A-level Modern Hebrew tutors
1 of 1 UK tutor teaching Modern Hebrew at A-level.
Modern Hebrew is offered at GCSE and A-level (AQA, formerly OCR) and is taken predominantly by heritage speakers from British Jewish families, often alongside or after Jewish-school Hebrew teaching. Biblical Hebrew is a separate skillset; modern Hebrew is the GCSE/A-level subject. Tutoring helps most with the gap between school-level conversational Hebrew and the written register and grammatical precision that exam papers expect — verb conjugations, gender agreement, formal vocabulary. The script (without vowels at higher levels) is a literacy step that many students need explicit help with. Look for native fluency in Israeli Hebrew and explicit UK-spec experience.
A-levels are sat at the end of Year 13 (age 17-18) and are the standard UK university-entrance qualification, with most students taking 3 subjects (sometimes 4 plus an EPQ). Grades A*-E feed UCAS, and competitive university courses set offers at AAA or higher. Tutoring helps most with the step up from GCSE — A-levels demand independent learning, denser content, and exam technique that rewards structured argument or method-mark-aware working. Boards (AQA, Edexcel, OCR, Eduqas, CIE) diverge meaningfully — match the tutor to the spec, especially in maths, sciences and modern languages where assessment differences are sharp.
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Plain-English guides
About A-level
Year groups, exam timing, and how A-level fits into the UK qualification ladder.
Exam boards
AQA, Edexcel, OCR, Eduqas, CCEA, SQA and Cambridge International — what each is known for.
Parent guides
Cost benchmarks, online vs in-person, when to start, choosing a tutor, and knowing if it's working.
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