Trail Project

Understanding the Learners We Work With

The learner profiles presented below are based on the insights, observations, and patterns that emerged across all of our inclusive mobility pilots. Each group reflects real learners we engaged with — their characteristics, strengths, barriers, and the conditions that supported their full participation.

These descriptions are not labels or rigid categories. Instead, they offer practitioners a practical, experience-based overview of who they may encounter in similar mobility contexts, and what kinds of needs and learning rhythms are important to be aware of. Our aim is to help trainers, mentors, and organisations better understand the diversity of adult learners and prepare environments where everyone can participate confidently, safely, and meaningfully.

Explore the profiles to gain a clearer picture of the groups involved and the considerations that shaped effective inclusive mobility practice.

Learners with Health-Related Needs

Adults managing chronic medical conditions or medically prescribed diets who need predictable routines and reliable health-supportive environments.

Inclusion for learners with health-related needs is most effective when medical considerations are anticipated early, privacy is respected, and routines support safety, comfort, and autonomy.

Adults in this group may live with chronic medical conditions, medically prescribed dietary constraints, or ongoing treatment routines that must be maintained consistently. Their participation is shaped by health considerations rather than ability: they are fully independent learners who simply require environments that support their medical needs. Some may prefer not to disclose detailed health information, so privacy, trust, and respectful communication are important. When the necessary safeguards are in place, they participate confidently and fully across all learning and mobility activities.

  • Predictable daily schedules that support medication timing, treatment routines, and energy levels

  • Advance information about accommodation, meals, accessibility, and any potential medical risks

  • Safe and reliable food options aligned with medically prescribed diets

  • A privacy-respecting environment where health needs can be communicated safely, without stigma, undue pressure
  • Clear emergency procedures and easy access to appropriate medical support

  • Facilitators who understand the seriousness of medical conditions and can recognise early signs of discomfort or fatigue

  • Practical adjustments such as reduced walking distances, rest opportunities, or alternative meal arrangements

  • Pre-departure health risk assessments identifying medical considerations, environmental risks, and necessary precautions

  • Shared travel, medication, and safety plans increasing predictability and reducing health-related stress
  • Careful selection of venues and catering preventing exposure to unsafe foods or environments

  • Open, confidential communication channels enabling learners to disclose needs comfortably and early

  • Monitoring for subtle health cues such as fatigue, discomfort, or early signs of reaction to prevent escalation

  • Quiet spaces and planned rest time allowing learners to manage their health without disrupting group participation

Older Learners

Learners aged 60+ with rich life experience but limited international, digital, or fast-paced learning exposure.

They participate most confidently when programmes reduce uncertainty, protect their energy, and provide steady, respectful support across learning, communication, and travel.

Older adult learners are generally between 60 and 85 years old. Many remain active, engaged, and curious, while others experience varying levels of social isolation and look for opportunities to reconnect. Common barriers include chronic health conditions, limited digital confidence, low English proficiency, anxiety around increasingly digitalised travel logistics, and reduced stamina for fast-paced learning environments. They benefit from predictable structure, clear communication, and time to process new information. When supported appropriately, they contribute depth, reflection, empathy, and extensive life experience that enriches the learning dynamic.

  • Slower pacing and frequent breaks

  • Clear communication and bilingual support

  • Predictable, structured routines

  • Help navigating digital tools or unfamiliar environments

  • Reassurance around travel, safety, and unfamiliar procedures

  • Accessible venues with manageable walking distances

  • Short, well-structured sessions: Helped maintain focus without overwhelming learners.

  • Simplified language and visual explanations: Increased confidence and comprehension.

  • Full travel support and printed itineraries: Reduced anxiety and built trust.

  • Accessible venues and orientation walks: Helped learners feel comfortable in new settings.

  • Gentle digital onboarding: Allowed learners to engage without pressure.

  • Daily check-ins: Provided emotional reassurance and kept motivation high.

Neurodivergent Learners

People with autism, ADHD, or learning differences who thrive with structure, clarity, and reduced sensory demands.

They engage most confidently when environments minimise unpredictability and overload, and when communication and routines are clear, consistent, and emotionally safe.

Neurodivergent learners may have diverse communication styles, sensory processing differences, and varying attention or information-processing patterns. Many have limited experience in unfamiliar or international environments and therefore rely on predictability, emotional safety, and steady routines to participate comfortably. They often benefit from visual cues, repetition, step-by-step explanations, and low-stimulus settings that reduce cognitive load. When supported appropriately, they demonstrate strong creativity, honesty, focused problem-solving, and deep engagement, contributing unique perspectives to group learning.

