A-level Urdu tutors
1 of 1 UK tutor teaching Urdu at A-level.
Urdu is offered at GCSE and A-level (AQA) and is taken predominantly by heritage speakers from British Pakistani and broader South Asian families. The cohort usually has strong listening and speaking but variable reading and writing in the Nastaliq script — tutoring helps most with literacy, formal register, and the grammar precision that exam mark schemes reward. At A-level, the literary and cultural content (poetry, ghazal, Partition-era literature) requires explicit teaching even for fluent speakers. The Urdu/Hindi overlap is real but not total — written script and formal vocabulary diverge. Look for native fluency, Nastaliq literacy, and 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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