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How It Fits Your District

Fitting tutoring into your district’s reality.

Scheduling constraints. MTSS requirements. Staff capacity. Funding timelines. We’ve built around these realities, not asked you to build around ours.

Can we run this within our schedule?

That’s usually the first question. The answer depends on your bell schedule, your intervention structures, and how much flexibility you have. Here’s how districts make it work.

Typical Schedule Models

Intervention Block Integration

Tutoring slots into existing WIN periods, RTI blocks, or dedicated intervention time. Students rotate to tutoring the same way they’d rotate to any other intervention. No schedule reconstruction required.

Pull-Out Model

Students leave specials, study hall, or non-core periods for tutoring sessions. Works well when intervention blocks aren’t available or are already full. Requires coordination with building schedules but minimal structural change.

Station Rotation

Tutoring becomes one station in a rotation model. Students cycle through tutoring alongside other learning activities. Common in elementary settings with flexible classroom structures.

Before/After Core Instruction

Sessions scheduled at the margins of the day (early morning, lunch, or immediately after dismissal) when in-school time isn’t available. Lower participation rates than embedded models, but viable for rigid schedules.

Integration Without Disruption

Tutoring reinforces classroom instruction. It doesn’t compete with it.

Sessions are scheduled around core instruction, not during it
Skill focus areas are coordinated with school leadership
Curriculum can align to your pacing guides so students aren’t learning conflicting approaches
Consistent session times mean students know when to expect tutoring and teachers can plan around it, with tutoring serving as an extension of the classroom

Attendance and Participation

In-school delivery solves the attendance problem. Students who wouldn’t show up for after-school programs get the same support during the school day.

Session attendance is tracked and monitored
Reporting supports visibility into participation
Patterns such as missed sessions or engagement dips can be identified to support intervention
Districts with in-school models consistently report strong attendance rates
MTSS Framework

Where tutoring fits in your intervention framework.

Most districts are not looking to add another program to their MTSS framework. They need the intervention capacity they already planned for but can’t staff internally. Tier 2 and Tier 3 supports are often defined, but finding certified teachers to fill them, especially for math, SPED, or ELL students, can be a challenge.

That’s where we fit. Tutoring supports your Tier 2 or Tier 3 intervention, delivered by certified teachers, tracked with the data you’re already collecting, and aligned to the framework you’re already running. The actual intervention support your MTSS plan calls for.

Tier 2: Targeted Intervention

What it looks like:

Small-group tutoring (2–4 students) for students who need additional support beyond core instruction but aren’t yet at intensive intervention levels.

How it integrates:

Groups are formed based on student needs and school input
Sessions target specific skill gaps identified through screening and classroom performance
Progress monitoring supports instructional decisions and MTSS cycles
Typical dosage: 30 minutes, 3x per week

Who it serves:

Students performing below benchmark but responding to targeted support. Often identified through fall/winter screening or mid-year benchmark assessments.

Tier 3: Intensive Intervention

What it looks like:

1:1 or very small group (2 students) tutoring for students with significant skill gaps who need intensive, individualized support.

How it integrates:

Instruction is highly individualized based on diagnostic data
Alignment with school leadership and intervention teams supports instructional consistency
Progress monitoring supports ongoing instructional decisions and MTSS cycles
Typical dosage: 45–60 minutes, 4–5x per week

Who it serves:

Students significantly below grade level, often receiving special education services or identified for intensive intervention through your MTSS process.

Progress Monitoring Integration

We work with your team to provide reporting that supports progress monitoring and MTSS decision-making aligned to your existing processes.

Session-level data on skill mastery and engagement
Information to support instructional decisions and MTSS cycles
Reporting designed to align with district expectations and workflows
Sessions Summaries (coming soon)

Your MTSS coordinator has access to the information needed to support ongoing decisions

Who’s delivering instruction, and how we maintain quality.

District leaders ask about tutor credentials early, and they should. Here’s how we staff, train, and monitor the educators working with your students.

Hiring Standards

We don’t hire tutors who couldn’t be hired by your district.

100% certified teachers. Every tutor holds a valid teaching credential.

Background-checked. Comprehensive screening before any student contact.

Experience required. Proven classroom and/or online instruction experience.

Specialized credentials. Many tutors hold endorsements in SPED, ELL, and Science of Reading.

We work with qualified educators who meet the same standards districts expect for classroom instruction.

Ongoing Development

Certification is the starting point, not the finish line.

Continuous professional development through K12’s PD Center.

Expert-led coaching sessions focused on virtual instruction best practices.

Collaborative practice communities where tutors share what’s working.

Training grounded in high-impact tutoring research (Stanford, Brown, Johns Hopkins).

If a tutor isn’t meeting standards, we address it. If a scheduling model isn’t producing the participation we expected, we adjust. Problems don’t improve by ignoring them.

Quality Monitoring

We observe sessions regularly and give tutors direct feedback.

Session observations by instructional coaches.

Feedback loops that identify what’s working and what needs adjustment.

If a tutor isn’t meeting standards, we address it fast.

