University places increasingly demand specific A-Levels grades, and predicted grades determine which offers students receive. In Easingwold, our dedicated educators help sixth form students raise both their attainment and their predictions by deepening subject understanding, improving exam readiness, and building the kind of fluency that impresses examiners.
Get in Touch
Whether it's a subject your learner loves but wants to master, or one they're struggling with and need to pass, our Easingwold tutors can help. Drop us a line to discuss their A-Levels needs.
University Preparation
Many Easingwold students are aiming for competitive university courses. Our dedicated educators can help with more than just grades — they advise on personal statements, provide practice for admissions tests, and help students prepare for interviews where required. Strong A-Levels grades are the foundation, but standing out in a competitive application requires preparation that goes beyond the syllabus.
Improving Forecasts
Predicted grades often determine which university offers a student receives — and they're typically set months before the actual exams. For Easingwold students whose predictions don't match their ambitions, focused tutoring can shift both performance and teacher assessment upward. We work with students on mock exam preparation, coursework quality, and the classroom participation that informs teacher predictions.
Monitoring Outcomes
Parents in Easingwold should be able to see tangible evidence that tutoring is working. After each block of work, the tutor provides a brief update on what was covered, how the learner responded, and what comes next. For exam-level pupils, we track scores on topic tests and timed papers, giving a concrete picture of improvement — not vague reassurances. If progress stalls, we adjust the approach rather than repeating what is not working.
Learning to Learn
The aim of tutoring is not dependence — it is independence. Working with Easingwold learners always includes helping them develop effective study habits: how to plan a revision timetable, how to use active recall instead of passive re-reading, how to break large tasks into manageable steps. These meta-skills are as valuable as the subject knowledge itself, and they serve pupils long after tutoring ends.
What to Expect
Sessions are typically weekly, lasting 60-90 minutes. The tutor focuses on whatever the student needs most — that might be working through a difficult topic, reviewing past paper answers, refining essay technique, or preparing for a specific exam. For Easingwold students in Year 13 or S6, we can also arrange intensive revision blocks in the weeks before exams.