Posts Tagged ‘become a tutor’

Tutor safety and the Ila Dusk security alarm

Friday, September 18th, 2009

ila dusk

Recently in the news we hear that a new security alarm has been launched that ‘emits a piercing, high decibel female scream designed to shock and disorientate an attacker’. The alarm is being promoted by M&S and can be purchased here.

Safety is of paramount importance for all concerned when contacting strangers through the internet. The case in August of the fake gumtree car advert used to attack and rob a victim is a recent reminder of this.

Our free guide for tutors covers tutor safety in some depth. Topics covered include child safety, professional boundaries, meeting up for the first time, appropriate insurance and email scams.

In addition, we provide prominent safety advice to parents and students who contact our tutors online. Indeed, parents and students must check a box indicating they’ve read our safety advice before contacting a potential tutor.

Two of our favourite sources of expertise on the topic of internet and personal safety are the charities The Suzy Lamplugh Trust and Kidscape. The former advises on all aspects of personal safety, while the latter is focused on child safety.

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The new Vetting and Barring scheme: some perspective please

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

Over the last day or two there has been a huge media frenzy over the Government’s new ‘Vetting and Barring’ scheme for protecting children and vulnerable adults, but it seems to me precious little attention has been paid to the facts. The following comment (from the Telegraph) is typical:

Under the Government’s new Vetting and Barring Scheme, every adult who has regular contact with children outside their family will have to register on a state database. Each individual will then be assessed by officials in terms of the risk they pose to children.

This is simply not true. There are many circumstances where registration on the ‘state database’ will not be required – one massive industry being private tuition. That’s right: self-employed private tutors who are employed by parents are not required to register on the Independent Safeguarding Authority (ISA) database.

The ISA needs desperately to make its role much clearer in order to prevent both media and public over-reaction.

But as far as private tutors are concerned, it’s very much business as usual. As we’ve tried to make clear all along, self-employed tutors neither need a so-called CRB (Criminal Records Bureau) check, nor do they need to belong to the new ISA database. Although it may well be in a tutor’s interests to voluntarily register with the ISA (to demonstrate an added level of credibility to parents), it is not a legal requirement.

When compiling information for our e-book on tutoring, we contacted the ISA for guidance on this topic. John Sheridan of the DCSF clarified the relationship between the ISA and the private tuition sector for us, and a short interview with him can be found in our e-book. This is what he had to say:

It’s true that self-employed regulated activity providers working for parents will not be required to register with the ISA, because parents will not be required to check these individuals’ ISA registration status. Parliament decided in effect that it would not be appropriate to criminalise parents for not making checks, and it follows that there should be no requirement on the regulated activity provider to register. The online check will be quick and free, and we hope that market pressure from parents wanting to do the check will, over time, lead increasingly to self-employed providers registering with the ISA.

Any tutor or parent who needs to obtain more information on this topic can download our free e-book here.

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10,000 genuine enquiries to Tutor Pages tutors

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

In August this year, the number of student enquiries passed on to tutors through the Tutor Pages passed the 10,000 mark. This is a significant achievement for a company which only launched at the beginning of 2008.

Moreover, the actual number of enquiries is significantly higher than 10,000 – that’s because this figure excludes enquiries made to some tutors who have included their own website on our Pages.

Unlike a simple classifieds site, we take care to check every enquiry that’s made through the The Tutor Pages to make sure it’s genuine. We now even have the technology to monitor exactly which tutors, which subjects and which areas are doing the best. That means we can adjust our advertising campaigns to make sure all of our registered tutors are happy with the number of enquiries that are coming through to them.

For more on The Tutor Pages statistics, see our monthly stats page. Or see how The Tutor Pages works.

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