The goal is to catch small problems before they become big ones, and to make sure you always know where the program stands.

Tutor Continuity for High-Impact Tutoring

Students work with the same tutor throughout their program.

Relationship continuity builds trust and engagement.

Tutors learn each student’s strengths, struggles, and what approaches work.

If a tutor change is necessary (illness, departure), we manage the transition carefully.

Families and teachers know who’s working with their students.

We measure success by whether districts choose to continue, and by the outcomes that justify that choice.

The first 90 days: what to expect.

District leaders want predictability. Here’s what implementation actually looks like, from contract to first session to steady-state operations.

Phase 1: Planning & Setup

Weeks 1–3

What Happens

Kick-off meeting to align on goals, schedules, and success metrics
Identification of a school-based or district tutoring coordinator
Student selection and grouping based on your data
Schedule coordination with building administrators
Platform setup and account provisioning
Communication templates for teachers and families
Determine approach around the instructional focus

Your team’s role:

Provide student data, confirm scheduling parameters, designate building contacts.

Our role:

Project management, technical setup, scheduling logistics, communication materials.

Phase 2: Launch & Calibration

Weeks 4-8

What Happens

Tutoring sessions begin
Scheduled implementation check-in after the first few weeks
Customer Success Manager and district or school coordinator meetings established for program management
Adjustments to grouping, scheduling, or instructional focus as needed
Ongoing support for program implementation

Your team’s role:

Monitor attendance, flag issues, participate in check-ins.

Our role:

Session delivery, data collection, rapid adjustment.

Phase 3: Steady State

Weeks 9+

What Happens

Regular session delivery continues
Attendance reporting supports visibility into participation
Ongoing program reviews with your team
Ongoing tutor development and quality monitoring

Your team’s role:

Review data, participate in MTSS cycles, provide feedback.

Our role:

Deliver instruction, maintain quality, report outcomes, adapt as needs evolve.

Typical Timeline

Milestone

Timing

Contract signed

Week 0

Kick-off meeting

Week 1

Student selection complete

Week 2

Platform setup complete

Week 3

First tutoring sessions

Week 4

Initial data review

Week 6

After initial implementation, tutoring continues with ongoing delivery and program support.

MTSS Framework

How information is accessed and used

We work with your team to provide access to information that supports progress monitoring and MTSS decision-making, aligned to your existing processes.

What you can access

Every session generates data:

Attendance and participation information
Engagement indicators
Session summaries (coming soon)
Reporting that can be downloaded to support review and analysis

This data is available within 24 hours of each session.

How this supports your team

Tutoring data should arrive ready for your decision cycles, not require translation.

How it integrates:

Information is available to support your existing review cycles and processes
Access supports building and district-level decision making
Designed to align with your MTSS framework and intervention planning

What we handle. What you handle. How we stay aligned.

Clear ownership prevents friction. Here’s how responsibilities divide between your team and ours, and how we stay coordinated throughout the partnership.

What K12 Tutoring Handles

Instruction delivery.
All tutoring sessions, curriculum, and instructional materials.

Tutor staffing.
Hiring, training, scheduling, and quality monitoring.

Platform and technology.
Session infrastructure, dashboards, and technical support.

Program management.
Dedicated Customer Success Manager, proactive communication, issue resolution.

What Your District Handles

Student identification.
Providing data for student selection and grouping.

Scheduling coordination.
Confirming session times within your master schedule.

Space and logistics.
Ensuring students have quiet space with devices and internet.

Building-level coordination.
Designating contacts at each school for day-to-day communication.

MTSS integration.
Incorporating tutoring data into your intervention review cycles.

How We Stay Aligned

Goal alignment.
We set success metrics together at kick-off.

Progress review.
Regular check-ins to assess what’s working.

Adjustment decisions.
Changes to grouping, scheduling, or focus based on data.

Communication.
Keeping teachers, families, and administrators informed.

Communication Rhythms

Ongoing coordination includes

Regular check-ins with your team
Support for district and school-level meetings as needed
Alignment with your MTSS cycles
Responsive support as needs arise

Communication Rhythms

Touchpoint

Participants

Frequency

Touchpoint

Building-level check-ins

Participants

Weekly

Frequency

Site coordinator + K12 CSM

Touchpoint

District program review

Participants

Monthly

Frequency

District leadership + K12 team

Touchpoint

Progress report delivery

Participants

Weekly/Monthly

Frequency

Automated + available on-demand

Touchpoint

MTSS data handoff

Participants

Per cycle

Frequency

MTSS coordinator + K12 CSM

Touchpoint

Issue escalation

Participants

As needed

Frequency

Direct line to Customer Success

Your Customer Success Manager

You have a dedicated Customer Success Manager who understands your district’s goals and supports ongoing coordination.

Single point of contact for strategic and operational questions
Proactive outreach, not just reactive support
Provides support for program and MTSS meetings as needed
Ongoing coordination to support program success

Ready to see how it fits?

You’ve seen the operational details. The next step is understanding how this maps to your specific district: your schedule, your MTSS framework, your funding situation.

Title I, state grants, and documentation support.