Houston Chronicle

Local business specialize­s in flexible ‘boutique’ tutoring

- By Annette Baird

Half way through his senior year at Memorial High School Christian DeAyala already had his mind on college and a fraternity. Trouble was, he wasn’t done with school. In fact, he was becoming more undone, and graduating on time seemed remote.

“I was having difficulti­es — I wasn’t very focused on my classes, I was drinking with my friends,” DeAyala said.

DeAyala left Memorial at the end of the first semester of his senior year, but with the help of a tutoring service he completed his high school credits, graduated on time and headed to the University of Alabama, where he recently completed his first year.

DeAyala’s mom, Lillian Newman, a Memorial resident, said her son needed a different environmen­t in which to finish school, and the flexible, individual­ized services he received at TutorVille, a tutoring business started six years ago by Jess Rogers, fit his needs.

“TutorVille had a great environmen­t — he loved it,” Newman said. “Jess went above and beyond to get his transcript in order.”

Homeschool tutoring services, like those DeAyala received, are some of the many offerings the River Oaks-based tutoring business has branched into as demand for services has risen since Rogers founded TutorVille six years ago.

This fall, Rogers is launching a series of enrichment courses at their offices at 1210 West Clay St.

The courses cover a range of areas, including: coding; finance; science, technology, engineerin­g and math subjects; filmmaking, world explorers and entreprene­urship.

With the growing number of home school

families in the area, Rogers said the company has also developed a personaliz­ed home school program for students in kindergart­en through 12th grade.

In the meantime, Rogers said Tutorville continues to offer staple services such as subject tutoring, test prep for the SAT and ACT and private school entrance exams and help with organizati­onal skills on an individual basis or in small groups at home or at the TutorVille facility.

Rogers advised parents to seek tutoring support for their kids sooner rather than later. “Academic struggles can be identified and overcome early on with the right guidance and preparatio­n from a caring, experience­d tutor,” Rogers said.

Rogers said what sets the company apart is personal service and a highly qualified staff that ranges from medical students to experience­d science teachers.

“We consider ourselves a boutique firm,” Rogers said.

“We have fantastic tutors, and we have a great reputation.”

Rogers said the company serves students from private schools like St. Francis Episcopal Day School and St. Thomas High School to public schools in Spring Branch Independen­t School District like Hunters Creek elementary, Spring Branch middle, Memorial and Stratford high schools.

But if families can’t go the private tutoring route to give their child an edge, or in DeAyala’s case, catch up, schools offer myriad services.

“There’s not a school in Spring Branch that doesn’t have some tutorials or other or offers extra help for their students — it could be during the day, before school, after school,” SBISD spokeswoma­n Linda Buchman said.

“For example, Memorial High School has an extended lunch period if kids need extra help, or they

can reach out to a teacher.”

Buchman listed other district tutoring and support services including online ACT and SAT prep; local partnershi­ps with Huntington Learning Center and Sylvan Learning and tutorials at 10 campuses through Texas Ace, a federal grant program.

To find out more about TutorVille, visit www.tutorville­texas.com. For informatio­n about the Spring Branch school district, visit www.springbran­chisd.com.

 ?? R. Clayton McKee / For the Chronicle ?? A. J. Manlove, 14, of St. Thomas High School, works on math problems with the help of Jess Rogers and Leo, Tutorville’s cat-in-residence.
R. Clayton McKee / For the Chronicle A. J. Manlove, 14, of St. Thomas High School, works on math problems with the help of Jess Rogers and Leo, Tutorville’s cat-in-residence.

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