We only offer qualified teachers for Primary tuition, SEN tution, GCSE tuition and A-Level tuition.
Take your time to look at the profiles of relevant, safe, qualified and experienced teachers, who are currently available to provide tuition for you.
Invite teachers to contact you. You are not committing to any lessons, just having an initial chat to see if they are a good fit for your needs. If you are unsure what to say or ask, use this guide to your introductory call
If ready, start tuition with a teacher. Fees are paid after each lesson by a secure online card payment. You are in control; you can check and approve lesson payments and stop tuition at any time.
Business is an academic subject taught in some schools from GCSE level, but in most schools largely at A-Level. It is the study of skills relating to running a business; including finance, accountancy, management, business organisation, human resources, marketing and advertising.
Business is considered to be an accessible GCSE course, taken by students across the full range of abilities, and often those with a particular interest in Business, Economics and Accountancy. In recent years, Business has become an increasingly popular subject choice, but not many schools are able to include this within their already over-loaded GCSE curriculum, so most schools introduce Business at A level only. Exam Boards offering GCSE Business include AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC (Eduqas) and CCEA. GCSE BTEC Business is also available, as a more vocational option, in a small number of schools and colleges. Generally GCSE Business is assessed with two exam papers, each of 1 hour 45 minutes; typically paper 1 focusing on the themes of "Starting a Business" and paper 2 on "Growing a Business".
A-Level Business is an inter-discplinary subject stretching across the disciplines of Accountancy, Economics, Management Science, Law and Social Psychology. Most students choosing an A-Level Business Course will do so without having done GCSE Business. A number of students may consider choosing Economics and/or Business at A-Level. Economics focuses much more on the global picture of world finances and economic processes, whereas Business keeps the specific focus on developing skills to manage a specific organisation or company. Generally, schools advise that students pick one of either Business or Economics, not both, and that the more academically-inclined students should opt for the more rigorous Economics Course. Business requires less understanding than Economics but involves more learning of content and so there is arguably more work to cover.
We connect you to the best teachers who work across several of the best primary and secondary schools in Kingston upon Hull (some detailed below). This means we can reliably provide you with a local and experienced tutor that fits your needs.
Kingston upon Hull primary school performance: The Kingston upon Hull area has 50 primary schools (one of the top being Clifton Primary School with 27% of pupils achieving at a higher standard). From their latest Oftsed report: The Kingston upon Hull local authority has an average of 68% of students meeting the expected standards in reading, writing, and maths at primary school age (vs England's average of 65%). And has an average of 11% achieving higher standard (vs England's average of 11%). |
Kingston upon Hull secondary school performance: The Kingston upon Hull area has 14 secondary schools (one of the top being St Mary's College with 51% of pupils achieving grade 5 or above in English and Maths GCSEs). From their latest Oftsed report: The Kingston upon Hull local authority has an average of 33% of students achieving grade 5 or above in English and Maths GCSEs (vs England's average of 43%). And has an average of 89% of students either staying in education or entering employment after GCSEs (vs England's average of 94%). |
Kingston upon Hull Ofsted ratings:
79% of Kingston upon Hull schools have received at least a 'Good' Ofsted rating, with 14 schools receiving an 'Outstanding' rating in their last evaluation.
Source: Gov.UK Website