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11+ English Online Tutor: How to Choose One You Can Trust

How an 11+ English online tutor prepares a child in Year 5 or 6 for comprehension, vocabulary and the writing task — and how Tutorwise makes tutor credibility a verified, checkable score.

AI Content Team
AI Content Team
10 July 2026
11 min read

11+ English Online Tutor: How to Choose One You Can Trust

Tutorwise Technologies Ltd

An 11+ English online tutor prepares a child in Year 5 or the opening weeks of Year 6 for the English section of a selective-school entrance exam — a state grammar school or an independent senior school — over video rather than at your kitchen table. Done well, online 11+ English tuition is not a weaker version of in-person prep: a good tutor marks comprehension answers and a child's writing on a shared screen, shows them exactly where a mark slipped away, and can be a genuine 11+ English specialist rather than the nearest available name. The hard part is not finding someone who says they prepare children for the 11+. It is knowing whether the track record you are being sold is real. On Tutorwise, a tutor's credibility is a computed, checkable score built from verified signals — not a paragraph the tutor wrote about themselves — and when the whole relationship happens over a screen, that difference matters more, not less.

Most families reach online 11+ English tuition for a practical reason. The well-regarded local tutors filled their places eighteen months ago, or the ones with a real grammar-school record are an hour's drive away, or you live outside a selective area and want a tutor who actually knows your target school's paper. The 11+ is also a market thick with reputation and rumour — the "secret" tutor a neighbour swears by, the recommendation passed around a parents' group with no way to check what sits behind it. Online removes the postcode limit and opens up specialists you could never reach in person. What it also removes is the one free reassurance in-person tuition gives you: meeting the tutor on your own doorstep. That reassurance has to come from somewhere else, and this article is about where.

What the 11+ English exam actually tests

The 11+ is sat in Year 5 or the opening weeks of Year 6, for entry to a selective secondary. Its English is broader and less mechanical than its maths, and that is exactly what makes it hard to prepare for well. Most papers rest on three things: reading comprehension, technical English — spelling, punctuation and grammar — and, in many independent schools and some grammar consortia, a piece of writing. The balance between them varies by area and by exam board, and a tutor who knows your specific format is worth far more than a generalist.

Comprehension is the heart of it, and it is not the retrieval exercise it looks like. A strong 11+ comprehension question rarely asks a child to find a fact stated plainly in the text. It asks them to infer a character's feeling from an action, to explain why a writer chose a particular word, to read the tone of a passage, or to work out a meaning the author only implies. Those are inference and deduction skills, and they are built by reading widely over years, not by learning a technique in a term. A child who reads a lot tends to find them natural; a child who does not can be taught to slow down, underline the evidence and reason from the text — but it takes time, and it is the single part of English prep that most rewards an early start.

Vocabulary sits underneath all of it and is the quietest reason children lose marks. Comprehension passages are often pitched a year or two above a child's own age, and the harder questions turn on a single unfamiliar word. Vocabulary cannot be crammed in the way times tables can; it grows with a reading age that builds slowly through exposure. A good tutor will not hand over a list of a thousand words to memorise — they will widen what a child reads, teach them to work out meaning from context, and build the habit that actually raises a reading age.

Then there is the writing task, and it is the component parents most often underestimate. Where a maths answer is right or wrong, a piece of 11+ writing is marked by a human on a mix of content, structure, vocabulary and technical accuracy — which makes it the least predictable part of the exam and the hardest to self-assess at home. A child might write a lively story that loses marks for weak punctuation, or a technically clean piece that is flat and unmemorable. Learning to plan quickly, open strongly, control paragraphs and proofread under time pressure is a craft, and it is one that improves fastest with a tutor reading the work closely and saying precisely what to change.

Two structural features shape how a child should prepare. The first is age-standardised scoring: providers such as GL Assessment convert a raw mark into a score adjusted for a child's exact age in months, so a summer-born child is not measured unfairly against an older classmate, and the pass mark is a moving target set by places and applicants rather than a fixed threshold to drill toward. The second is that the format is not uniform. Historically two names dominated — GL Assessment and CEM — and in recent years many areas that used CEM have moved to GL Assessment. A large number of independent schools instead use the ISEB Common Pre-Test, sat on a computer and adapting its questions as the child goes. Knowing whether your child faces multiple-choice comprehension on a separate answer sheet, a written comprehension, or a computer-based test — and whether a writing paper is included at all — changes how a tutor prepares them. For the full curriculum and how to choose, see our guide to 11+ English tuition.

