
On this page
Why a capable reader can still miss a grade 9
The skills that turn reading into a grade
What a GCSE English tutor changes
Meet some of our GCSE English tutors
Next steps for your child
Worth reading next
Frequently asked questions
Why a capable reader can still miss a grade 9
Your child enjoys reading and clearly understands the books they study, yet the English grade keeps coming back lower than you expected. A good GCSE English tutor in Abu Dhabi sees this all the time. The understanding is there. What is missing is the technical skill that turns a good reading into marks on the page. Across British curriculum schools in Abu Dhabi, from Brighton College Abu Dhabi to The British School Al Khubairat, this is one of the most common situations we meet. It is also one of the easiest to put right.
The short version
A natural feel for reading is the hard part to teach, and your child may already have it. Turning that natural feel into clear, well-evidenced analysis is what takes a strong reader to a grade 9.
Is your child capable but stuck below a 9?
A tutor can show them how to turn instinct into the analysis examiners reward.
The skills that turn reading into a grade
To show what this work looks like, here is an example drawn from real sessions, with the details changed to protect the students. Picture a Year 11 student we will call Jihu. She is bright and widely read, and she is working towards the top grades at a British curriculum school. Her reading was excellent from the first lesson. She had a natural gift for getting to the heart of a text and describing the feeling it creates. The challenge, therefore, was teaching her the skill to organise that instinct into essays and writing that score at grade 9.
Giving an essay a clear shape
Much of our early work went into structure. Jihu’s ideas were strong, yet her essays did not always guide the reader through them or build towards a point. So we practised shortening ideas and guiding the reader, so each paragraph made its point clearly. We worked on opening with a clear line of argument and developing it in order. As a result, the same insights that once felt scattered began to read as a controlled, deliberate case. Examiners reward that sense of direction, and her marks moved with it.
Backing instinct with technique
The next step was proving in technical terms what Jihu could already sense. She would feel the mood of a passage at once. However, she needed to show how the writer creates it. Therefore we discussed a range of literary techniques and applied them directly to the text in front of her. We set up clear arguments about a writer’s style, then built paragraphs around the more demanding devices. In practice, her instinct turned into the kind of clear analysis a top grade rewards, in both poetry and fiction.
Want your child’s essays to reach a grade 9?
Our tutors teach the technical skill that turns strong reading into a grade 9.
Control in creative writing
The GCSE English Language paper also asks for original writing, and here the work ran the other way. Jihu’s imagery was vivid, yet it sometimes ran ahead of the reader. So we focused on saying what was happening clearly, while keeping the figurative language under control. A strong piece moves the reader and stays in command of its effects. We practised this alongside her analytical work, and throughout, Jihu wrote everything in her own voice, unaided by online tools, because the examiner wants to hear her, not a borrowed style.
What a GCSE English tutor changes
The most valuable thing a tutor brings to English is a reader who responds to your child’s actual writing. A mark scheme can tell a student that top answers show “perceptive, detailed analysis”. Yet those words rarely explain what to do differently on Monday morning. A tutor, by contrast, reads the essay your child wrote. From there, the tutor points to the exact sentence where a strong observation went unproven, and shows how to develop it. That feedback is specific enough to act on, which is what makes it work.
The second change is structure. Many capable students lose marks here, although their ideas are perfectly strong. The essay simply does not guide the reader through those ideas or build towards an argument. Therefore a tutor teaches the shape of a top-grade answer. That means a clear main point in the opening, the paragraphs that develop a single line of thought, and the close reading that earns the analytical marks. Over a few weeks these habits become second nature.
The third change is the quality of feedback your child receives. A mark scheme describes what a top answer looks like in general terms. A tutor, by contrast, points to the exact line in your child’s own essay where an idea needed developing, and shows how to do it. Because that feedback is specific to the work in front of them, your child knows exactly what to change next time, rather than guessing.
Meet some of our GCSE English tutors

Laurie
Laurie read English at the University of Oxford (The Queen’s College) with a Double First and won the J.A. Scott Prize for the highest finals mark in English or History at her college. She has over 500 hours of tutoring across a decade, teaching GCSE and IGCSE English Language and Literature. A working foreign correspondent, she is excellent at helping a strong reader turn instinct into clear, technical analysis.

George
George holds an MPhil in Linguistics from the University of Cambridge (High Distinction) and a First in English Literature from Manchester, with over 500 hours of tutoring across GCSE, A Level, and Oxbridge admissions. His background in linguistics gives him a sharp eye for how language works on the page, and he is known for helping students develop the close technical reading that the top GCSE grades reward.

Naomi
Naomi read Politics, Philosophy and Economics at the University of Oxford (Exeter College) with three A* grades at A Level. She teaches GCSE English Language alongside the humanities, and she is skilled at helping students write with clarity and structure. Naomi is particularly good at showing a student how to organise ideas so an argument reads cleanly from start to finish.
Next steps for your child
If your child reads well, yet the grades are not matching that ability, the right tutor can build the bridge. Therefore, we will match them with a specialist GCSE English tutor. That tutor teaches the British curriculum and knows what a grade 9 requires. Sessions are online, which suits families across Abu Dhabi and fits neatly around the school week.
Help Your Child Reach a Grade 9 in English
EXPERT GCSE ENGLISH TUTORING FOR ABU DHABI FAMILIES
Our Oxbridge-educated tutors turn natural reading into clear analysis, with personalised feedback on your child’s own essays that a mark scheme alone cannot give.
Worth reading next
If this was useful, these guides go deeper into the skills behind a grade 9. One focuses on reaching a 9 in literature. Another sets out the core skills behind a 9 in language, and the last looks at the language paper in more detail.
- How to get a 9 in GCSE English Literature
- The three skills behind a 9 in GCSE English Language
- How to get a 9 in GCSE English Language
