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This single mom is paying 2 tutors to teach her kids this school year during COVID-19

With families' lack of confidence in the education system this year, local tutoring services are experiencing a rise in demand and unique requests during the pandemic.

Tutoring services in Hamilton seeing growing interest from parents who worry about learning during pandemic

With families' lack of confidence in the education system this year, local tutoring services are experiencing a rise in demand and unique requests during the pandemic. (Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters)

Less than a month before schools re-open,parents with a lack of confidence in the province and school boards'approach are hiring local tutorsin high volumes and asking for more of their time.

Tiamma Lee is one of them and she'savoiding schools altogether this September.

She's homeschooling two of her four kids and is hiring two tutors to visittheirWest Mountain home in Hamilton, Ont.,where they'llteach in her living roomthree days a week.

With a lack of social interaction between kids at school this fall, as well as some students wearing masks and others not, Lee isn't comfortable sending her children to class.

"It's going to be a mentally exhausting environment," she explained.

A teacher gives a lesson to elementary elementary school eastern France in this photo. Schools in Hamilton are opening in September, but confusion about some rules is worrying parents, prompting some to try homeschool and tutoring. (Frederick Florin/AFP/Getty Images)

It's a decision many parents are grappling with. Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board did a survey between June 25 and July 1 with more than 10,000 responses asking families if their kids would return to classrooms. Some28 per cent said they wouldn't.

One of Lee's children also has Asperger's syndrome which makes learning difficult for him. Itwas another deal breaker for her. But homeschooling isn't new for her family.

She homeschooledfor a year when she wasn't working and had a grad student from McMaster University help her. But being a single mother and supporting four sons has forced her to work and find more outside help.

Lee posted an ad on Kijijilooking for tutors to teach mathematics, English, geography and music. She said her kids were thrilled.

"I have interviews next week. I've received five or so responses so far," Lee explained.

Her plan is to take bits and pieces from the e-learning curriculum and have the tutors teach two of her kids, aged 8 and 12,three days a week.

On days the tutors aren't around, she'll start them off with math exercises in the morning before giving them a break outdoors and returning inside to focus on the four subjects.

She's also willing to shell out up to $800 a month for the tutors.

More familiesseeking tutoring services

Tutoring services in the Hamilton area told CBC that parents are paying up to $1,000 a month. Andmany of those parents are also still sending theirkids to school.

Sunny Verma, CEO of TutorBright, saidhe hasseen a rise in requests fromDundas, Ancaster, Waterdown, the west end of Hamilton, and neighbourhoods near McMaster University.

"Our peak season started early this year. The last week of July and the first week of August are usually very slow because families are on vacation ... but people are thinking about back to school much earlier this year," he explained.

Tutoring services in Hamilton say core math skills, reading comprehension and hard skills like time management are some of the popular requests among parents.

Normally, parents reach out to a tutor after their child receives a low grade. Now, Verma said, families are reaching out to try and avoid the low marks.

Meggi Chopra, the owner of Oxford Learning in Hamilton, told CBCnot only do more parents want tutors, they want more sessions.

"Before, the average was two to three hours a week of tutoring, now we're finding the average is three to five a week," she highlighted.

She added that the demandexposes inequities for low-income families.

"Kids need support whether they get it at school, a tutoring centre, even hanging out with friends. With all of that eliminated now ... absolutely there's a disadvantage for parents who cannot afford it."

WATCH |Inequality concerns as parents consider back-to-school options

Inequality concerns as parents consider back-to-school options

4 years ago
Duration 1:58
Worried about sending their kids back to class during the COVID-19 pandemic, some parents are opting to home school, or hire a tutor, but that raises concerns about inequality.

For those who can afford tutors, which could cost $300a month on the low end, Verma said parents should seek them sooner than later due to the "exceptionally abnormal"demand.

"If you called me three weeks ago, I would have said it's slow ... our biggest thought is, 'Will we have enough tutors and what else can we offer students if we don't?' "

He explained that students of all ages are signing up and added that parents want more training on time managementamong other core skills.Chopra said her demand is skewing younger with an emphasis on reading comprehension and math fundamentals.

'Massive' rise in 'pod tutoring' and online learning

Verma added that one "massive" local trendis the desire for online tutoring.

Oxford Learning hasstudents use screen sharing and Zoom calls to get help in real-time.

At TutorBright, students receivingonline tutoringget video or audio support and an interactive whiteboard that the tutor and student can work on at the same time.

Verma said online learning makes it easier for tutors by avoiding the commuting to and from the office. It also allows for shorter, 30 minutesessions.

Another emerging trend is "pod tutoring" where people hire a tutor for aneighbourhood or a small group of kids, usually fewer than 10.

Three school-age girls in Australia use e-learning from home. Some tutoring services offer 'pod tutoring' which sees one tutor teach a handful of students at the same time. The approach is becoming popular in the U.S. and budding in Canada. (Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)

It's becoming popular in the U.S. and both Chopra and Verma said they are hearing families in the Hamilton area ask about it.Both of them were open to the idea of offering pod tutoring.

"With elementary schools not having a cap on class sizes and some kids not being required to wear a mask, a lot of my parents are concerned and pod learning is something my team has a plan in place for it," Chopra said.

Vermanotedpod tutoring has to meet more specific criteria to be successful, namely ensuring kids are in the same grade, with similar problems and similar learning styles. Despite that, he held a free demo in the summer and said the results showed it works.

"A lot of students in Hamilton participated in this too, so if you asked me, 'Would it work?' Yes, it works," he said.