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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think this tutor has an attitude?

759 replies

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 21:22

First time posting on here (long-time lurker). I'm not sure what I'm looking for here tbh, maybe just a hand-hold or just (brutally) honest opinions, but I'm just feeling a bit weird about a Zoom call I had with my DS' history tutor yesterday. I might be overreacting but it's just left a bad taste in my mouth.

Me and DH decided to get DS a tutor for GCSE History. He's in Year 11 and he's had a bit of a shit time with the course. When he was choosing his options in year 9, his history teacher did recommend that he do geography instead because his essay-writing and memory surrounding dates was not good (he did roughly the same in terms of achievement in both history and geography). The thing is he is interested in it, but he just can't remember key dates very well. The thing is he wants to do history at A Level. I feel bad for him because he likes the subject, but he's just not very good at it and obviously that's problematic if he is considering this subject as a potential academic or career pathway.

So we meet this tutor and he says in our initial meeting with him that tutoring is to complement ongoing revision. I don't agree with this because I view tutoring as teaching my DS how to revise. The tutor says that he likes to do a baseline assessment with the students so he can determine their areas they need work on, which again I found a bit overkill because why are you already testing DS when you haven't taught him how to revise yet?? We scheduled a lesson for later that week, but DS was running a little bit late as he'd woken up late so we only had 30 minutes of a lesson with the tutor (it's all done on Zoom). DS thought he had been working on the Cold War that week in school and so the tutor set him some questions on the Cold War. DS, bless him, really struggled with the first question so didn't have time to look at the rest of the questions. The tutor ran through the questions with DS, and that was when DS realised he hadn't actually done the Cold War and he'd gotten the name confused with something else.

The tutoring has been going on for 2 months, and the tutor scheduled a Zoom call with me to basically tell me that we may want to reconsider choosing History as an A Level option. This really caught me off guard, and it came across as him telling me how to parent my child! He said that there are loads of issues regarding essay-writing and analysing sources and interpretations, and whilst he is totally happy to support DS with this he can't ignore the fact that if these skills aren't being mastered in Year 11 history then this is going to severely set DS back when he starts Year 12. I ask the tutor about what revision methods he has taught DS, and the tutor said that the subject knowledge is a key area of weakness, and DS apparently said to him that he doesn't make notes in the lessons because his teacher isn't good. I said to the tutor that I think DS just needs to be taught how to create his own quizzes, and how to create flashcards and mindmaps. The tutor said that with mocks coming up those "knowledge gaps" need to be filled in. But I'd prefer him to prioritise teaching DS how to revise history, and if I'm asking for a particular service surely I should receive it?

So, AIBU to think this tutor has a bit of an attitude and is overstepping the mark a bit? I don’t need him to tell us which subjects DS should or shouldn’t do at sixth form, I just want him to teach DS how to revise properly!

OP posts:
HappyGilmorex · 08/11/2025 22:21

OP is 100% a wind up merchant

MumChp · 08/11/2025 22:21

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 22:16

It was really frustrating. The first tutor just gave him loads of worksheets with very little guidance. The second tutor kept changing the focus of the lessons (i.e. one week they'd be working on warfare through time, the following week they were doing elizabethan england) and DS just ended up being more confused.

You need to figure out what exactly you want a tutor to offer before hiring one. You don't really seem to have done a good job upfront if your are on your 3rd tutor.I think you will get the most out of tutoring your son through the curriculum yourself and teaching him the techniques that you find essential.

