More pupils who require academic help are turning to online
tuition. More than 15 tuition centres and private tutors have
started offering such classes in recent years, in addition to their
traditional face-to-face ones.
Tutors and parents told The Straits Times that they are more
convenient than face-to-face arrangements.
Online tuition relies on video chat applications such as Skype and
Google Hangouts to communicate, and file-sharing tools like Dropbox
to assign worksheets.
Paya Lebar Methodist Girls' School (Secondary) student Berdine Yeo,
14, signed up for a $200-a-year weekly online maths tuition
programme two years ago to prepare for her Primary School Leaving
Examination (PSLE).
She used the online service offered by PSLEMath Learning Centre to
supplement her face-to-face tuition.
Her father, manager Yeo See Kiat, 48, said: "It provided her with
the extra help needed and also more practice with the
subject."
IB Super Tuition Centre, which offers face-to-face tuition for a
number of subjects including International Baccalaureate (IB) maths
and science, introduced its online service a year ago.
The number of students using the online option has risen five times
from last year. The centre now has 15 students on this online
arrangement, compared with only three last year.
For at least one session a week, students clarify their doubts, go
over key concepts and attempt questions using online tuition
software, which has features such as video conferencing, an online
whiteboard and file-sharing capabilities.
There is no price difference between face-to-face classes and
online classes, which cost between $100 and $130 per 90-minute
session.
"Students these days are more comfortable with technology," said
centre founder Bel Hwang, 38.
"Parents do not have to worry about their children travelling to a
centre. Some parents also prefer online tutors to home tutors as
they dislike strangers coming to their house."
Numberskill Math Tuition Centre, which offers O-level, A-level and
IB tuition, introduced its online service this year. Its principal
tutor Gary Ang, 36, said:
"Parents want their children to attend classes by proven tutors,
and if the schedule does not allow for it, they see online tuition
as the next best option."
However, SmartLab Education Centre, an early provider of online
classes, has discontinued its online programme since 2012.
Co-founder Tony Tan, 45, said that there are limitations to online
tuition and it is "not as personal" as being there in a
class.
"It takes a lot of time trying to communicate with the students,
who may not be able to express themselves as well through an online
platform," he said.
National Institute of Education professor Jason Tan noted that
while some students can learn independently, others still need a
tutor next to them.
He added: "Some children need that supervision to keep them on
task, so they do not do something else instead."
Get MyPaper for
more stories.