KS3 Geology tutors

2 of 2 UK tutors teaching Geology at KS3.

Geology is a single-board subject in UK schools — GCSE Geology is offered only by Eduqas / WJEC (spec C480QS), and A-level Geology runs at Eduqas / WJEC and at OCR (H414), with OCR withdrawing the qualification (final first teach September 2026, final A-level assessment June 2028). It covers minerals and rocks, plate tectonics, geological time and structural geology, with substantial fieldwork — the Eduqas A-level requires a minimum of four days in the field. Tutoring helps most with rock and mineral identification (which rewards lots of practice with real specimens), the quantitative side at A-level (cross-sections, dip and strike, thin-section interpretation), and the essay-style questions on Earth history. School provision is thin and tutors are correspondingly scarce; geoscience graduates and Earth science teachers are the realistic pool. There's a meaningful adult-learner and university-support cohort here too — Open University earth science modules, mature students sitting GCSE or A-level privately, and undergraduate fieldwork prep.

Key Stage 3 covers Years 7, 8 and 9 (ages 11-14) — the first three years of secondary school, before GCSE choices and content begin. It's a quieter period for tutoring than KS2 or GCSE, but the foundations laid (or missed) at KS3 drive GCSE outcomes more than students or parents usually realise. Tutoring helps most where confidence has dropped at the primary-secondary transition (especially in maths, where the algebra step lands here) or where a student is ahead and under-stretched. The 13+ for independent-school transfer is sat in Year 8, which adds a separate layer of preparation for that cohort.

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