Tutoring Session Booking Form Template
Parents book, students learn — subject, current level, term goals, and workable afternoons collected in one pass, so the first lesson starts prepared.
Book tutoring in a couple of minutes. Tell us about the student and what you want the term to achieve — we’ll confirm a slot and a plan.
Tutoring bookings have a structural quirk no other appointment shares: the person booking is not the person learning. A parent knows the timetable and the worry; the student holds the actual gaps. A booking form that serves only one of them produces either a scheduled slot with no teaching plan, or a diagnosis with no workable Tuesday. This form deliberately interviews for both halves — logistics from the parent's world, learning context from the student's.
Why these fields. Student name and year level anchor everything, because "maths help" means counting strategies in Year 3 and differentiation in Year 12 — the tutor assignment depends on it. The current-level question sounds blunt and works because of it: catching up, keeping up, and extending are three different teaching jobs, and parents self-sort accurately when the options carry no judgment. The term-goals field is the one that changes the first lesson — "pass the June exam" and "rebuild confidence" are different curricula from minute one, and requiring it politely refuses the vague booking that leads to aimless sessions. Cadence separates the one-off homework rescue from the weekly commitment your roster planning actually cares about, and the afternoon checkboxes reflect the truth of school-age scheduling: the bookable universe is five afternoons and Saturday morning, so asking as checkboxes gets a complete answer in one tap-through.
What we left out. School names and report-card uploads — useful later, intrusive at booking; let the tutor request specifics once the match is made. Also parent phone as a requirement: tutoring coordination lives comfortably in email, and one required channel is enough friction.
Who uses this. Independent tutors filling their after-school grid, tutoring centers matching students to staff, exam-prep specialists running seasonal blocks, and music or language teachers whose "term" rhythm looks identical even when the subject differs.
Make it yours. Rename subjects to what you actually teach and re-cut the time checkboxes to your true availability — offering slots you never staff is how waitlists get grumpy. Turn on notifications too: tutoring enquiries cluster on Sunday evenings and around report cards, and the family that hears back before school on Monday rarely keeps shopping. When your roster fills, a close rule stops new requests at a number you set and shows a message pointing families to next term. Embed the form on your site inline, or share the link straight into the school parents' group chat, where tutoring bookings actually begin.
Goals make the match. The difference between a tutor and a great fit is knowing what winning looks like before lesson one. This form asks the question most bookings skip — and the first session shows it.
Frequently asked questions
Should the parent or the student fill this in?
Either works — the fields are split so a parent can complete it alone, but the goals question is best answered together. Many tutors send the link addressed to both.
What happens when my roster is full?
Set a close rule — after a set number of responses, the form stops accepting and shows your message, like "Term 2 is full; Term 3 booking opens May 1." No stale requests to disappoint.
Why ask how the student is doing before we have met them?
The three options sort the teaching job — catch-up, consolidation, extension — which decides tutor match and first-lesson prep. It is a triage question, not an assessment.
Can I keep a record of demand by subject?
Export the CSV each term — the subject and cadence columns show exactly where demand sits, which is your hiring and scheduling signal for next term.