Rupert - English Literature tutor - Watford
1st lesson free
Rupert - English Literature tutor - Watford

Rupert's profile and their contact details have been verified by our experts

Rupert

  • Rate ₱5,254
  • Response 3h
  • Students

    Number of students Rupert has taught since their arrival at Superprof

    15

    Number of students Rupert has taught since their arrival at Superprof

Rupert - English Literature tutor - Watford
  • 5 (8 reviews)

₱5,254/h

1st lesson free

Contact

1st lesson free

1st lesson free

  • English Literature
  • Modern Literature
  • Classics
  • Essay Writing
  • Text commentary

Examiner-Led GCSE, IGCSE, IB and A Level English Tuition for Top-Band Writing

  • English Literature
  • Modern Literature
  • Classics
  • Essay Writing
  • Text commentary

Lesson location

Super Prof

Rupert is one of our best English Literature tutors. They have a high-quality profile, verified qualifications, a quick response time, and great reviews from students!

About Rupert


I have taught English for over twenty years in leading schools in the UK and abroad, and I work with students across GCSE, IGCSE, IB and A Level English Literature. I'm a graduate of Cambridge and York and an experienced A Level and IB examiner, so I know from the inside how exam boards reward answers, where students lose marks, and what separates a top-band response from a merely competent one.
What makes the difference is how the teaching is structured. I start by diagnosing a student's current writing against the actual mark scheme, so we can see precisely which skills are costing marks rather than guessing. From there I build work tailored to that student: targeted tasks and workbooks calibrated to the gaps the diagnosis found. Every piece they write comes back with detailed feedback that feeds straight into the next attempt, so improvement compounds instead of resetting each lesson.
The result is students who interpret with confidence, analyse language with precision, and build a fluent, well-argued essay under timed conditions, and who can keep doing it when I'm not in the room. Parents tell me they notice the shift in confidence and independence as much as in the grades. Whether a student needs to secure a strong pass or push for the very top, the aim is the same: to have them writing at their best when the exam actually arrives.

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About the lesson

  • Elementary School
  • Junior High School
  • Senior High School
  • +6
  • levels :

    Elementary School

    Junior High School

    Senior High School

    Adult Education

    Bachelor

    Technical Vocational Education And Training

    Master

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    MBA

  • English

All languages in which the lesson is available :

English

Specialist one-to-one online tuition in GCSE, IGCSE and A Level English Language and Literature, focused on exam technique, essay writing and high-level textual analysis.
Lessons aren't generic revision. They're built from a clear picture of where each student actually stands. We work on reading questions strategically, selecting and analysing evidence with precision, and shaping ideas into controlled, well-structured essays that meet the demands of the top bands. At A Level that means handling argument, context and critical reading with real sophistication; at GCSE it means moving past formulaic structures into genuine interpretation.
Because I've examined for major boards, I teach to the criteria students are actually marked against, not a diluted version of them. The aim is straightforward: students who write with clarity, control and confidence, and who understand exactly how to keep improving.

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Rates

Rate

  • ₱5,254

Pack rates

  • 5h: ₱24,251
  • 10h: ₱48,501

online

  • ₱5,254/h

free lessons

This first lesson offered with Rupert will allow you to get to know each other and clearly specify your needs for your next lessons.

  • 1hr

Details

All lessons are online, so there are no travel or venue costs, and any materials used in the lesson are included in the fee. The rate reflects individually planned teaching rather than a fixed syllabus: I prepare for each student specifically, based on where their writing currently stands.
Detailed written work is arranged separately. A full diagnostic of a student's writing marked against the exam criteria, or close marking of complete essays between lessons, is available as a costed add-on for families who want it. This keeps the lessons themselves focused on teaching, with the heavier written analysis available to those who need it.

Find out more about Rupert

Find out more about Rupert

  • When did you develop an interest in your chosen field and in private tutoring?

    I’ve always been drawn to English because it’s the one subject where the work is never finished. You can reread a paragraph and notice something you genuinely missed the first time, even when you thought
    you knew it inside out. That feeling of discovery hooked me early on.

    Tutoring came later, almost by accident. I started helping a couple of students who were bright but stuck, not because they lacked ability, but because school had made the subject feel like a set of hoops to jump through. Once I realised how quickly confidence shifts when a student gets clear feedback and a concrete plan, I was in. I like the precision of it: one student, one set of habits, one next step at a time.

    Now I teach online, mostly GCSE and A Level, and the work still feels oddly intimate. It’s you, a text, and a question that refuses to let you hide.
  • Tell us more about the subject you teach, the topics you like to discuss with students (and possibly those you like a little less).

