Does My Child Need a Tutor or a Structured English Program?
You've noticed something is off.
Your child is studying English. Attending class. Getting support.
But the results aren't there.
So you're searching for more help—and the question is: what kind?
The Two Things Parents Confuse
There is a difference between support and structure.
A tutor provides support. They help your child with what's in front of them—homework, test prep, vocabulary.
A structured program builds something. It starts from your child's current level, fills foundational gaps, and moves them forward in a planned sequence.
For some children, support is enough. For others, structure is what's actually missing.
Signs Your Child Needs Structure, Not Just Support
If any of these are true, a tutor is unlikely to solve the problem:
- Your child reads slowly and struggles to sound out unfamiliar words
- They can speak English conversationally but fall apart in writing
- Comprehension exercises are consistently difficult
- Progress feels like one step forward, one step back
- They've had a tutor for months but the school gap hasn't closed
These are signs of a foundational gap—not a preparation gap.
What a Structured Program Looks Like
A structured English program:
- Starts with a placement assessment
- Identifies specific gaps in phonics, reading, comprehension, or writing
- Follows a clear curriculum sequence
- Tracks progress at every stage
- Adjusts teaching to the child's development, not just the school calendar
At Spark English Center Vietnam, classes run with a maximum of 6 students. Every child follows a pathway from phonics through to academic writing and IELTS preparation. Progress is visible and measurable.
When a Tutor Is the Right Choice
A private tutor makes sense when:
- Your child has strong foundations but needs help with a specific subject
- The gap is narrow and short-term (one exam, one unit)
- Your child is advanced and needs enrichment beyond the standard curriculum
If the issue is wider than that, a tutor is usually treating symptoms rather than the cause.
The Mistake That Costs Parents Months
Many families spend six months, twelve months with a tutor—getting temporary improvements, but no lasting change.
The child can answer the homework. But they still can't read fluently. Can't write independently. Still struggles in class.
The tutor didn't fail because they weren't good. They failed because the problem required structure, not support.
Getting clarity on this distinction early saves time, money, and frustration.
FAQs
How do I know if my child has a foundational English gap?
Key signs: slow reading, difficulty writing independently, inability to decode new words, and inconsistent performance across subjects that require English.
Can a structured program work alongside school?
Yes. A good structured program complements school rather than duplicating it. It addresses what school cannot deliver at scale—individual attention and foundational skill-building.
My child is in Year 5. Is it too late for phonics?
No. Children who missed phonics at an early age can catch up quickly with the right instruction, regardless of their current year level.
What's the difference between an English center and a structured program?
Not all English centers offer structured programs. Large-class centers often focus on general English. A structured program has clear learning objectives, a defined sequence, and measurable outcomes.
How long does a structured program take to show results?
In a small-group setting with consistent attendance, most children show measurable improvement within 8 to 12 weeks.
Not sure whether your child needs a tutor or a structured program?
The answer starts with understanding exactly where they are.

















































