The Future of Tutoring
Public First ran opinion research to understand parental opinions on tutoring, as part of wider research into the impact of the National Tutoring Programme (NTP) and the 16-19 Tuition Fund.
Key findings include parents are overwhelmingly in favour of tutoring, with 77% of parents supporting an increase in tutoring provision, and 73% who think that the government should pay for tutoring for pupils from low income backgrounds – a view shared by parents across all socio-economic groups. Parents were supportive of the benefits of tutoring, with with 74% citing that it helped children who are falling behind to catch up among the benefits of increasing provision, and 53% stating that it helped recover learning lost during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Parents of children who had experienced tutoring highlighted a range of wider benefits, including addressing many of the most significant challenges across the education system currently. These included 85% of parents saying tutoring had positively impact their child’s confidence, 68% saying it had improved attendance, 78% saying it had improved their child’s relationships with their classroom teachers, and 64% saying it had improved their child’s relationships with other children.
Only 50% of parents whose children received tutoring said they would definitely or likely have paid for tutoring if it had not been provided by the school, and among all parents a majority (64%) cited cost as a barrier for accessing more tutoring for their child. Indeed, cost was the greatest barrier identified by parents. This was nuanced by socioeconomic status, with the parents in higher socio-economic grades (ABC1) nearly twice as likely to say they would pay for tutoring (62%) than those in the lower social grades (C2DE) (35%).
The full report can be found here.
The full polling tables can be found here.