What worries me is the suggestion that a teaching assistant be employed to keep students on-task suggesting it's not actually that greatTeaching assistants/non specialists are are already used to supervise A-Level self study, fortnightly assessment classes or periods when teacher is ill etc. Obviously it wouldn't work with students who cant stay on task. But plenty of children who take their studying seriously can stay on task, do want to learn and are peed off at the disruptive students wasting the teachers time.
Would you really want to risk one of your 3 A-level choices on a bit of software and the hope of self-motivation? Well it sounds not unlike the Open University courses but provided in a class room, if that was the case then yes I would definitely 'consider' it as an option and do further research.
I dont think 'mymaths' is specifically designed to provide the A-level syllabus (I could be wrong) but again there is a difference between forcing children to do it that way and a student choosing to do that course, in the full knowledge of how it is taught.
I bet it would be the poor kids getting the apps, the best schools would still have proper teachers. Would have thought it was more suitable for middle/high achievers?
Alarm bells should be ringing as Pearson virtual schools in the US Link is behind a pay wall. Correct me if I am wrong but isn't a Virtual A-level a far cry from a whole virtual school?