Posts Tagged ‘GSG’

7 Questions to Ask a Prospective Tutor

Friday, March 18th, 2011

The Good Schools Guide is celebrating 25 years with its most comprehensive edition yet. Currently, they’re offering an introductory £9.99 subscription which will let you access all of their online content.

As well as reviewing schools up and down the country, The Good Schools Guide is one of the few publications interested in shining a light on the private tuition industry in the UK. As an aside, The Tutor Pages is one of its recommended websites for private tuition.

Recently, they published a list of 7 questions to ask before deciding to employ a tutor, which I’ve included below. It’s sound and sensible advice – exactly what we’ve come to expect:

“If you’re considering a tutor, avoid an exam horror story by asking these key questions first:

  1. What are your qualifications? There’s no formal accreditation for tutors – anyone can call themselves one. So ask for chapter and verse: are they a student, an unemployed graduate, or a former teacher with bags of experience?
  2. How do you keep up to date on the latest curriculum or exam requirements? Your tutor may have a PhD in astrophysics, but that won’t help your child prepare for grammar school reasoning tests. Make sure the tutor you choose is an expert in preparing for the exam your child will be taking.
  3. Are you CRB checked? Over the top if your tutor comes with glowing praise from your friends, but worth asking if they’re unknown and you can’t check them out in other ways.
  4. What’s it going to cost? Pin down how much, how often and whom you pay. Does it go to the tutor? To the agency? Do you have to pay extra for the tutor’s travel? What happens if you have to cancel a lesson?
  5. Do I have to sign a contract? If so, check what you are committing to. Some agencies try to tie you into a ‘package’ of lessons before you’ve even met the tutor – beware!
  6. Can I talk to some of your existing clients? Ask for phone numbers and make sure to ring them.
  7. Do you offer small group instruction? Some magical tutoring happens in settings of three or four pupils – and it can save you a bundle in fees. It won’t suit everyone, but can work well for grammar school exams and other school entrance tests.”

The Tutor Pages appears in the Good Schools Guide

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

The Tutor Pages is to appear in next year’s Good Schools Guide, under its recommendations for tuition companies.

The Good Schools Guide only usually recommends tuition agencies, and so to feature in the Guide is a strong endorsement of the quality service we provide and our unique approach to private tuition.

So, how exactly do we differ to tuition agencies?

Simply put, The Tutor Pages is a high quality advertising platform where tutor profiles are manually checked before being posted on the site, and where students or parents are able to contact tutors free of charge. Unlike an agency, The Tutor Pages doesn’t perform background checks on the tutors listed, and it is the parent’s responsibility to do so.

Why do we work it this way? The result of this shift in responsibility is the potentially huge cost saving for both student and tutor. As our Safety Advice explains, working independently (i.e. without an agency) is ‘the method of choice for many well-qualified and experienced tutors. This way of working has always worked for private music tuition, and we’re simply extending the principle to academic and other types of tuition.’

What did The Good Schools Guide review have to say about The Tutor Pages, then?

For the full report, you’ll need to wait until the new year, but we can say that The Good Schools Guide is not known for mincing its words (it’s not for nothing that the TES reported how, ‘It is just as untroubled by the sensibilities of schools and as cavalier in the face of squawks from those it has offended.’).

The Tutor Pages did not come out of the assessment unscathed: for example, its coverage of the whole of the UK was described as ‘patchy’ and ‘wonderfully quirky’.

On the other hand, the review did state that ‘The Tutor Pages is impressive … a clear zealot for quality in this industry in which there are all too many free-loaders’. It went on to say, ‘The site is worth a visit, whether or not you want a tutor’ and that:

If you want a tutor and don’t want to employ a posh and expensive agency, take a look. Trust your judgement, interview potential tutors carefully and you could get a real bargain.

We’re certainly pleased with The Good Schools Guide assessment, since it reinforces our belief that The Tutor Pages is unique in the kind of service it provides. The positive endorsement from The Good Schools Guide cannot fail to be of benefit to all those who use our website.