Clara James Tutoring

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Feedback from other parents

Do you have testimonials we can see from other parents

August 05, 20244 min read

Can you provide references or testimonials from previous clients?

 

Good Evening.

 

Both A and I wanted to take the time to write and express our thanks for the tutoring with Asha.

 

Asha has been a breath of fresh air with her open, happy and friendly nature.  

 

I honestly could not rate her higher enough for tuition, she instantly put my son at ease (who was apprehensive about using a tutor), she is meticulous with her planning and her time keeping, she is extremely knowledgeable on all the subjects that we required.  And it is her relax manner that you instantly warm to.

 

Both my son and I felt upset last night that it might have been our last session.

 

We have grown so fond of Asha that we are very excited to hopefully meet up after GCSE results day and share the news.

 

Kindest regards,

 

I think this is one of the kindest testimonials I’ve had about the tutors who work with me. It’s definitely one that stands out.

 

Feedback from Josh

Not long after I started the tutoring business, I started recommending other tutors as I couldn’t support everyone myself. I just presumed that everyone provided a tailored-1-to-1 approach to tutoring. I guess I was naïve.

At the same time, my lad was doing his A’ levels and had missed a lesson for some reason. I asked one of the tutors that I had been recommending if he would mind spending an hour with J going over whatever it was that he had missed in the lesson.

He turned up, pen in hand, shirt halfway undone, no preparation to be seen and asked J what he would like to go over. Jamie explained. The tutor asked what he knew about it. J said nothing as he had missed that lesson. The tutor replied that he must know something!

Nope…

But he must…

This went on for an hour when the tutor took his money and left.

J was none- the -wiser.

As a parent I was mad, I had just handed over (more than double what I was charging at the time, plus petrol) the money.

As someone who was putting their heart and soul into starting a business and had been recommending him to other, I was devastated. I knew that if others felt that was what I deemed to be acceptable it would completely destroy our reputation.

When I spoke to him about it, his attitude was: well, no one has ever moaned about it before.

But I am now!

So, I let him go. Now everyone that works with me is employed so I can determine how we do things, when I ‘moan’ it’s because I hugely value our reputation. But I am so proud of the tutors who work with me, I know the business would not be today what it is without their help. I will always be so genuinely grateful from the bottom of my heart.

So, I would like to thank them all.

Ramesh

 

Hi Dawn

 

I'm so sorry for not replying sooner. I've not been very well and i'm afraid i've not been able to keep up with my emails. I think all the stress of trying to get F through his exams caught up with me as soon as he finished!

 

I wanted to say a huge ginormous thank you to you for everything you've done for F. You have helped him so much in his maths and english. But for him it's more than that. Before starting with you he was in a really bad place. He felt education wasn't for him and had no hope of passing anything or achieving anything. But by teaching him maths in a way he understood he started to believe that he wasn't totally stupid and maybe he could pass. And then that spiralled as he got better at maths he starting thinking he could maybe do other things and it's really changed his whole outlook. I never thought i'd be sitting here with him discussing A levels let alone him considering going to college after 6th form to studing computing. He is like a different person!



The exam period was not easy but now the stress has gone he's much easier to live with and is enjoying his life of leisure. He wanted me to ask you if there was somewhere he could leave a review for you as he wanted to say thank you and tell other people how good you were for him.



So a huge thank you from all of us and we will let you know how he gets on.

I hope you have a wonderful summer!

 

 

Farah

For more of our testimonials you can see them on our Facebook page: (20+) Clara James Tutoring | Facebook

 

Kevin

I have to be honest and say I’m not very good at asking for them, but I am proud of each and every one of them.

 

Janet Randall

If you have any questions, please do ask: [email protected]

 

 

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Dawn Strachan

For the past 20+ years I have been a firm believer that learning should be an enjoyable experience. I appreciate that traditionally education has revolved around worksheets, textbooks, listening to teachers. But a grounding in early years and working with children who had a variety of learning styles from I learned that it is an individual activity that is personal to all of us. We don’t all learn in the same way. Our influences, our experiences, our capabilities all influence how we retain information. But through it all, I believe that if we can make it enjoyable and engaging, they will want to participate. With participation comes practice which in turn boosts skill and confidence. With an increase in skill and confidence comes a willingness to have a go. This in turn leads to more practice which leads to a positive spiral of success. The moral, we need to make learning fun, engaging, use a range of techniques.

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Happy New Year - Jan 2024

Happy new year!  

I hope you’ve had a brilliant break over Christmas.

I know some people have been on holiday, others have been enjoying family time at home. Either way, I hope it was fantastic.

Someone sent me a Christmas present just before the bog day, but I have no idea who it was from, so I can’t say thank you. I feel really guilty as it seems like bad manners, but it was just in a box from M&S with no message attached.

This year, I have committed to send out the notification when the monthly membership bundle goes live, but I am also going to send out an (initially) fortnightly newsletter with suggestions for revision / secondary school Math / English, then in the alternate week a newsletter with suggestions for the primary subjects.

If either of them isn’t relevant, please either let me know and I will ensure you just get the primary or secondary newsletter if you want it, or just click unsubscribe (but then you also won’t receive the email about when the bundle goes live).

