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11+ Tutor in Blackheath: How to Find One You Can Trust

How to find a verified, DBS-checked 11+ tutor in Blackheath — for the Bexley test or an independent-school entrance exam, starting from checked evidence rather than a self-written bio.

Michael Quan
Michael Quan
15 July 2026
11 min read

11+ Tutor in Blackheath: How to Find One You Can Trust

Tutorwise Technologies Ltd

An 11+ tutor in Blackheath is a specialist teacher — working in person across the area or online — who prepares your child for the selective entrance exams that decide a grammar or independent school place. The dependable way to find one you can trust is to stop guessing from a self-written profile and start from evidence: a tutor's verified DBS and identity, their qualifications, the 11+ results they have genuinely delivered, and reviews from real families. On Tutorwise that evidence is gathered into a single credibility score, shown on every profile, so you can see who actually knows the 11+ before you book a first session.

That matters more in Blackheath than in many places, because the local 11+ picture is not a single exam. Blackheath sits on the boundary of two southeast London boroughs, Lewisham and Greenwich, and neither runs a state grammar school of its own. So families here are usually preparing for one of two quite different routes: the entrance exams set by the area's independent schools, or the selective state tests in a neighbouring borough. A tutor who genuinely knows Blackheath knows which of those your child is aiming at, and prepares for that specific exam rather than a generic "11+".

What the 11+ means for a Blackheath family

The first job is to be clear about which exam you are actually preparing for, because in this corner of London the answer is rarely obvious.

On the independent side, Blackheath and the streets around it are well served. Blackheath High School, a girls' school run by the Girls' Day School Trust, sits in the heart of the area, alongside long-established preparatory schools. A short distance away are Colfe's and Eltham College, and St Dunstan's College in Catford. Push a little further west towards Dulwich and you reach Dulwich College, Alleyn's and James Allen's Girls' School. Each of these schools sets its own entrance process, often built around the ISEB Common Pre-Test together with the school's own written papers and an interview. The exact format, and the year in which the pre-test is sat, varies from school to school, so a tutor's first useful act is to pin down the requirements of the specific schools on your list.

On the state side, the picture is different again. Because Lewisham and Greenwich are not selective boroughs, Blackheath families who want a selective state place usually look to Bexley. The Bexley Selection Test, commonly called the Bexley 11+, feeds the borough's grammar schools — Townley Grammar, Beths Grammar, Bexley Grammar and Chislehurst and Sidcup Grammar. Some families also consider the Kent Test for grammar schools further out, though the daily commute is a real factor in that decision. These state tests have their own published structure and timetable, and they are not interchangeable with the independent-school papers.

Across both routes, the 11+ generally draws on four areas: English, mathematics, verbal reasoning and non-verbal reasoning. Which of these carry the most weight, and how they are examined, depends entirely on the target school or test. This is the single strongest reason to choose a tutor who knows the local landscape rather than one working from a one-size-fits-all syllabus. If you want to understand the individual papers in more depth, our guides to finding an 11+ maths tutor and an 11+ English tutor walk through what each subject actually tests.

Why the usual way of finding a tutor lets you down

Most parents in Blackheath find a tutor in one of two ways, and both leave you trusting words that no one has checked.

The first is a directory or listings search, where every profile reads much the same. "11+ specialist", "grammar school expert", "outstanding results" — the phrases are confident, identical and unverifiable. You have no way to tell the tutor who has genuinely prepared children for the Bexley test from the one who has simply copied the language everyone else uses.

The second is a name passed quietly between parents at the school gate or in a local group chat. That can be a good tutor. It can also be a busy one whose results were strong three years ago, whose DBS check no one has actually seen, and whose availability no longer matches your child's timetable. A recommendation is a starting point, not evidence.

The stakes make this worse than in ordinary tuition. The 11+ is a high-pressure, one-attempt exam, the fees are not small, and the wrong choice costs you a year of your child's preparation as well as your money. Choosing on unchecked claims is exactly the moment you would want real proof — and it is precisely where the usual routes give you none.

How Tutorwise makes a tutor's credibility checkable

This is the problem Tutorwise is built to remove, and it is worth being concrete about how.

On an ordinary directory, a tutor's profile is a self-written advert. They decide what to claim, and you decide whether to believe it. On Tutorwise, a tutor's standing is not something they write — it is a credibility score the platform computes from signals it has actually verified. An enhanced DBS certificate is checked and reflected in the score, not merely asserted. Identity is confirmed. Qualifications are recorded against the tutor's profile. The outcomes they have delivered and the reviews left by real families — parents who booked and paid through the platform, not anonymous testimonials — feed the same score. The result is a single, visible measure of trust that a tutor earns through checked evidence, and cannot simply talk their way into.

The practical difference for a Blackheath parent is this. Instead of reading five near-identical bios and picking on gut feel, you can see, before you message anyone, whose safeguarding is verified, whose qualifications are on record, and whose past families rated them well. You spend your first conversation talking about your child and the specific exam — the Bexley test, or a Blackheath High School entrance paper — rather than trying to work out whether the person is safe and genuinely qualified. The checking has already been done, and it is shown openly on the profile.

That is the honest core of choosing well here: not a better-worded promise, but a claim you can actually inspect.

