon, I built a Dyslexia-Friendly Worksheet Creator—a web application that automatically generates educational worksheets optimized for students with dyslexia. The tool incorporates research-backed design principles: larger font sizes, specific typefaces, increased line spacing, reduced visual clutter, and color schemes that minimize reading strain.
But this wasn't just another hackathon project for me. It was personal.
What I Built and Why It Matters
The Dyslexia-Friendly Worksheet Creator allows educators to:
Generate customized worksheets with dyslexia-optimized formatting
Choose from various subject templates (math, reading comprehension, vocabulary)
Automatically apply accessibility features without design expertise
Export print-ready PDFs that follow evidence-based accessibility guidelines
What makes this tool special isn't just its functionality—it's the 10-15% improvement in reading comprehension that early testing showed when students used these formatted worksheets compared to traditional ones.
The Learning Curve That Transformed Me
This month of creation taught me skills I never knew I needed:
Technical Growth:
Mastered responsive web design with accessibility-first principles
Learned to integrate PDF generation libraries with custom formatting
Dove deep into UX research, specifically around cognitive accessibility
Personal Transformation:
Discovered my passion for inclusive technology design
Realized that the most impactful solutions often serve underrepresented communities
Learned that accessibility isn't a feature—it's a fundamental design philosophy
What's Next: Beyond the Hackathon
The hackathon may be over, but this project has taken on a life of its own:
Immediate Plans (Next 3 months):
Partnering with local special education teachers to refine the tool based on real classroom feedback
Adding support for other learning differences (ADHD, visual processing disorders)
Building a library of subject-specific templates created by educators
Long-term Vision:
Launching as a freemium SaaS platform for schools and individual educators
Exploring partnerships with educational publishers to integrate accessibility standards
Potentially spinning this into a full-fledged startup focused on accessible educational technology
How This Changed My Trajectory
Before this hackathon, I was following a traditional software development path. Now, I'm pivoting toward assistive technology and inclusive design. I've already started:
Volunteering with local disability advocacy groups
Taking courses in accessibility standards and cognitive science
Connecting with other developers building inclusive tools
This experience showed me that building for inclusion doesn't limit your audience—it expands it. When you design for users with the greatest needs, you create solutions that benefit everyone.
The Bigger Picture
What struck me most was realizing how many "solved problems" in tech aren't actually solved for everyone. Education technology is filled with beautiful, functional tools that completely fail students with learning differences.
This hackathon taught me that true innovation isn't always about the newest framework or the flashiest features—sometimes it's about taking existing solutions and making them work for people who've been overlooked.
The Dyslexia-Friendly Worksheet Creator started as a hackathon project. Now it's become my mission to prove that accessibility and great design aren't contradictory—they're collaborative.
Building this tool reminded me why I fell in love with coding in the first place: the power to solve real problems for real people. The hackathon is over, but the impact is just beginning.
This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by gabbar

gabbar | Sciencx (2025-07-26T12:43:13+00:00) From Frustration to Innovation: How Building a Dyslexia-Friendly Worksheet Creator Changed Everything. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2025/07/26/from-frustration-to-innovation-how-building-a-dyslexia-friendly-worksheet-creator-changed-everything/
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