For Families · Learners aged 8–18

Services for Families

From first concerns to a clear plan: assessments that explain how your child learns, and support that turns understanding into progress. Every family journey starts with a free 30-minute consultation.

Diagnostic Assessments (Dyslexia & SpLD)

A full diagnostic assessment is the most thorough way to understand how a learner's mind works. It explores underlying ability, phonological processing, memory, processing speed, reading, writing and spelling — bringing the results together into a clear picture, including, where appropriate, a formal identification of dyslexia or another specific learning difficulty.

What's included

  • Pre-assessment questionnaires for parents and school
  • A full assessment session (typically 2.5–3 hours, with breaks)
  • A comprehensive written diagnostic report with clear, practical recommendations for home and school
  • A follow-up call to talk through the findings
Why the APC matters: Ruth holds a current SASC-regulated Assessment Practising Certificate (APC) under the SpLD Assessment Standards Committee (United Kingdom). Diagnostic reports are written to SASC standards — the benchmark accepted as evidence for Disabled Students' Allowance (DSA) applications at university. An assessment now can support your child for years to come.

Fee: please get in touch for current fees — a clear quote is provided after the free consultation.

Exam Access Arrangements Assessments

Access arrangements — such as 25% extra time, a reader, a scribe or rest breaks — allow candidates with learning difficulties to show what they know without being unfairly disadvantaged in exams.

How the process works under JCQ regulations

Access arrangements for GCSEs and A Levels are governed by the Joint Council for Qualifications (JCQ), and Insight Horizon's assessment practice is aligned to JCQ regulations. It helps for families to understand how the process works:

  • The school or exam centre applies for access arrangements — not the parent, and not the assessor.
  • The assessment evidence is recorded on JCQ's Form 8, completed by an appropriately qualified assessor. As a Level 7 qualified assessor with a current APC, Ruth meets JCQ's requirements to carry out these assessments.
  • JCQ regulations require the assessor to work in consultation with the school, and for the school to hold evidence of the candidate's normal way of working — arrangements must reflect how the student usually works in the classroom, not just performance on the day of assessment.
  • Importantly, JCQ regulations state that a privately commissioned assessment carried out without prior consultation with the school cannot on its own be used to award access arrangements. That's why Insight Horizon always works alongside your school's SENCo from the outset.

This isn't red tape — it's what makes arrangements robust and secure for your child. If you're a parent, the best first step is usually a conversation with your school's SENCo; Ruth is happy to liaise with them directly.

For schools and SENCos

Access arrangements assessments are available for individual candidates or groups, working within your centre's processes — including completion of Section C of Form 8 and standardised evidence for your centre's files, with qualifications and APC documentation provided as JCQ requires.

Fees per candidate, with group rates available — contact us for a quote.

Literacy Assessments

Not every situation calls for a full diagnostic assessment. A focused literacy assessment looks at reading accuracy, fluency, comprehension, spelling and writing — identifying exactly where the strengths and gaps lie, and shaping a targeted programme of support.

Who it's for

  • Parents who want to understand why their child is struggling before deciding on next steps
  • Families beginning tuition, so the programme targets the right skills from day one
  • Reviewing progress after a period of support
Please note: a literacy assessment is not a diagnostic assessment and does not identify dyslexia — but it can indicate whether a full diagnostic assessment would be worthwhile.

Individual Support Plan (ISP) Advice

Sometimes a family already has a diagnosis or a report — what's missing is a practical plan. ISP advice turns understanding into action: clear, realistic strategies and targets that can be shared with tutors and schools, so that recommendations are actually put into practice rather than sitting in a drawer.

What's included

  • A review of existing reports, diagnoses and school feedback
  • A practical, personalised support plan with specific strategies and targets
  • A format designed to be shared with — and used by — tutors, teachers and support staff

Specialist 1:1 Tuition (Ages 8–18)

Specialist tuition is different from general tutoring. Sessions are structured, cumulative and multisensory, drawing on evidence-based approaches designed for learners with dyslexia, ADHD, autism and other neurodivergent profiles — building skills in small, secure steps so that progress genuinely sticks.

What to expect

  • One-to-one sessions tailored to each learner's needs
  • A personalised programme informed by assessment or ISP
  • Regular feedback to parents and, where helpful, liaison with school

Just as importantly, sessions build confidence. Many learners arrive believing they “can't do it” — watching that belief change is the best part of the job.