In person or online for the 11+ in Blackheath

Both work, and the right answer depends on your child rather than your postcode.

In-person tutoring suits many younger children and the early, hands-on stages of preparation, when sitting beside someone helps with focus and confidence. Blackheath is well placed for it, with good rail links and a compact, walkable centre, so a local tutor visiting your home or meeting nearby is realistic.

Online tutoring is just as effective for the reasoning papers and for timed exam practice, and it widens your choice enormously. Rather than being limited to tutors who can physically reach Blackheath, you can work with a genuine specialist in the exact test your child is sitting, wherever they are based. On Tutorwise the same verified credibility score applies whether a tutor works in person or online, so you can decide on what fits your child and your week, not on which option happens to be easier to check. For the reasoning papers in particular, our guides to the 11+ verbal reasoning tutor and the 11+ non-verbal reasoning tutor explain what to look for.

When to start

Earlier than most parents expect, and steadily rather than in a rush.

The independent pre-tests and the Bexley test are generally sat around the start of Year 6, which means the substantial work happens across Year 5. Many families begin gently in Year 4, building reasoning skills and reading habits rather than drilling papers. Spaced, consistent preparation beats a last-minute cram, both for results and for your child's confidence walking into the exam room. A good local tutor will build a plan backwards from your specific test date, so the intensity peaks at the right moment instead of burning your child out months early.

What a good first session looks like

The first session is where you learn whether a tutor is right for your child, so treat it as an assessment of the tutor as much as of your child. A strong 11+ tutor will spend part of it finding out where your child actually is — not to catch them out, but to see which of the four areas needs the most work and how your child responds under gentle time pressure. They should be able to explain, in plain terms, how the specific exam you are targeting is structured and where children most often lose marks on it. Vague answers about "the 11+" in general are a warning sign; a tutor preparing children for the Bexley test, or for a Blackheath High School paper, should talk about it in detail.

Watch how your child is with them, too. The 11+ runs over the best part of a year, and a tutor your child dreads working with will undo their own good teaching through lost motivation. Warmth and clarity matter as much as subject knowledge at this age. A tutor who can keep a ten-year-old engaged and calm about a high-stakes exam is doing something a stronger examiner without those skills cannot.

Finally, expect honesty about the timeline. If your child has a lot of ground to cover before the exam, a good tutor says so and sets out a realistic plan rather than promising a place. That candour is itself a signal of quality — and on Tutorwise it sits alongside the verified record of results and reviews, so you are weighing a frank conversation against checked evidence rather than against a sales pitch.

Choosing well — a short checklist

Before you book, look for:

  • Verified safeguarding, not a claim. Confirm the tutor's DBS and identity are checked, not just mentioned. On Tutorwise this is part of the visible credibility score.
  • Knowledge of your exact exam. A Bexley test and a Blackheath High School paper need different preparation. Ask which they have genuinely taught.
  • Real reviews from families who booked. Feedback from paying clients tells you more than a curated quote.
  • An honest plan. A tutor who maps the terms between now and the exam, and is frank about what your child needs, is worth more than one promising a guaranteed place.
  • A rate you can see up front. On Tutorwise each tutor sets and displays their own rate on their profile, so you can compare openly rather than negotiating blind.

The 11+ is stressful enough without wondering whether the person guiding your child is who they say they are. Start from checked evidence, prepare for the specific exam your child is sitting, and the rest of the decision gets much simpler. You can search verified 11+ tutors in Blackheath on Tutorwise, compare their credibility scores and rates side by side, and book the first session when you have found the right fit.

Frequently asked questions

Which 11+ exam do children in Blackheath usually sit?

It depends on the school you are targeting. Blackheath sits across Lewisham and Greenwich, neither of which has its own state grammar school, so families split between two routes: the entrance exams set by local independent schools such as Blackheath High School, Colfe's and Eltham College, and the Bexley Selection Test for the state grammars in neighbouring Bexley. A good local tutor prepares for the specific exam your child is sitting, not a generic 11+.

When should we start preparing for the 11+?

Earlier than most parents expect. The independent pre-tests and the Bexley test are generally sat around the start of Year 6, so the substantial work falls in Year 5, and many families begin gently in Year 4 to build reasoning and reading skills. Steady, spaced preparation beats a last-minute rush, both for results and for your child's confidence on the day.

How much does an 11+ tutor in Blackheath cost?

Rates vary with the tutor's experience, whether sessions are in person or online, and how intensive the programme is. On Tutorwise each tutor sets and displays their own rate on their profile, so you can compare openly before you book rather than negotiating blind. Online sessions are often a little more affordable, as there is no travel involved.

How do I know a Blackheath 11+ tutor is safe and genuinely qualified?

Look for checked evidence, not claims. On Tutorwise every tutor's identity and DBS status, qualifications and reviews from real families are gathered into a visible credibility score, so safeguarding and competence are verified before you book, rather than taken on trust from a self-written bio or an unchecked recommendation.

Should 11+ tutoring be in person or online?

Both work. In-person sessions often suit younger children and the early, hands-on stages of preparation, and Blackheath's good transport links make a local tutor realistic. Online is just as effective for the reasoning papers and timed practice, and it gives you a far wider choice of specialists in the exact test your child is sitting. On Tutorwise the same verified credibility score applies either way.

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