

Anthony Daoudi
Lead Teacher & Founder, Bespoke Learning
July 15, 2025
At Bespoke Learning, we believe that behind every thriving student is a structure that supports their growth. One of the most powerful — yet often overlooked — tools in any educator's toolkit is the routine.
Whether we're providing IB French tutoring or supporting neurodiverse learners through one-on-one IB and AP sessions, routines provide the foundation for safety, engagement, and academic success. As I've explored through my leadership training with Harvard and the Ontario Principal Qualification Program (PQP), routines aren't just about classroom management — they are deeply tied to equity, neuroscience, and effective instructional leadership.
Cognitive science confirms that routines reduce extraneous cognitive load, allowing students to allocate more working memory to complex tasks (Sweller et al., 2011). When students know what to expect, their executive functioning systems are less taxed — which is critical for learners with ADHD, anxiety, or trauma-related symptoms (Centre for ADHD Awareness Canada, 2023).
Predictable routines help students:
As Zaretta Hammond (2015) emphasizes in Culturally Responsive Teaching and the Brain, structure and predictability are not the enemies of creativity — they are its foundation.
The Ontario Leadership Framework and Street Data (Safir & Dugan, 2021) remind us that equity requires coherence and intentionality. Too often, "hidden curriculum" — the unspoken routines and norms of school — creates barriers for multilingual learners, neurodivergent students, and those who experience systemic marginalization.
Transparent, co-constructed routines make learning accessible. They create a sense of belonging and reduce ambiguity, which research shows is especially important for students navigating unfamiliar or exclusive systems (Ontario College of Teachers, 2023).
At Bespoke Learning, we design all of our sessions — whether tutoring, enrichment, or exam prep — with clarity, consistency, and co-agency in mind.
Routines are not static — they evolve with purpose. At Bespoke Learning, we use the ABCM framework (Autonomy, Belonging, Competence, Meaning) from the Harvard Instructional Leadership course to guide our lesson routines.
Whether supporting a student with IB Paper 1 strategies or scaffolding oral practice in French, we rely on predictable elements:
These routines help students become metacognitive learners — aware of their process, able to self-assess, and ready to take risks.
In an era of personalized, AI-supported learning, routines remain essential. AI can suggest learning paths, but only humans can create the relational safety and clarity students need to succeed.
Our tutors blend AI-enhanced tools like Brisk and Flint with predictable routines to help students:
As Michael Fullan (2021) reminds us, technology amplifies the work of strong educators — it doesn't replace it.
If you're a parent or educator, here are 4 research-informed ways to support routines at home or school:
At Bespoke Learning, we design personalized routines that support cognitive growth, equity, and student confidence. Whether your child is preparing for IB exams, mastering French language skills, or rebuilding motivation, we're here to help them develop evidence-based habits that last.
Evidence-based services: Study skills development | Extended Essay structure coaching | University application routines
Free planning tools: Study Hours Planner | Grade Calculator
Book Your Free Routine Consultation →📍Serving students globally from Toronto | Follow: Instagram | LinkedIn
CAST. (2018). Universal Design for Learning Guidelines version 2.2. https://udlguidelines.cast.org/
Centre for ADHD Awareness Canada. (2023). Classroom strategies for students with ADHD. https://caddac.ca
Fullan, M. (2021). The right drivers for whole system success. Centre for Strategic Education.
Hammond, Z. (2015). Culturally responsive teaching and the brain. Corwin Press.
Ontario College of Teachers. (2023). Exploring Accessibility, Inclusion, and Belonging. https://www.oct.ca
Safir, S., & Dugan, J. (2021). Street data: A next-generation model for equity, pedagogy, and school transformation. Corwin Press.
Sweller, J., Ayres, P., & Kalyuga, S. (2011). Cognitive load theory. Springer.