There’s a growing understanding across education, SEND, and care sectors that no two learners are the same. Needs are complex. Journeys are rarely linear. And provision that’s truly personalised can’t be delivered through rigid, one-size-fits-all systems.
But here’s the problem: many of the tools, platforms and processes we rely on were built for uniformity, not for flexibility. They track attendance, not engagement. They record outcomes, but not context. They expect neat inputs and standard progressions when in reality, many learners move in loops, detours, and leaps.
At Anthill, we see this every day in the teams we work with: Alternative Provisions juggling multiple agencies, SEND settings adapting to emotional and sensory needs, home educators blending formal and informal learning. Everyone is doing their best but the tools often let them down.
Neurodiversity Isn’t Neat
Supporting neurodivergent learners means embracing variability.
You might have a child who reads at a post-16 level but struggles with executive functioning. Another who masks their needs so effectively that progress appears static, until you dig deeper. Or a teenager who thrives on practical, interest-led projects and resists anything that feels too structured.
Rigid systems can’t hold that complexity. Worse, they can flatten it, turning vibrant, unique learning journeys into incomplete boxes or misunderstood “gaps.”
What we need instead are tools that:
- Let teams define their own metrics of progress
- Capture narrative, context, and lived experience
- Adapt to different paces, pathways, and purposes
- Reduce duplication across multi-agency teams
- Reflect strength-based, holistic development
Adaptability Is Not a Luxury-It’s Essential
In fast-moving settings, especially those outside the mainstream, things change quickly. Staff turnover. New EHCPs. Shifting needs. Local authority requirements. A tool that worked six months ago might suddenly feel clunky or restrictive.
The ability to tweak a tracker, shift a focus, or add custom language without losing integrity isn’t a “nice to have” it’s essential for good practice. It empowers staff to stay responsive, and gives learners the dignity of being seen as whole people, not just data points.
Real Flexibility Supports Real Work
For us, flexibility doesn’t mean “anything goes.” It means building tools that support the real-world ways people work. That’s why we believe systems should:
- Start with the user, not the form
- Allow both structure and storytelling
- Scale to fit different settings-big or small
- Evolve with the team, not leave them behind
We’ve seen how the right tool, one that fits the reality on the ground can unlock capacity, boost morale, and make teams feel seen. That’s not just a tech solution. It’s a human one.
Final Thought
If we’re serious about personalised provision, we need to be serious about the tools that support it.
Because it’s not just about tracking learning or proving outcomes, it’s about creating systems that reflect what we value: adaptability, equity, and the unique ways young people grow.
Want to explore what flexible, human-centred tools could look like in your setting?
Take a look at what we’re building with Anthill Trails or reach out—we’d love to hear about the real-world challenges you’re facing.