    I teach English Language and English Literature, so we move between craft and meaning. One day we are pulling apart how a writer controls a reader with sentence length and viewpoint. The next we are arguing about morality, power, class, love, or identity and doing it with the text as evidence, not vibes.

    I love teaching close reading because it gives students a kind of authority. When they can point to a single word and explain what it does, they stop feeling like they are guessing what the examiner wants.
    I’m also a big fan of the “so what?” conversation. Why does this metaphor matter? Why does this structural shift change our sympathy? If a point doesn’t survive that question, it probably isn’t worth writing.

    Topics I enjoy most tend to be the uncomfortable ones: hypocrisy, manipulation, self-deception, reputation, and the way people perform versions of themselves to stay safe. Students often have sharp instincts about those ideas. They just need help translating instinct into analysis.

    What I like a little less is the myth that English is purely subjective. Of course interpretation matters, but it’s not a free-for-all. I spend a lot of time gently unteaching that misunderstanding.
  • Did you have any role models; a teacher that inspired you?

    Yes. I had a teacher who treated the classroom like a place where ideas mattered, not just answers. They were strict about evidence but generous about disagreement. You could challenge them, but you had
    to earn it with the text.

    That combination stuck with me. I try to recreate it in tutoring: high standards, no waffle, and a real sense that the student’s thinking is taken seriously. The goal is not to borrow my interpretation. It’s to learn how to build their own and defend it.
  • What do you think are the qualities required to be a good tutor?

    First, clarity. If you can’t explain a skill in a way a tired teenager can use at 8pm, you don’t really understand it.

    Second, diagnostic attention. A good tutor can spot whether a student is struggling because they don’t understand the text, don’t know how to structure an answer, lack vocabulary, or simply panic under time
    pressure. Those problems look similar on the page, but the fix is different.

    Third, honesty. Not harshness. Honesty. If a paragraph is vague, it needs saying. If a student is capable of more, they need to hear that too.

    Finally, patience with the process. Real improvement in English comes from repetition with feedback: practise, refine, try again. The tutor’s job is to make that cycle feel possible and worth doing.
  • Provide a valuable anecdote related to your subject or your days at school.

    One of my favourite tutoring moments was with a student who insisted they were “bad at English” because they couldn’t memorise quotations. We stopped treating quotes as museum pieces and started treating them as tools. Instead of learning a whole speech, they learned two or three short, flexible phrases and practised “zooming in” on them.

    A week later they messaged after a mock and said, essentially, “I actually knew what to write.” Nothing magical had happened. They hadn’t become a different person. They’d just been given a method that
    reduced the fear. That’s when English becomes teachable.

    At school, I wish someone had told me earlier that good writing is mostly rewriting. The students who do best are rarely the ones with the fanciest vocabulary. They’re the ones who can tighten a sentence, cut the fluff, and make an argument sharper.
  • What were the difficulties or challenges you faced or still facing in your subject?

    English can feel slippery because it mixes creativity with rigour. Students are often told to “analyse” without being shown what analysis actually looks like in sentences. That gap creates the classic problem: lots of
    plot, lots of opinion, very little method.

    Personally, the challenge is resisting lazy shortcuts. It’s tempting to hand students a pre-made interpretation. But that doesn’t hold up in an exam where the extract or question shifts. So I keep forcing the work back onto language, structure, and the line of argument. It’s slower, but it produces independent writers.

    Another ongoing challenge is confidence. A surprising number of able students have decided they are not “a natural” at English. The subject suffers from that myth more than maths or science. Part of my job is dismantling it.
  • Do you have a particular passion? Is it teaching in general or an element of the subject or something completely different?

    It’s teaching, but specifically the moment a student realises they can control the writing. When they stop hoping the examiner will be kind and start making deliberate choices: a tighter topic sentence, a better
    embedded quote, a clearer comparison, a more purposeful conclusion.

    Within the subject, I’m especially passionate about rhetoric and voice. Even in exam writing, students can sound like themselves while still being precise and high-level. I want them to feel proud of the work, not just relieved it’s finished.
  • What makes you a Superprof (besides answering these interview questions :-P)?

    I take English seriously, but I don’t make it mystifying. My sessions are structured, practical, and very focused on what moves a student up the mark scheme. We practise the exact skills that get rewarded, and we do
    it with feedback that’s specific enough to use immediately.

    I’m also careful about confidence. I won’t flatter a student with vague praise, but I will show them, clearly, what they did well and exactly what to do next. Over time, that builds independence, which is the whole point.

    If you want a tutor who will push you, keep you accountable, and help you write with real control, that’s what I do.
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