ECT22 · 08/11/2025 22:21

Since you’re confident that you know the revision strategies that will help, and don’t consider subject knowledge a barrier, the good news is that you can save money by teaching your DS the magical revision strategies yourself.

junebirthdaygirl · 08/11/2025 22:22

My two ds had history as their favourite subject. As they were passionate about it they performed better than other areas where as teens, they were a bit lax. But for history they read extra books, watched documentaries , had discussions at dinner etc. They just got it.
Sounds like your ds will not be able to perform at this level so he might be better with geography where there is more to learn and not so much discussions and debate.
I am in lreland so l am presuming things ae pretty much the same and l have seen ds learn and learn for Geography to get the facts but not offering opinions.
As a teacher who has tutored outside the classroom l have had parents who thought l could bring their dc to an A student now that l am here. I wish l could but if the child is lacking ability l can help but not to that extreme. I would also not work with a parent as difficult as you as it needs to be a team effort.
For your sons sake listen to the tutor. He has no ulterior motive in offering advice so value his experience and go with him.

Eloquentlemur87 · 08/11/2025 22:22

Revision is revision. Surely he is revising for his other subjects and therefore knows basic revision skills?!

It’s quite clear the problem is that he doesn’t have sufficient knowledge in the first place, so he can’t possibly “revise” - he needs to actually learn the stuff first! That’s what the tutor should be (and it sounds like is trying to) help with.

If your son is not even bothering to take notes in class and can’t remember the name of the topic he has studied in a given week (how on earth do you get the Cold War confused with anything else, unless you are not actually paying any attention in class?!), he’s got no hope of getting a decent grade though, tutor or no tutor.

Also exceptionally rude to be late to the tutor session, and then moan that the tutor was unimpressed about this.

Your son is the problem here, not the tutor… and if you can’t see that, you are the problem as well!

SleepingisanArt · 08/11/2025 22:23

Dear god! You sent a tutor a mind map?! I know a very experienced tutor and you would be sacked! Either you let the tutor do their job or if you are so bloody fabulous then you teach your son how to revise stuff he doesn't even know....

KatyaKat · 08/11/2025 22:23

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 21:44

I see all your points and I'm not going to deny that there is an issue regarding his knowledge. I think I was just not expecting the tone the tutor spoke to me in.

The first lesson where DS was late, it was mainly down to the fact that we couldn't find the laptop charger (and DS sleeping in meant we had minimised time to find said charger). I did message the tutor that we were going to be late if he wanted to grab himself a coffee or something. DS did toy with the idea of skipping the lesson altogether, but I said "no, we will still be charged" so he logged on and the tutor let out a sigh and said "right, let's get started". Just found it a bit unnecessary.

Hang on, your DS was late (30 mins?) and you found the tutor's sighing 'a bit unnecessary'? WTF? That was incredibly rude of your DS and you, frankly.

A history tutor's job is to fill gaps in knowledge, not teach a Y11 student how to revise...surely he's had exams before now?

Catcatcat111 · 08/11/2025 22:24

If he doesn’t know the content, how can he revise it? Surely you need helpful ways of teaching him the content.

Kettledodger · 08/11/2025 22:24

Teacher recommended that your child not take history and now a reputable tutor also says that your child doesn’t seem suited to the subject. But you are getting all weird about it. Maybe these people know more about the education system than you and perhaps you should listen a bit more rather than fight against them 🤷🏼‍♀️ just a thought.

ForZanyAquaViewer · 08/11/2025 22:24

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 22:13

The thing is I can't really get rid of this tutor because my DS has had 3 history tutors because the other 2 let him down

Is this a windup?! 🤣

ForPearlViper · 08/11/2025 22:24

CypressGrove · 08/11/2025 22:19

Yeah this can't be true.

No-one could be this bonkers but I wouldn't mind it running for a bit for the entertainment. I am imagining the he tutor sharing this in the pub. "And then she sent me details on how to do mind maps..."

Polyestered · 08/11/2025 22:24

Bloody hell, what have I just read? I feel even more sorry for teachers now if this is what they have to put up with.

SiobahnRoy · 08/11/2025 22:26

You’ve employed a tutor for his expertise which you are ignoring. Tutor him yourself since you know best, save yourself some money. Maybe eventually you’ll realise that the school and tutor do actually know what they’re talking about.

