Choosing the right online tutor is easier when you know what to look for. This guide explains the key checks parents should make before starting tuition, from safeguarding and subject expertise to lesson structure, feedback and fit.
Parents should look for a tutor who is DBS checked, understands the relevant curriculum or exam board, communicates clearly, adapts to the learner and provides structured feedback. A trial lesson helps you see whether the tutor’s approach feels right before committing to ongoing lessons.
Strong subject knowledge matters, but tutoring works best when the tutor can explain clearly, build confidence and adapt the lesson to the child. For younger learners, patience and encouragement are essential. For GCSE and A-Level students, exam technique and specification knowledge become more important.
| What to check | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| DBS and safeguarding | Parents need confidence that tutor standards and online safety are taken seriously. |
| Subject and level fit | A primary tutor, GCSE tutor and A-Level tutor need different skills. |
| Communication | Good feedback helps parents understand what has improved and what needs more work. |
| Trial option | A first lesson reduces risk and helps check tutor fit. |
Decide whether your child needs confidence, catch-up support, exam technique, subject knowledge or regular structure.
Make sure tutors are DBS checked and that the provider has safeguarding processes.
Choose support that fits the learner’s school year, subject and current confidence.
Look at how the tutor explains, encourages and responds to the learner.
Look for DBS checks, clear online lesson standards and parent communication.
The right tutor should match the child’s age, subject, exam stage and confidence.
Feedback shows whether tutoring is structured, not just a weekly conversation.
National Learning Group supports learners with online tutoring matched to their stage, subject, confidence and goals. Tutors are DBS checked, lessons take place online, and parents can start with a £1 trial lesson before deciding whether regular tutoring is the right next step.
Keep exploring the next step in the Knowledge Hub or move towards tutoring support.
Online tutoring can be effective when the tutor is well matched, lessons are structured and the child receives regular support. It works best when sessions are interactive, focused and supported by clear parent feedback.
Younger learners may benefit from a confident general primary tutor. GCSE and A-Level students usually need subject-specific support, especially for exam technique and specification knowledge.
DBS checking is an important safeguarding signal. NLG works with DBS-checked tutors and places safeguarding at the centre of tutor standards and online lesson processes.
Yes. A trial lesson lets the learner experience the tutor’s style and gives parents a better sense of whether regular tutoring is the right next step.
Start with a focused £1 trial lesson and let NLG match your child with suitable online support.