Specific tutors to start with in Birmingham
Tutor
Explore Learning Birmingham centres
Birmingham area shopping centres · Maths and English skills for primary and secondary · Monthly membership, assessment session
Structured learning centres with small group tuition and individual programmes. Good for children who benefit from a classroom environment outside school; check location, assessment process and commitment.
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Tutor
Tutorful
Online and Birmingham area · Flexible online or in-person tutoring · £15-40/hour depending on level and tutor
Platform connecting families with local and online tutors. Good for matching specific subject needs, learning styles, and scheduling preferences; includes trial lessons and tutor reviews.
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What to look for in Birmingham
Tutors vary by age, timetable and provider style. Parents usually get the best results by checking practical details first: location, session length, costs, age range, booking terms and how the provider handles safety and communication.
Good for planning
Shortlist options that fit your normal school run, weekend routine or holiday dates before comparing extras.
Questions to ask
Ask about trial sessions, what is included, staff checks, cancellation terms and what your child needs to bring.
Parent tip
Keep one backup option nearby in case a class is full, a camp sells out or weather changes your plans.
When tutoring can help
Confidence gaps
A tutor can help when a child understands parts of a subject but needs patient one-to-one explanation and practice.
Exam preparation
11+, entrance exam, GCSE and A-level tutoring works best when families know the target, timescale and current baseline.
Stretch and interest
Some families use tutoring for extra challenge in maths, English, science, languages, music theory or coding.
Start with the problem, not the tutor
Before booking, write down what you want to change: fewer homework battles, stronger times tables, clearer essay structure, a realistic 11+ plan, GCSE exam technique or more confidence after a school move. A clear goal helps you choose between a subject specialist, a confidence-focused primary tutor, a small group or a short revision course.
Age-range notes
- Primary school: Look for short, encouraging sessions that build fluency without turning evenings into extra school.
- 11+ and entrance exams: Ask whether the tutor knows the specific local exam format and can set a realistic practice plan.
- Secondary and GCSE: Subject knowledge matters, but so does clear feedback on gaps, revision habits and exam technique.
- A-level and older teens: Check subject depth, exam-board experience and whether the tutor can support independent study rather than simply reteaching lessons.
Online, in-person or group tutoring?
Online tutoring
Convenient and often easier to fit around clubs, but check the platform, screen sharing, safeguarding, distractions and whether your child engages well on video.
In-person tutoring
Can suit younger children or practical subjects. Agree where sessions happen, whether a parent stays nearby and how travel or venue costs work.
Small-group tutoring
Usually cheaper than one-to-one and can feel less intense. Ask about group size, ability range and how individual gaps are spotted.
Questions to ask before starting
- What age groups, subjects and exam boards does the tutor specialise in?
- Are sessions online, in person, one-to-one or small group, and how long is each session?
- How will progress be shared with parents, and how often will goals be reviewed?
- What happens if your child is tired, anxious, ill or struggling with homework load?
- What qualifications, references, DBS checks and safeguarding arrangements can the tutor explain?
- Will the tutor liaise with school targets, use school work as context, or set a separate plan?
Cost and booking checks
Agree the hourly rate, cancellation notice, payment timing and whether materials or assessment tests cost extra. Avoid paying for a large block until your child has had at least one trial or short initial run.
- Ask whether prices change for GCSE, A-level, entrance exam or specialist SEND support.
- Check if homework marking, mock exams, reports or travel are included.
- Review after four to six sessions: your child should feel clearer about what they are practising and parents should understand the next steps.
When tutoring may not be the answer
If a child is exhausted, anxious or overloaded, another weekly commitment can make things worse. Speak to school if gaps are broad, consider a lighter routine, or compare confidence-building classes and clubs where the main need is motivation, friendship or routine.
Useful next read: how to choose a children's tutor. You can also compare related support via children's classes and activities if your child mainly needs confidence, routine or social practice.