MumChp · 08/11/2025 22:27

ForPearlViper · 08/11/2025 22:24

No-one could be this bonkers but I wouldn't mind it running for a bit for the entertainment. I am imagining the he tutor sharing this in the pub. "And then she sent me details on how to do mind maps..."

Edited

We have teachers in our family. It's actually pretty much 1:1 what they experience from entitled parents.

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 22:28

Honestly, I'm starting to get a bit upset at some of the replies saying this is a wind-up, and I know I asked for brutally honest opinions but it gets to a point where it's just straight-up mean. I'm genuinely trying to do what's best for DS and I feel like some people are completely missing the point. I want to make sure he is getting the right support.

i feel like the focus keeps drifting away from the key issue which is about how DS is revising and whether he's getting real, structured guidance. That's all I care about. It's upsetting to feel like people are questioning my motives rather than the actual problem here.

OP posts:
FlorenceAndTheVagine · 08/11/2025 22:28

Just tutor him yourself, you know everything. Except what ‘baseline’ means, or how to be believable.

McSpoot · 08/11/2025 22:28

SiobahnRoy · 08/11/2025 22:26

You’ve employed a tutor for his expertise which you are ignoring. Tutor him yourself since you know best, save yourself some money. Maybe eventually you’ll realise that the school and tutor do actually know what they’re talking about.

Or get you all knowing teacher friend to do so.

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 22:30

FlorenceAndTheVagine · 08/11/2025 22:28

Just tutor him yourself, you know everything. Except what ‘baseline’ means, or how to be believable.

I know what baseline means thank you very much! I was saying that I just didn't agree with it

OP posts:
Kettledodger · 08/11/2025 22:30

Your child by year 11 should NOT be needing revision skills they should have already been taught these and if not then why have you waited so long to get help?

Whatnowsheila · 08/11/2025 22:31

Mate, if he isn’t on track for a 5 and his best prediction is a 6, should he even be looking at doing A-Levels? Perhaps and apprenticeship might be better.

Also, he can’t revise if he doesn’t have the knowledge, what would he be revising? Mixing up the Cold War with whatever else is a little worrying….

Superhansrantowindsor · 08/11/2025 22:31

You can not revise history if you don’t know the content. Your son doesn’t even know what units he’s doing! He thought he was doing was the Cold War but it wasn’t. Imagine if the tutor therefore did a revision task on the arms race, Korea, Vietnam etc and then your son said -actually I’m doing WWI. It would be a complete waste of time.
You need the basic facts first. What happened and when. Then you can start looking at cause and consequence etc.
If your son is in year 11 and doesn’t even know if he’s doing the Cold War or not then A-level is definitely NOT for him.

Merryoldgoat · 08/11/2025 22:32

This is truly one of the maddest threads in a while.

FlorenceAndTheVagine · 08/11/2025 22:32

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 22:30

I know what baseline means thank you very much! I was saying that I just didn't agree with it

You said it wasn’t fair he’d assessed your son without teaching him any techniques first. So no, you don’t know what baseline means.

pikkumyy77 · 08/11/2025 22:34

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 22:13

The thing is I can't really get rid of this tutor because my DS has had 3 history tutors because the other 2 let him down

Oh come ON.

MumChp · 08/11/2025 22:35

SoCloseToNothing1981 · 08/11/2025 22:28

Honestly, I'm starting to get a bit upset at some of the replies saying this is a wind-up, and I know I asked for brutally honest opinions but it gets to a point where it's just straight-up mean. I'm genuinely trying to do what's best for DS and I feel like some people are completely missing the point. I want to make sure he is getting the right support.

i feel like the focus keeps drifting away from the key issue which is about how DS is revising and whether he's getting real, structured guidance. That's all I care about. It's upsetting to feel like people are questioning my motives rather than the actual problem here.

I think the best you can do is to realise that tutoring your child is a waste of time and choose another A-level subject.