My goal is to keep you more in the loop as to what is happening. For example, we occasionally put free courses on Udemy – we’ve just done one on angles – here’s the link if wanted. It was created to promote the topic book we have also created; we’ve also got revision planners for students that might be suitable for some GCSE parents.

At Christmas we also had some free times-tables colouring sheets which you may not have been aware of, so like I say, it may not be of interest to you, but if it is, at least you’ll be aware of it. I have 3 revision planners and 3 angles topic books to give away if you’re interested. Let me know and I’ll happily pop one in the post for you (or give it to you if I’m likely to see you…).

If you do have one, if you could give it feedback on Amazon (I’ll send you the link) that would be hugely appreciated.  

Happy new year for now and warm wishes,

Dawn

Times Tables - Jan 24

Hi,

 

Last week I sent out an email saying I was going to try and commit to sending out an email at the beginning of each week on ideas to support primary school children, then later in the week about supporting secondary school children.

As a result, I was asked if I could also send out some ideas to support the 11+.

(Again, if this doesn’t concern you let me know and I’ll try to ensure that you don’t receive them).

I’ll send the 11+ emails on an alternate Wednesday as I normally have Alfie, my grandson on a Tuesday and the odds of getting much done with a lively 2-year-old for company…  

There will be some cross over between primary school and secondary school subjects, but at any stage there is something you specifically want me to help with, please do shout.  

So, back on subject, sorry…  

Times tables have always been one of the key subjects that I work on with, specifically primary aged children, but also secondary school children, and often the parents say they’re awful at them as well…  

I don’t suggest learning them in chronological order.

If you do, you’ll hit some of the much harder ones before you get to some of the easier ones.

Instead, what I suggest (and you’ve probably heard me say this before) is that you start with the 10’s, 11’s, 2’s and 5’s as they do in school.

Then deviate across to the 9’s as there are so many tricks to help you to learn them.

Then the 6’s or 7’s. Crazy I know!   But they are quite simple if you split them so that 6x8 becomes: 5x8 + 1x8 = 50+8 Or 7x8 becomes 5x8 + 2x8 = 40 +16 = 56.

From there you can pretty much work in any order.

The 12’s is also straight forward as we can split it into 10x + 2x which would give us the same answer as 12x.  

There are more suggestions on the times tables over in the Clara James Approach, or I have a sequence of emails which sends out once a month with suggestions on how to learn each of the times tables with some resources. If it would help, the link is here: Support your child with their times tables - The fun way! (sendfox.com)

I hope that’s helpful and not just waffle.

Like I say if there is anything specific you would like us to focus on, please do give me a shout.  

Have a great week and warm wishes,  

Dawn

Hand Writing Support

Hi,

I hope you had a good weekend.

 

Something I am often asked about is supporting hand-writing skills.

At a young age this may relate to the hand muscles in the hands not yet being fully developed and I have a few suggestions that may help.

As the child gets older, you may want to find the support of an occupational therapist to provide some suggestions.

 

1.       Start big: I guess it’s a bit like parking a car. When you are first asked to park a car, you wouldn’t want to park in a narrow gap, you’d hopefully save that until you were more confident, more skilled. Handwriting practice is the same, using a big piece of paper is far better than trying to squeeze your imperfect shapes between two narrow lines. Even better, (if the weather is more forgiving) start by using water to paint on the side of the house, a patio or footpath). Use large movements and as these improve start to shrink it down to what is expected inside a school exercise book.  

2.       Jenga: I love this game and we’ve adapted it by writing numbers of the bricks so that we can practice number bonds or the times tables, we’ve also got grammatical terms on others so that we can also practice those. But the skill and care needed to remove the brick from the tower without it all tumbling is a great way to practice the fine motor skills which will in turn support handwriting.

 

3.       Colouring is another suggestion: keeping the colouring inside the lines is another skill that requires practice and patience. Again, the strokes used in colouring can further aid the shapes created when writing letters.  

4.       Sewing again requires the use of the fine motor skills needed for neat handwriting. You may just do a normal running stitch on a square of fabric, or you may decide to make something or use a more elaborate stitch. Either way I hope this helps.  

5.       Playdough and clay are other great early interventions to building up the muscles in the hands. The stronger and more developed the muscles are the more precise we can be with our writing.  

To be honest, anything that needs to be precise will help. Many crafts and building activities help.    

For some people, messy handwriting is always an issue.

There are a couple of members of my family whose handwriting I always struggle to read, yet they are so intelligent. It doesn't seem to add up. But my daughter says, if she doesn’t write quickly, she can’t remember everything her brain is throwing at her. Her brain works at such a speed.

I used to tutor a girl a couple of years back. I hadn’t realized her mum was an invigilator for the A’ levels at the school my youngest went to.

Not long after Hay sat her history the mum asked me if my daughter was doing her exams now.

Yes.

Does she do History?

Yes. Is she called Angel?

Yes.

She said, I thought it must be your daughter.

I have never seen anyone writing so quickly. I expected sparks to come off that page!  

There are many reasons why people have scruffy handwriting, sometimes it needs to be investigated and like I say, if you are worried about it, it might be worth while trying to get in touch with an occupational therapist.

Sometimes, practicing using the suggestions above will help.   Sometimes, like with Hay, it’s just one of those things that make them, them.  

I hope this has helped a bit.

Have a great week and warm wishes,

Dawn