How online 11+ English tuition actually works

A good online 11+ English lesson is built around a shared screen where tutor and child read, annotate and mark together. For comprehension this is close to ideal: the tutor can put a passage on screen, watch how a child navigates it, and show them in real time how to underline evidence, cross-reference a question back to the text, and structure a full-mark answer rather than a half one. Marking a child's comprehension responses live — asking "where in the passage does it tell you that?" — is exactly the coaching that turns a vague reader into a precise one, and it works as well over video as across a table.

Writing is where online tuition proves its worth. A child writes a piece, the tutor reads it closely, and the feedback is specific: this opening is flat, this paragraph has no shape, this strong word is undercut by a missing comma. Being able to annotate the child's own writing on a shared screen — sentence by sentence — is more useful than a grade scribbled at the bottom of a page, and it is the part of English prep parents find hardest to do themselves, because judging a piece of writing takes a trained eye.

The best online 11+ English tutors also run timed practice under something close to exam conditions, then do the more valuable half of the work: going back over the paper to find why a mark was dropped — a misread inference question, a rushed conclusion, a technical slip under time pressure — and fixing the pattern rather than just marking the page. Sessions for an 11+ child tend to be longer and more structured than for a younger one, because the work is genuinely exam-directed. A parent's job is to be within earshot for any technical hitch, not on the call; an 11+ child needs to learn to push through a hard passage without a grown-up stepping in, because that is what the exam room will demand.

Why "verified" means something specific on Tutorwise

Here is the problem with an ordinary 11+ tutor listing, a directory, or a word-of-mouth recommendation: almost everything you are told is unchecked. The "fifteen years of grammar-school success", the impressive pass rate, the warm self-description — you are being asked to trust a claim, usually one the tutor wrote themselves. For the 11+, where the market runs on reputation and a child's preparation window is a single short season, that is a thin basis for a decision. Online makes it thinner still, because you cannot fall back on meeting the person face to face.

Tutorwise is built to remove that leap of faith. A tutor's credibility on the platform is not a paragraph they wrote; it is a computed score, built from real signals the platform checks and the tutor cannot fabricate. An enhanced DBS check and a verified identity sit at the centre of it — for anyone working with children, that is the floor, not a bonus. On top of that, the score reflects verified qualifications, the outcomes a tutor has actually delivered through the platform, and reviews from families who booked real lessons. Each of those is a signal Tutorwise has confirmed, weighted into a single number you can read at a glance. A tutor cannot type their way to a high score; they earn it by being who they say they are and by doing the work well.

The practical effect for an 11+ booking is direct. Instead of trusting the neighbour's "secret" tutor or the most persuasive profile, you are reading an earned, checkable score — and because it is computed the same way for every tutor, you can compare two candidates honestly rather than guessing who writes the better bio. When the whole relationship happens over video and the stakes are a school place, that verified floor — a real DBS, a real identity, a real delivered record — is the reassurance that meeting a tutor in person would once have given you at the door.

What to check before you book

A few things separate a strong online 11+ English tutor from a merely available one. Check the verification badges first — identity and DBS should be confirmed on the platform, not asserted in the write-up. Ask whether the tutor knows your specific exam: the GL Assessment, CEM-legacy or ISEB format your target schools use, and whether a writing paper is part of it, because preparing a child for a multiple-choice comprehension is a different job from coaching a piece of creative writing. Look for genuine 11+ English experience rather than a general English tutor, and ask, on a short first session, how the tutor handles the writing task and the harder inference questions — the good ones will describe marking a child's own work closely and reviewing the pattern of dropped marks, not just handing over worksheets.

There is a quiet cost to getting this wrong, and it is worth naming plainly rather than dressing it up. A term with a tutor whose record you could not actually check is not only money spent; it is part of a short, one-shot preparation window given to the wrong person — and 11+ prep does not get a second run. Because so much of English rests on skills that build slowly, a term lost to a weak tutor is harder to recover than a term of missed maths drills. Starting from a verified score rather than a good story is the cheapest insurance you can buy against that, and it is the thing an online booking needs most.

Picture the outcome you actually want: your child walking into the exam able to read a hard passage calmly and write with control, because the months before it were spent with a tutor who turned out to be exactly who they claimed to be. That is what a computed credibility score is for. If you want the reading foundations in place earlier, our guide to a KS2 English online tutor covers the stage before 11+ prep begins, and many families prepare for 11+ verbal reasoning alongside English, since the two draw on the same core skills.

