The impact of high-impact tutoring on the education system in recent years is hard to overstate. The number of school districts providing this intensive form of supplemental instruction has skyrocketed in recent years, and school leaders who have signed on report big benefits.
Students aren’t just learning more with access to a high-impact tutoring program during the school day. They’re less likely to be absent from school too.
How can you bring those benefits to your students, and what high-impact tutoring best practices should you look for in a program? Here’s what district and school leaders need to know before they choose a tutoring partner.
High-impact tutoring is an intensive intervention provided one-to-one or in small groups that occurs several times a week over an extended period of time. The tutoring model goes by a number of names, including HIT, high-dosage and high dose, and it’s become increasingly popular in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Between December 2022 to May 2024 alone, the percentage of U.S. public schools offering high-impact tutoring to students grew by 9 percent.
One crucial criteria to look for in a high-impact tutoring program is the use of a high-quality curriculum, which ensures all tutors provide the same quality of instruction to every student.
If a potential tutoring partner doesn’t use a high-quality curriculum, it could be cause for concern. Struggling students need more than simple homework help or ineffective practices like guided reading.
This makes your first criteria for any potential partner fairly simple: Do they have a high-quality curriculum in place to ensure every student will receive consistent instruction, or will your teachers be expected to tell tutors what they’re supposed to work on with each student?
High-impact tutoring, when done correctly, shouldn’t add more work to teachers’ already full plates.
If you already have an evidence-based curriculum in your district, students will benefit from tutoring that’s backed by research. An evidence-based tutoring curriculum will coherently integrate with your core curriculum, giving students more targeted practice with the skills they need most.
It will also make gauging tutor performance easier to measure. Student progress monitoring will align with specific content, something that can’t be done if your partner’s approach is unscripted and incoherent.
High-impact program partners should be ready to answer questions about the theoretical framework of their tutoring curriculum and outline the instructional strategies their tutors will use. In particular, a foundational reading skills tutoring curriculum should address the key elements of foundational reading instruction — such as phonemic awareness, phonics, and fluency — to provide students with the skills they need to become automatic, fluent readers.
If your district has yet to adopt a literacy curriculum that’s based in the Science of Reading, or you’re in the midst of curriculum adoption, having a tutoring partner with an evidence-based curriculum brings a number of benefits to the table, including:
Here are some questions you can use to assess the quality of the curriculum underpinning the tutoring program:
Selecting a tutoring program that uses an evidence-based curriculum may be required to stay in line with the laws of your state as well. As of fall 2024, 39 states and the District of Columbia had adopted legislation mandating that school districts adopt an evidence-based literacy curriculum. More than half of the states in the nation also now require that tutoring services use high-quality instructional materials that align with classroom curricula.
If classroom teachers who provide Tier 1 instruction are trained and certified, it stands to reason that tutors who step in to provide Tier 2 and 3 supports should likewise be well-trained.
It can be tempting to rely on parents who offer to drop into the classroom and other community volunteers to tutor students to cut down on costs. Community investment in education is certainly something to be lauded, and school volunteers provide an invaluable service.
The research tells us, however, that tutoring is one service where the “who” matters as much as the “what.” Studies have found students see substantially more success when their tutor has been professionally trained, and their services are being supervised.
Volunteer tutors often cannot commit to the intense amount of time — optimally five days per week of tutoring — required for tutoring to have “high-impact” results, and may drop out of the program entirely if it conflicts with paid work.
Here’s what you get with a professional tutor, on the other hand:
Trained tutors do not have to be certified teachers. In fact, parents and community members who undergo a high-quality tutor training program can — and do — provide high-quality instruction to students.
Here are some important questions to ask your potential tutoring partner about their tutor training and supervision:
When it comes to tutor monitoring, you may also want to consider a synchronous virtual tutoring partner over an in-person option. When sessions are performed virtually, video of every tutor can be monitored to make sure instruction follows the curriculum.
Student assessment is an integral part of instruction, and that’s just as true of the literacy instruction students receive in a tutoring program as it is in a traditional classroom setting.
Progress monitoring by your tutoring partner will enable their instructional staff to tailor instruction to the individual student, giving the child as many at-bats as they need to master the skill they’re working on.
The tutoring program should begin with a diagnostic assessment, so tutors know exactly what skills students have mastered and still need to learn. After sessions begin, your partner should be consistently tracking student progress and measuring growth, and they should be able to explain their methodology for assessing whether students have mastered a skill before they move to the next.
Your partner should also have a system for communicating this data back to school and district leaders. In the same way that they lighten students’ load with consistent instruction, a great tutoring partner saves teachers’ time by connecting the dots between the learning happening in tutoring sessions and the classroom.
Here are some questions to ask potential partners to gauge the strength of their student assessment planning:
Ignite Reading delivers 1:1 online tutoring to students who need extra support in learning to read. Our expert tutors teach students the foundational skills they need to become confident, fluent readers by the end of 1st grade.
With a team of literacy specialists and highly trained tutors, we provide daily, targeted instruction that quickly closes decoding gaps, so students can successfully make the transition from learning to read to reading to learn.