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How much would you pay for a creative writing class?

35 replies

writinglady · 28/08/2015 09:41

Hope this is a good place to put this. I was an English teacher but am also an author and am thinking of setting up some creative writing classes for children after school. I've tutored 1:1 for years and years. This would be for children aged 9,10 and 11 approximately (Year 5,6 and maybe 7.) I have a good idea of how much 1:1 tutoring is but not so sure about fees for group tuition. I was thinking of something like £20 each for a group of no more than 6. How does that sound?

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AnonyMusty · 30/08/2015 02:16

I too have considered starting a creative writing workshops / holiday school. However, I love tutoring on a 1:1 basis and feel strongly that although a group would help those who need the stimulation and motivation to write through exciting group-based and independent-then-shared writing activities, the very nature of teaching a group would mean that I'd be led by general group based objectives vs tailor my lessons to the individual, at the pitch and pace that they need. This is a less effective approach. I'm not going to bother.

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Stompylongnose · 29/08/2015 17:12

20 quid an hour for a group lesson is too expensive unless you are a famous author.

My son in y5 struggles with writing so I'd love a writing tutor. I wouldn't limit it to creative writing though.

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Clavinova · 29/08/2015 12:06

A popular tuition/education centre in South West London runs a 3 hour creative writing workshop for £60 aimed at this age group. One hour seems too short for teaching, writing and feedback on the previous week's work though - not as long as a timetabled 'double lesson' in my ds' schools.

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balletgirlmum · 29/08/2015 08:44

I would pay for creative writing for Ds because as a child with AS this is something he really struggles with.

I'd expect (for a qualified primary teacher with knowledge of SEN) to pay around £20-25 per hour for 1:1 & around £10 per hour for a small group class.

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SheGotAllDaMoves · 29/08/2015 08:36

I think there is a huge difference between teaching the creative writing element of the 11+ of common entrance (both of which are quite prescriptive) and the sort of creative writing that opens minds.

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lougle · 29/08/2015 08:29

There is no way on this earth that you'll get £20ph for a group lesson. £8 maybe.

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mrz · 29/08/2015 08:03

With creative writing being squeezed out of the curriculum it might not appeal to parents in the way that 11+ tutoring does.

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Lurkedforever1 · 28/08/2015 23:03

Sorry but £20 an hour for a group session doesn't remotely compare with what you'd pay for someone in any other field at that sort of level with similar overheads, so I wouldn't even consider it.

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Kampeki · 28/08/2015 19:34

My dd is also in your target age group. She is a talented writer and does loads of creative writing in her free time, wants to be an author etc. I have actually thought previously that she would love a creative writing class if only I could find one.

£40 per hour for 1:1 tuition sounds rather steep for my area, but if you were a published author and qualified teacher, I'd probably consider a few sessions at that rate. However, I definitely wouldn't pay £20 per hour for a group session - unless you were a really big name children's author. For someone I'd never heard of, I probably wouldn't spend more than £5/6 on a group lesson. My reasoning is that it would be better to pay for fewer 1:1 sessions at £40 than for double the amount of group sessions at £20.

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Minicaters · 28/08/2015 19:33

I think if you wouldn't consider it at less than £15 per child per hour, we would never agree a price. My children can choose from a whole host of extra-curricular activities at less than £10 per hour. I wouldn't pay a premium for creative writing over, say, an instrument, or drama with the opportunity to be in big productions.

It's a completely different market to 11+ tutoring. I suggest you stick with your current lucrative work.

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redskybynight · 28/08/2015 17:36

I have a DD in your target group (Year 5, significantly above average in English, wants to be a writer when she grows up). There's no way on earth I'd pay anything like £20 for a creative writing class. In fact I'd question whether I'd encourage her to go to something like that at all -she already does loads of writing at school and home and if there is money to be spent on extra-curricular activities I'd rather she did something different.

