At school — Insights from real experiences

School is where many learning difficulties become visible, not only because tasks are demanding, but because children must navigate them within a fast-paced, highly structured environment.
Over the years, working closely with my son Giacomo and with many students with specific learning difficulties, I’ve learned how essential it is for teachers, parents, tutors, and pupils to work as a team.

Teachers’ observations often reveal aspects that families may not see at home, offering a 360-degree understanding of a child’s real challenges.
In my own work — carried out inside a school setting — the most meaningful progress always came from shared insights and open communication.

Many traditional teaching approaches were not designed with diverse learning profiles in mind.
This means that some pupils may not access every part of a lesson as easily as others, even when they understand the content.
Recognising these moments allows teachers, parents, and tutors to work together and find small adjustments that support everyone in the classroom.

The insights shared here reflect some of the recurring patterns I have observed in schools, along with small strategies that helped students stay oriented, engaged, and able to show what they really know.

More school-focused deep-dives are on the way, shaped by what teachers, pupils, and families have generously shared.