Confidence has dropped
The child avoids homework, says they are “bad” at a subject, becomes upset before lessons or gives up quickly when tasks feel difficult.
SEND tutoring can help children who need patient, flexible and confidence-led learning support. This guide explains what SEND tutoring is, when it may help, what parents should ask, and how online tutoring can support different learning needs without replacing school support.
SEND tutoring is personalised learning support for children with special educational needs and disabilities. It can support pupils with needs linked to attention, processing, reading, writing, maths, communication, anxiety, confidence or sensory differences. The best SEND tutoring adapts the lesson pace, explanation style, routine and goals around the individual child.
Parents often look for SEND tutoring when a child is capable but finding learning harder than expected. The reason may be academic, emotional, behavioural, sensory or linked to how the child processes information.
The child avoids homework, says they are “bad” at a subject, becomes upset before lessons or gives up quickly when tasks feel difficult.
They may understand some ideas verbally but struggle to write answers, follow multi-step instructions, remember methods or keep up with class pace.
Older pupils may know they need to revise but find planning, sequencing, recall and exam technique difficult without structure.
Absence, anxiety, changes of school, low confidence or unmet needs can leave gaps that make new topics harder to learn.
If a child needs more processing time, clearer routines or a calmer approach, a standard fast-paced lesson may not be the right fit.
SEND tutoring can provide an additional layer of support while parents continue working with school, SENCOs and other professionals.
Important: tutoring does not replace specialist assessment, therapy, school provision or an EHCP where those are needed. It can complement them by helping the child practise learning in a supportive, consistent setting.
SEND covers a broad range of needs. A tutor should not treat a label as a complete picture of the child. The useful question is: what makes learning harder for this pupil, and what helps them feel safe enough to try?
Support may focus on reading confidence, spelling patterns, comprehension, writing structure, memory prompts and reducing pressure around written tasks.
Lessons may need short task chunks, movement breaks, clear routines, visual cues, active questioning and goals that keep the learner engaged.
A calm, predictable session structure can help. The tutor should explain expectations clearly and avoid unnecessary pressure or ambiguity.
Support may focus on number sense, visual methods, repetition, step-by-step modelling and rebuilding confidence with basic maths concepts.
The tutor may slow the pace, repeat instructions, use worked examples and revisit learning regularly so it is easier to retain.
Confidence-led tutoring can make learning feel safer by using praise, achievable steps and gentle routines before increasing challenge.
Standard tutoring usually focuses on subject knowledge, homework support or exam preparation. SEND tutoring may still cover those areas, but it also considers the barriers that make learning difficult.
The tutor may need to adapt the pace, language, examples, task length, session routine and communication style. For some learners, the first goal is not more content. It is trust, confidence and a predictable learning rhythm.
| Standard tutoring | SEND tutoring |
|---|---|
| Often subject-first | Learner-first and subject-aware |
| May follow a fixed pace | Adapts pace and explanations |
| Focuses on knowledge gaps | Looks at confidence, access and learning barriers |
| May suit confident learners | Designed for pupils who need additional flexibility |
Yes, online tutoring can work well for SEND learners when the tutor match is right and the session is designed around the child. Some pupils feel calmer learning from home because the environment is familiar and predictable.
The first session should help the tutor understand the child’s confidence, attention, communication style and subject needs.
A clear beginning, short tasks, regular check-ins and a consistent ending can help children feel more secure.
Screen sharing, worked examples, whiteboard tools and verbal modelling can make abstract ideas easier to follow.
Early wins matter. A learner who feels successful is more likely to attempt harder tasks later.
Parents should keep feeding back. If the pace, format or tutor style needs adjusting, the provider should listen.
Before booking regular sessions, parents should ask practical questions about tutor matching, safeguarding, communication and how the lesson will adapt to the child.
SEND tutoring should complement, not compete with, the support a child receives in school. Where possible, parents can share relevant school information with the tutor, such as topics being studied, exam boards, reading targets, SENCO advice or areas where the child is finding lessons hard.
For children with an EHCP, specialist interventions or professional advice in place, tutoring should work around those needs. A tutor can help practise subject skills and confidence, but they should not claim to replace clinical, therapeutic or statutory support.
“For many SEND learners, progress starts when the lesson feels safe, predictable and achievable. The right tutor does not just explain the subject. They help the child believe they can try again.”
National Learning Group parent guideNational Learning Group provides online tutoring for pupils across the UK, including children who need a more patient, personalised and confidence-led approach. The main SEND tutoring service page is the best place to enquire when you are ready to speak to the team.
NLG can match families with tutors based on subject, school stage, goals and the type of support the learner needs.
Tutors are DBS checked in line with safeguarding expectations for working with children and young people.
Lessons can be shaped around the child’s pace, confidence and learning style, with support available from primary through to exam stages.
Note: tutoring support should be tailored to the child and does not guarantee a specific grade or outcome.
SEND tutoring is personalised learning support for children with special educational needs and disabilities. It adapts the pace, structure and explanations to suit the learner.
Yes. Online SEND tutoring can work well when sessions are calm, predictable, flexible and matched to the child’s attention, communication and confidence needs.
Yes. SEND tutoring considers learning barriers as well as subject gaps. It may adapt task length, pace, language, repetition and confidence-building.
A tutor can support learning strategies, confidence and subject understanding. They should not claim to diagnose or replace specialist professional support.
Where possible, yes. Sharing school targets, SENCO advice or current topics can help tutoring complement the support already in place.
Yes. NLG tutors are DBS checked in line with safeguarding expectations for working with children and young people.
No responsible tutoring provider should guarantee a fixed outcome. SEND tutoring aims to build confidence, understanding and steady progress over time.
Speak to National Learning Group about online SEND tutoring matched to your child’s stage, subject, confidence and learning needs.