Practical, evidence-based classroom strategies for teaching students with ADHD, autism, and dyslexia.
The government estimates one to two students with NPF in every class, yet knowledge of neurodevelopmental conditions was only added to teacher-education exam goals in 2020. And research warns that training teachers about diagnoses is the wrong frame: a label does not tell a teacher what to actually do on Tuesday morning.
Sweden's support system is often drawn as a staircase with three steps. The one most people skip past is the first. Ledning och stimulans is the guidance and stimulation every student is entitled to inside ordinary teaching, before any formal decision. Here is what it means, why it matters most for neurodivergent students, and why the 2028 reform leans on it harder.
Between 2019 and 2022, the share of children in Sweden with an ADHD diagnosis rose by up to 50 percent, and the fastest growth was among girls, the group schools have historically missed. Here is what the numbers actually say, and why they change what a classroom has to be able to do.
Sweden's specialist school authority SPSM built a model for what makes education accessible to every student. It has four areas. Here is what they are, and which one neurodivergent students most often lose.
For a student on the autism spectrum, a classroom that works is above all a predictable one. Here are the adaptations that genuinely help, grounded in guidance from Sweden's special-needs agency, why they rest on the structure of clarifying teaching, and why they are part of what the law already requires.
A student with dyslexia is not a student who cannot learn, but one for whom reading and writing are the hardest part. Here are the adaptations and assistive tools that genuinely help, grounded in guidance from Sweden's special-needs agency, and why they are part of what the law already requires.
Around one in ten Swedish students has a neurodevelopmental condition, and ADHD is one of the most common. Here are the classroom adaptations that genuinely help, grounded in guidance from Sweden's special-needs agency, and why they are not optional extras but part of what the law already requires.