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motherinferior · 28/08/2015 15:52

I wouldn't. Not unless it was JW, or a seriously reputable writer of children's/YA fiction.

I am not a complete philistine, btw, have two English degrees and am 2/3 way through a second redraft of a novel...but I still wouldn't.

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ImperialBlether · 28/08/2015 15:46

The trouble is that if some are in the class because they love writing and others are in the class because they are awful at creative writing and don't see the point in it (looking at my very bright brother here, who only read what was necessary for exams and wouldn't have passed a test in creative writing without help) then you're teaching completely different skills. A class off one type of child at a similar age would be one thing, but a mixed group could be a nightmare.

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SelfRaisingFlour · 28/08/2015 15:22

Our local grammar schools have creative writing in their English entrance tests and I think parents would pay £20 per hour as preparation for the 11+.

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Paddlepop · 28/08/2015 15:18

OP in west London parents would gladly pay, and they do pay, £90-£110 per hour for 1-1 tuition in creative writing especially before the 7+, 8+, 11+ exams. Creative writing is the most difficult subject to teach because it requires DC to be competent in a very broad range of skills. DS attended a well established writing workshop in Richmond but I was aghast to find it was 20 kids shoe horned into a classroom for 3 hours rather than small group "retreat" that was advertised. The instructor charged £50 for 3 hours. After seeing some shoddy child minding based writers workshops I prefer 1-1 tuition despite the higher price as I feel the DC is learning something. I'm extremely disappointed with the quality of creative teaching in even the most expensive day prep schools. Teachers will confess that teachers completing a PGCE do not learn how to teach creative writing. Teaching creative writing involves more than giving DC a pile of VCOP exercises.

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bikeandrun · 28/08/2015 15:11

A really good primary school teacher who used to work at our school( well liked by children and parents) charges £6 for an hour session for something that sounds very similar.Not sure what the max no of kids is though

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Hellochicken · 28/08/2015 14:52

11 plus tutoring is different and 1-to-1 here and done by people with plenty knowledge, experience and particularly good at it. Still I think it is around 25 to 30 per hour.

For a group class of 6 as you have described I would pay £10-12 at most, but maybe your area is more expensive than mine.

I would pay for it as I am not good at English/writing and know I'd be no help teaching dcs creative writing. I don't think they get enough time on this in school, as it is 11 plus focussed.

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pinkdelight · 28/08/2015 14:23

"to write well is somehow inferior, or less intellectual, or whatever"

I don't think it's inferior or less intellectual. If anything I think it's harder to teach well because so much is down to the student's ability, and it's so hard to judge the outcome objectively - you can pay thousands for many classes and get nowhere, or pay nothing and be brilliant. That happens less with more tangible skills - a student can play a Grade 3 piano piece or not. The intangibility of creative writing is partly why it's become such a cash cow in further/higher education (Hanif Kureshi's "the biggest con-job" chimes with my experience), and I can't help thinking it's even more the case targeting kids who are going to be at an earlier stage anyway and really just need to keep writing and find their voices. I guess I'm just not on board with charging so much for these things, but then I'm probably swayed by my experience of having such brilliant free/cheap creative workshops at youth theatres etc, which opened doors for all kinds of kids, not just bright well-off kids. Sorry. I'll shut up now.

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JeffreySadsacIsUnwell · 28/08/2015 14:09

No way would I pay £20 per DC for a 1hr group class and I am used to exorbitant inner London prices. Not even your OU tutor would have been earning that much to teach you .

Totally agree that 11+ tutoring is different - the cost of tutoring are offset by the savings made if the DC gets into grammar school rather than private. Having said that, I'd balk at £60, that's rather more than anyone I know has paid. Creative writing is not part of the test. It's not an essential life skill. It's a hobby so should be compared to the cost of ballet, music, drama, gymnastics, etc.

