Group tuition

A-Level and GCSE Maths Group Tuition.

My one-to-one rate reflects the level I teach at — the depth of subject knowledge, the exam-board specificity, the years spent breaking down exactly what examiners want to see.

I also recognise that private tuition at that level isn't something every family can access. I didn't want that to be the end of the conversation.

Group sessions were my answer.

Small groups, working through the same exam board content together. The methods are identical to my private tuition. The exam focus, the past paper work, the marking — all the same. The only difference is the format, and the price.

Group tuition

£40

per student, per hour

  • Small groups — individual attention throughout
  • A-Level and GCSE Maths
  • Grouped by year and exam board
  • Real past paper questions every session
  • Same exam-focused methods as private tuition
  • Online via shared whiteboard
Check availability

Looking for one-to-one?
See private rates →

Patrick Ohlenschlager teaching an online maths group session

Why it works

Small enough to still be personal.

A small group is not a class. At that size, I know what each person is struggling with within the first session. Questions get answered in real time. Nobody gets left behind while I move on.

Groups are formed by year group and exam board, so everyone in the room is working towards the same exam. That means every explanation, every past paper question, and every piece of exam technique is directly relevant to every student in the group.

How it works

Three steps to getting started.

01

Get in touch

Tell me your child's year group and exam board. I'll check whether a suitable group has availability or let you know when the next one forms.

02

Join a group

Groups are matched by year and board. Sessions run online via a shared interactive whiteboard — the same setup I use for private tuition.

03

Start learning

Every session goes straight to past paper questions and the techniques examiners reward. Productive from the first minute.

Common questions

FAQ

Groups are kept deliberately small — small enough that every student gets real attention and I can respond to the specific questions coming up in the room rather than delivering a lecture.
The teaching methods and exam focus are identical. Group sessions work well for students who are broadly keeping up but need more practice, better exam technique, and regular past paper work. One-to-one is better suited to students with significant gaps in their understanding who need sessions built precisely around their individual weak points.
GCSE and A-Level Maths. Groups are formed by year group and exam board where possible, so students are working on the same content and towards the same exam.
Get in touch anyway. I'll add you to the waiting list and contact you as soon as a suitable group forms. Groups typically form quickly during the run-up to exam season.
Yes. Some students start with group sessions and move to one-to-one as their exam gets closer and they need more targeted preparation. Others find the group format works well throughout. Get in touch to discuss what makes sense for your child's situation.