GCSE Urdu tutors
1 of 1 UK tutor teaching Urdu at GCSE.
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.
GCSEs are sat in Year 11 (age 15-16), with most students taking 8-10 subjects. They're the load-bearing UK school qualification — the 9-1 graded exams that drive sixth-form admission, apprenticeship eligibility, and (via maths and English at grade 4 or 5) university and many job prerequisites. Tutoring demand peaks here. The biggest grade gains tend to come from exam-paper technique rather than further content — students often know more than they show. Boards (AQA, Edexcel, OCR, Eduqas, WJEC, CIE) diverge on content and assessment, so tutor familiarity with the specific spec is meaningful in most subjects.
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About GCSE
Year groups, exam timing, and how GCSE fits into the UK qualification ladder.
Exam boards
AQA, Edexcel, OCR, Eduqas, CCEA, SQA and Cambridge International — what each is known for.
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