E.g. recently there was a creative writing workshop held near here for kids 10+, 2x 2hr sessions held on consecutive days with well-known authors. £40 for the course, so £10 per hour. I'd say that's on the upper limit but totally acceptable as a one-off holiday thing.

The issue is not what it's worth to you, but what it's worth to the parents - not even the DC at that age. If I was to choose between 10 ballet lessons or 3 creative writing classes, then there's no contest at all. I probably wouldn't pay for creative writing classes anyway though, despite my DD's enthusiasm for creative writing which I encourage and my own career in teaching literature & writing. I think that you would have to factor in that kind of attitude, so perhaps lower demand than you might think amongst your target audience because many of us who value creative writing value the creativity more than the technical accomplishment in children (based on lengthy discussions with friends in similar careers).

You might be better off looking at a slightly older age range and doing one- or two-day workshops instead - overheads would reduce significantly if you were hiring for a single day (or even half-day) rather than hourly, especially if you take into account travel time etc (yours and the parents who have to ferry the kids... Teenagers could make their own way there). I'd be more willing to stump up cash for a teenager showing interest and aptitude than for a 10yo for whom I am also paying for after-school activities every day of the week, or childcare.

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writinglady · 28/08/2015 13:59

Swimming the target group would be children who were slightly above average ability already who showed an interest in writing; children who like writing already as a hobby OR children who may be sitting CE exams where essay writing ( creative) is important. It would not be catch-up tutoring.
I'm not dead set on £20, that's why I asked, but as I said, teaching a group properly and not just following a book, or tape, or pieces for a music exam, takes time and there'd be the marking of their work after the lesson.

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CocktailQueen · 28/08/2015 13:54

My daughter would love that!! Will have a think. Instinct says that I wouldn't pay £20 per hour for a group lesson, though.

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writinglady · 28/08/2015 13:53

Presumably, your MA was for pleasure and you were happy to pay many thousands of pounds for the privilege? You valued it and presumably it was a luxury?

You've hit the nail on the head; yes, all students would be different which is why the cost would reflect the personal input for each child, as well as input to the whole group.

I've taught pairs of students before and groups of three. I know what's involved.

The other point is that the hour with the students is only part of it; there is prep time and marking time, so in effect it would be 3 hours of my time.

I'm just thinking about this at the moment and even if £20 seems too much, I'd not go below £15 because teaching a group of 6 I'd want at least double what I'd earn for 2 x 1:1 students in 2 hours (about £80.)

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Swimmingwithsharks · 28/08/2015 13:52

Hmm you will have to test the market for your area. £20 for a lesson sounds okay, though £15-18 sounds better! I have met a maths/English 'tutor' who charged £20 each for group lessons. This was aimed at kids who were trailing in class but also included children sitting 11+. So a different market than yours.
I think most parents unfortunately put greater importance on maths, sports, music before creative writing. Or are happier paying for tutoring linked heavily with the school curriculum and up coming exams.
I know a lot of children struggle with creative writing and then there are some children who love to write but have no proper guidance in the subject. I have met a couple of kids who by that age have voiced an interest in writing and wanting to be writers. In that case I think someone like you would be great. But what sort of child are you particularly targeting? I could see benefit for both types of children.

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orangepudding · 28/08/2015 13:51

Parents pay £60+ for 11+ plus tutoring because it can save on private school fees or can save on further tutoring if the child gets into a very good school.
I don't think you can compare 11+ tutoring to creative writing tutoring. £20 an hour for a group session is too much.

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ImperialBlether · 28/08/2015 13:41

But 1:1 is always different isn't it, because you are catering to their specific needs. The minute two students are there, everything changes.

I did an MA in Creative Writing and even in our workshops the different ability levels was very noticeable. This would be more so with young children because of the age difference.

I suppose if you are in a wealthy area and parents are prepared to pay £20 without thinking for a child's hobby/interest, you might be OK but I thought (as a teacher, private tutor and examiner) that parents tended to spend when there's a goal in sight, such as an exam or entrance test.

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