A blind student is suing Miami University for allegedly discriminating against her because of her disability, The Dayton Daily News reported.

Aleeha Dudley, third-year zoology major who wants to pursue veterinary school, filed a federal lawsuit claiming that the university deliberately failed to make "necessary modifications" so she could complete the coursework for her degree.

"Miami, far from providing an equal opportunity to access educational benefits, has offered Ms. Dudley a nightmarish experience of failed and broken promises, unfair disadvantage and an educational experience that is second to all," she charges in the complaint filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio., according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

In the lawsuit, Dudley said she has struggled academically since she enrolled at the university in 2011 because new technology used by the school is not accessible to her and does not convert to the Braille content she needs, The Dayton Daily News. Course materials were also provided in a way that she could not use text-to-speech software.

"I am frustrated, but the biggest of my goals is that I really want to help somebody who comes behind me as a blind student pursuing science," she told The Dayton Daily News. "Maybe not only at Miami but at other universities so that they don't have these same frustrations, and they're not nearly as exhausted and frustrated as I am about this."

Dudley, who graduated high school with a 3.6 grade point average, currently holds a 2.64 grade point average at Miami University, which has "jeopardized, if not destroyed" her chances of gaining admittance to veterinary school, according to her lawsuit.

"My dream of becoming a veterinarian has turned in to a nightmare. I am so far behind in my coursework, and my grades have suffered so much, that I will not be able to pursue a veterinary degree and enter the job market on time, if at all," Dudley said in a statement.

The issue seems to a common be problem today for blind students on college campuses.

"Miami is not alone in this. It's a very common problem in higher education," Dudley's attorney, Kerstin Sjoberg-Witt of Disability Rights Ohio, told The Dayton Daily News.

According to The Dayton Daily News Dudley said she plans to continue her education at Miami this semester and hopes to graduate, as well.