Ready to start? You can browse 11+ English tutors on Tutorwise, filter for verified identity and DBS, and read each tutor's computed credibility score before you book a single lesson.

Frequently asked questions

Is online tuition as good as in-person for the 11+ English? For focused, exam-directed work — timed comprehension, marking writing closely, fixing the recurring mistake — online works very well, and it is often better, because it gives you access to a genuine 11+ English specialist rather than the nearest available tutor. A shared screen lets the tutor annotate a child's comprehension answers and writing in real time. In-person can have a slight edge for a very young or easily distracted child, but a strong online tutor closes most of that gap. The bigger variable is the tutor, not the medium.

When should my child start 11+ English tuition? Most families begin in Year 5, which gives a comfortable run of a year or so before the exam early in Year 6. English rewards an earlier start more than maths does, because comprehension and vocabulary build slowly through reading rather than through drilling. Starting late is possible, but a good tutor's first job is then to be honest about what is realistic and to focus on the parts that improve fastest — writing technique and exam strategy — while widening reading in the background.

How do I know an online 11+ English tutor's success rate is real? This is exactly what Tutorwise's verification is for. Rather than trusting a self-reported pass rate, you can read a computed credibility score built from checked signals — an enhanced DBS check, a verified identity, confirmed qualifications, delivered outcomes and genuine reviews from families who booked real lessons. Because it is calculated the same way for every tutor, it lets you compare two candidates honestly instead of taking a claim on trust.

Can an online tutor really help with creative writing? Yes, and it is one of the things online tuition does best. The tutor reads the child's own writing on a shared screen and annotates it sentence by sentence — pointing out a flat opening, a paragraph with no shape, a strong idea undercut by weak punctuation. That close, specific feedback on a real piece of work is more useful than a grade at the bottom of a page, and it is the part of English prep parents find hardest to do well themselves.

How is 11+ English different from what my child does at school? It draws on the same reading and writing your child does at school, but tests it faster, deeper and less predictably. School comprehension often asks a child to find a fact in the text; the 11+ asks them to infer, deduce and read tone, frequently from a passage pitched above their age. The writing task is marked on content and technical accuracy together, under time pressure. Inference under the clock and controlled writing to a plan are the parts that most separate 11+ English from ordinary schoolwork, and they are where good tuition spends the most time.

Frequently asked questions

Is online tuition as good as in-person for the 11+ English?

For focused, exam-directed work — timed comprehension, marking writing closely, fixing the recurring mistake — online works very well, and it is often better, because it gives you access to a genuine 11+ English specialist rather than the nearest available tutor. A shared screen lets the tutor annotate a child's comprehension answers and writing in real time. In-person can have a slight edge for a very young or easily distracted child, but a strong online tutor closes most of that gap. The bigger variable is the tutor, not the medium.

When should my child start 11+ English tuition?

Most families begin in Year 5, which gives a comfortable run of a year or so before the exam early in Year 6. English rewards an earlier start more than maths does, because comprehension and vocabulary build slowly through reading rather than through drilling. Starting late is possible, but a good tutor's first job is then to be honest about what is realistic and to focus on the parts that improve fastest — writing technique and exam strategy — while widening reading in the background.

How do I know an online 11+ English tutor's success rate is real?

This is exactly what Tutorwise's verification is for. Rather than trusting a self-reported pass rate, you can read a computed credibility score built from checked signals — an enhanced DBS check, a verified identity, confirmed qualifications, delivered outcomes and genuine reviews from families who booked real lessons. Because it is calculated the same way for every tutor, it lets you compare two candidates honestly instead of taking a claim on trust.

Can an online tutor really help with creative writing?

Yes, and it is one of the things online tuition does best. The tutor reads the child's own writing on a shared screen and annotates it sentence by sentence — pointing out a flat opening, a paragraph with no shape, a strong idea undercut by weak punctuation. That close, specific feedback on a real piece of work is more useful than a grade at the bottom of a page, and it is the part of English prep parents find hardest to do well themselves.

How is 11+ English different from what my child does at school?

It draws on the same reading and writing your child does at school, but tests it faster, deeper and less predictably. School comprehension often asks a child to find a fact in the text; the 11+ asks them to infer, deduce and read tone, frequently from a passage pitched above their age. The writing task is marked on content and technical accuracy together, under time pressure. Inference under the clock and controlled writing to a plan are the parts that most separate 11+ English from ordinary schoolwork, and they are where good tuition spends the most time.

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