  • Predictable routines with minimal daily changes

  • Clear, concrete, step-by-step instructions

  • Reduced sensory input and access to quiet spaces

  • Visual scaffolding to support verbal explanations

  • Reassurance, emotional grounding, and trusted mentors

  • Freedom to pause or withdraw without judgement

  • One major activity per day to prevent overload and maintain focus

  • Plain language paired with visual supports for clarity and confidence

  • Quiet, low-stimulation accommodation that supported emotional regulation

  • Buddy systems and structured group rules that strengthened orientation and belonging

  • Daily mentoring check-ins offering emotional grounding and early identification of distress

  • Flexible participation options allowing learners to step back and re-engage when ready

Learners with Mental Health Challenges

Adults managing psychological conditions ranging from anxiety, depression and requires sensitive emotional support and awareness.

They work best when pressure is reduced, environments are calm, and emotional support is consistent, predictable, and free of judgement.

Learners with mental health challenges often experience fluctuating emotional states, heightened sensitivity to unfamiliar environments, and increased vulnerability to stress or overstimulation. They may find fast-paced schedules, social demands, or sudden changes overwhelming and often need more time to settle, observe, and build trust before engaging fully. Many rely on calm, predictable routines and benefit from environments where their emotional needs are acknowledged without stigma. Subtle shifts in behaviour, withdrawal, or fatigue can indicate rising stress, making stability and psychological safety particularly important for this group.

  • Calm and low-pressure environments that reduce overstimulation

  • Flexible participation with the option to step back without judgement

  • Predictable daily routines with limited sudden changes

  • Clear, simple information shared early to reduce anticipatory stress

  • Time to observe and build trust before engaging

  • Trainers who can recognise early signs of distress, remain approachable, and maintain open, non-intrusive communication

  • Shorter, paced learning days that balanced activity with recovery time

  • Quiet, low-stimulation accommodation supporting emotional stability

  • Normalised flexibility allowing learners to withdraw and rejoin comfortably

  • Steady facilitator presence offering unobtrusive emotional support and close awareness of stress triggers

  • Clear, early explanations of each day’s plan reducing uncertainty

  • Gradual social integration through gentle, structured interactions rather than large, unstructured groups

Young People with Fewer Opportunities

Young people facing economic, educational, or social barriers (NEETs) with limited access to structured or international learning environments.

They learn best when they feel trusted and when the goals are clear. They get more interested and motivated when they are well prepared and when the learning connects to things they care about. It helps them feel more involved when they have a safe space where they can express themselves freely and use their creativity.

These learners often face socio-economic barriers, limited educational pathways, unstable life situations, or migration-related challenges. Many lack confidence in formal learning settings and may feel uncertain about how to behave, contribute, or navigate international contexts. They respond well to relatable guidance, transparency, and opportunities to shape their own learning experience. When supported, they engage energetically, show strong peer solidarity, and contribute practical insight rooted in lived experience.

  • Trusting relationships with familiar mentors

  • Opportunities to co-design parts of the learning process to establish a sense of ownership
  • Clear, direct communication about expectations and logistics

  • Extended preparation phases using non-formal methods for stable engagement

  • Language and confidence-building activities

  • Achievable, realistic tasks to avoid discouragement

  • Co-designed activities creating ownership and motivation

  • Playful language and skills workshops increasing confidence

  • Informal communication channels (e.g., WhatsApp, voice notes) supporting accessibility

  • Early travel guidance reducing stress and uncertainty

  • Short, dynamic learning tasks maintaining focus

  • Structured social events strengthening group cohesion

Mixed and Intersectional Groups

Participants of varied ages, backgrounds, and abilities bringing overlapping needs and diverse learning rhythms.

Mixed groups collaborate best when facilitation is flexible and anticipatory, recognising that diverse learners require different speeds, supports, and participation pathways rather than a single “norm.”

Mixed and intersectional learner groups bring together individuals with different socio-economic backgrounds, ages, cultural identities, learning speeds, and support needs. These learners often move through activities at varying paces, with strengths and barriers that shift from day to day. Group members may experience overlapping forms of disadvantage, such as limited language confidence, low digital skills, or social hesitancy, alongside strong creativity, resilience, and practical insight. This diversity offers rich learning potential yet requires facilitation that is adaptable, multimodal, and sensitive to dynamics that can change rapidly.

  • Space to negotiate different learning speeds without pressure

  • Facilitation that adapts to emerging needs in real time

  • Multimodal communication, especially visual support, to accommodate different processing styles

  • Structured but not rigid content to provide clarity while allowing flexibility

  • Tools and methods accessible to all digital skill levels

  • Strong group-building activities to reduce initial distance and support cohesion

  • Two shorter learning blocks per day preventing fatigue and supporting sustained engagement

  • Distributed facilitation allowing trainers to move between groups and respond to individual needs

  • Plain English paired with visual tools ensuring everyone could follow regardless of language or processing differences

  • Multiple participation formats (drawing, speaking, observing, note-taking) enabling all learners to contribute meaningfully

  • Daily check-ins helping facilitators identify early signs of confusion, stress, or withdrawal

  • Intentional group-building activities reducing initial social barriers and strengthening peer support