
On this page
When the effort is there but the grade is not
How a good tutor turns that around
Three students, three fixes
What a good GCSE maths tutor changes
Meet some of our GCSE maths tutors
Next steps for your child
Worth reading next
Frequently asked questions
When the effort is there but the grade is not
Your child revises for GCSE maths. After all, they turn up to lessons and do the homework. Yet they still open the results and see a 5 or a 6 where you hoped for more. When you ask what went wrong, they cannot always say. It just did not click. That gap between the effort and the grade is one of the hardest things for a parent to watch. You cannot fix it for them, and it is often the point where families start looking for a GCSE maths tutor.
Here is the part that should reassure you. In our experience, the child usually understands more maths than the grade shows. The marks are lost in small, repeated places: a dropped minus sign, a method that takes too long, a question read too quickly. These are fixable. You just need a good GCSE maths tutor. Someone who can find the exact spots where the marks are going and sort them one at a time.
The short version
If your child knows the content but keeps dropping marks, the problem is usually accuracy and method choice, not knowledge. That is what targeted tutoring fixes fastest.
How a good tutor turns that around
The way we work is simple, and it is built to fix exactly this problem. A tutor teaches to your child’s own exam board and specification, so nothing is wasted on material they will not be tested on. After each session they set a few practice questions on a shared online board. They also send back a short written note on what went well and what to work on. The following week, your child takes the method into school and uses it in class. That is the loop that moves a grade: find the weak spot, fix it, practise it, use it. Across British curriculum schools in Oman, from The British School Muscat to The Sultan’s School, it is the same handful of topics that come up again and again. Here is what that looks like with real students, with the details changed so no child can be identified.
Is your child losing marks they should be keeping?
A tutor can read their working and show them exactly where the easy marks are going.
Three students, three fixes
The student who was strong but careless
One boy we worked with, we will call him Adam, knew his algebra inside out. He could tell you every rule. Yet his mock grade kept coming back lower than his ability. The reason was the same each time: careless slips, and minus signs most of all. Nothing was wrong with his understanding. So the work was not new content. Instead, it was care. So we showed him how to check an answer by working it backwards, which meant a slip got caught before it cost a mark. Within a few weeks he was losing far fewer marks to small errors, and the grade started to match what he actually knew.
The student stuck on harder quadratics
A girl we will call Sara was confident factorising quadratics where the number in front of the x squared was one. However, the moment that number changed, her confidence dropped. This is one of the most common splits we see. So we worked through every type of factorising that comes up at GCSE, until the method no longer depended on luck. Then we did the same with completing the square, which she had been avoiding because the steps felt random. Once she saw why each step was there, it stopped being something to fear. The following week she used it in a class test and got the question out.
The student who could not choose the right rule
A third student, we will call him Reuben, could apply the sine rule and the cosine rule on their own. The trouble came in the exam, where a question does not tell you which one to use. He would freeze, pick the wrong one, and lose the marks. So we practised the choosing until it became automatic: read the question, see what you are given, and the rule picks itself. Then we did the same with the exact trig values that come up without a calculator. By the end, the part that used to cost him marks had become one of his safer topics.
Want these topics covered in depth?
Our tutors work through the exact areas where your child loses marks, one session at a time.
What a good GCSE maths tutor changes
The single most common note in our lesson records is about care. A student knows all the rules, and the main thing to focus on is accuracy, minus signs especially. That sounds minor until you count the marks. A sign error in the second line of a long algebra question can cost every mark that follows it. The method can be completely correct and the marks still vanish. Therefore a tutor who watches your child work, rather than only marking the final answer, catches these habits and corrects them before the exam does.
The second change is method choice. In practice, there is often more than one valid way to answer a GCSE question, and the difference between them is time. A tutor shows your child the most efficient route, which matters enormously in a paper where the clock is tight. The third change is confidence under pressure. As a result of working through harder questions until they feel routine, the exam stops feeling threatening.
This is the part past papers alone cannot deliver. A past paper tells your child whether an answer was right or wrong. However, it does not explain why a particular method was slow. It does not show where a habit is costing marks, or what the jump to the next grade actually requires. A GCSE maths tutor reads the working and gives feedback clear enough to act on.
Meet some of our GCSE maths tutors

Murray
Murray is in the fourth year of a Materials Science degree at the University of Oxford (Trinity College), on track for a First, with A grades at A Level in Maths, Chemistry, and Physics. He has over 150 hours of tutoring experience across GCSE and A Level Maths. Murray is methodical with the things that cost marks, sign errors, slow methods, and shaky algebra, and he is patient enough to rebuild a topic from the foundation up.

Jessica
Jessica is a fourth year Medicine student at the University of Cambridge, with four top grades at A Level in Maths, Further Maths, Chemistry, and Biology, and twelve A* grades at GCSE. She is one of the most experienced tutors at Greenhill Academics by hours taught. Jessica is calm and exact, and she is particularly good at showing students the quickest reliable method for a question rather than the first one that comes to mind.

Gonzalo
Gonzalo holds a First Class MChem in Chemistry from the University of Oxford (Jesus College) and begins a PhD at Cambridge shortly. He achieved A grades at A Level in Maths, Further Maths, Chemistry, and Biology, alongside nine grade 9s at GCSE. Gonzalo teaches GCSE Maths with a clear, structured style, and he is good at helping students see the connections between topics that make harder questions feel familiar.
Next steps for your child
If your child knows the content but the grades are not showing it, the right tutor can find the gap and close it. Specifically, we will match them with a specialist GCSE maths tutor who teaches the British curriculum. They understand exactly what the top grades require. Sessions are online, which suits families across Oman and fits around school timetables.
Help Your Child Keep the Marks They Earn
EXPERT GCSE MATHS TUTORING FOR DOHA FAMILIES
Our Oxbridge-educated tutors find the small, repeated errors that cost marks and fix them with targeted, personalised feedback that past papers alone cannot give.
Worth reading next
If you found this useful, these guides go further on the same theme. One covers the most common exam mistakes in GCSE maths. Another looks at what to do if your child is falling behind. The last covers our wider maths tutoring across the region.
- The most common GCSE maths exam mistakes
- What to do if your child is falling behind in maths
- GCSE maths tutoring across the UAE
