How Much Tutoring Does My Child Need? | NLG
Tutoring Advice

How Much Tutoring Does My Child Need?

The right amount of tutoring depends on the learner’s goals, confidence, subject gaps and available time. This guide helps parents decide whether weekly, short-term or more intensive support is most suitable.

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Direct answer

How often should a child have tutoring?

Weekly tutoring is usually the most sustainable starting point because it gives the learner regular structure without overwhelming them. More intensive support may be useful near exams or where there are significant gaps, while short-term tutoring can work for targeted topics.

What this means

Frequency should match the size of the gap and the goal

A child preparing for GCSE mocks may need different support from a Year 4 pupil struggling with reading confidence. The tutor should help identify whether the learner needs catch-up, consolidation, exam technique, stretch or confidence-building.

  • Use weekly tutoring for steady support and routine.
  • Use short-term tutoring for a specific topic, test or transition.
  • Use more frequent tutoring carefully when exams are close.
  • Review progress regularly rather than guessing how long support is needed.
NeedTypical approach
Confidence and routineWeekly sessions to build trust and consistency.
Specific topic gapShort focused block or weekly sessions until the topic is secure.
Exam preparationWeekly support, sometimes increased near mocks or final exams.
Major gapsLonger-term support with regular review.
How to approach it

A practical step-by-step approach

1

Set the goal

Decide whether the main aim is confidence, catch-up, exam technique or stretch.

2

Start with a manageable rhythm

Weekly tutoring is often a sensible starting point.

3

Review feedback

Use tutor feedback to decide whether support should continue, change focus or reduce.

4

Adjust around exams

Increase focus before mocks or final exams if needed.

Key considerations

What parents usually need to compare

📅

Weekly support

Best for routine, consistency and confidence.

🎯

Targeted support

Useful for one topic, paper, skill or school transition.

🧭

Regular review

Tutor feedback should guide the plan over time.

How NLG can help

Support that fits the learner

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.

  • One-to-one and group tutoring options where available.
  • Support across primary, secondary, GCSE, A-Level and SEND learning needs.
  • Focused lesson feedback so parents understand what has been covered.

Related NLG guides and support

Keep exploring the next step in the Knowledge Hub or move towards tutoring support.

FAQ

Common questions

For many learners, one lesson per week is a sensible starting point. It creates routine while leaving time for schoolwork and independent practice.

Yes, especially near exams or where support is needed in more than one subject. The best frequency depends on goals, confidence and workload.

Tutoring should continue for as long as it is helping the learner make progress, feel more confident or prepare effectively. Regular review is important.

It may stop after exams, but some students continue when moving to the next key stage, starting A-Levels or needing support with a new subject level.

Ready to see whether tutoring is the right fit?

Start with a focused £1 trial lesson and let NLG match your child with suitable online support.