Discover Trinity Guildhall Music Exams

July 11th, 2011, 0 Comments

Music teachers may be interested to hear that Trinity Guildhall is offering a series of free presentations across the UK and Ireland on their graded music exams. Upcoming presentations are in Manchester, Truro, Exeter, Tunbridge Wells and Cambridge, and there’s even a series of free concerts showcasing the new piano and woodwind repertoire as part of the Edinburgh Fringe Festival this August.

This would be a good chance to find out about the Trinity Guildhall approach to music exams with their emphasis on performance, and also hear about aspects such as technical work, supporting tests (aural, sightreading, musical knowledge and improvisation etc), and teacher support.

Apparently, you’ll also be able to buy their publications at a discounted price.

Just visit www.trinityguildhall.co.uk/discover to register to attend an event, or to suggest locations for future events.

The Daily Mail on ‘Super Tutors’

June 10th, 2011, 3 Comments

On average, tutors registered with The Tutor Pages charge something between £15 and £45 per hour. These are reasonable rates – from both the tutor’s perspective and the parent/ student’s – and are rates chosen by the tutors themselves. They are clearly the kind of rates that the market dictates.

In one of the most ludicrous articles on private tuition I’ve yet seen, the Daily Mail discusses ‘super-tutors’ who charge ‘up to £300 an hour’. The article’s conflation of the ‘very particular indeed’ with the ‘industry in general’ might actually be amusing if it didn’t make a nonsense of most people’s experiences of private tuition. It is clearly designed to titillate the readership.

If you don’t wish to read the article in full, here are some extracts which I’ll leave you to cringe over:

“tutors exist in a world in which clients have so much money, their fees are almost irrelevant. Indeed, the more these parents are charged, the happier they are.”

“Highly qualified Oxbridge graduates are turning their backs on banking and deciding to become tutors instead as they discover they can name their own price.”

“For as everyone from Kazakh billionaires to Oscar-winning actors knows, if you want a tutor to brag about, they have to be British.”

Clearly, every tutor hopes to be taken up by a super-rich family, such as one governess [...] who was chaperoning Middle Eastern princesses.

Finally, would it be the Daily Mail if there wasn’t something salacious?:

“An awful lot of mothers hire the tutor for themselves, not the children at all, and have affairs with them in the holidays while their husbands are working.”

 

Social Media Update – New Tutor Pages Facebook Page

May 26th, 2011, 0 Comments

We’ve been working hard on the new Tutor Pages Facebook Page, and congratulations to Martin for having cracked it.
On the Page, you’ll find a mini Tutor Pages interface (with the latest Editor’s Pick articles, latest tutors, blog posts etc) and news and updates about the world of private tuition on the Wall.
Do check it out, and remember to Like our Page if you’d like to stay in touch with the latest news and ideas on private tuition.
Click the screen capture below to view the Page: