Therapeutic Tutoring combines two approaches with strong independent research support. Here’s the evidence behind each piece of our model — and what hasn’t been studied yet.
An honest starting point. No published study has tested our exact model — one licensed clinician delivering therapy and academic instruction together, in the same session. That combination is genuinely new, and we’re not aware of research that has isolated its effect.
What does exist is a substantial, independent research base behind each component this model draws on: one-on-one tutoring, addressing emotional and attentional barriers alongside academic instruction, and structured intervention for specific learning disabilities. Below, we walk through that evidence honestly, including where it’s strong and where it’s still developing. We think that’s more useful to you than a page that oversells — whether you’re a parent deciding if this is worth the investment, or a pediatrician, school psychologist, or educational consultant deciding whether to refer a family to us.
Why tutoring itself works
The evidence for one-on-one tutoring, delivered by a trained professional, is among the strongest in all of education research.
A 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis published by the National Bureau of Economic Research — later updated and published in the American Educational Research Journal in 2024 — pooled results across dozens of randomized and quasi-experimental studies of PreK–12 tutoring programs. It found an average effect size of 0.37 standard deviations on learning outcomes. Effects were consistently stronger when tutoring was delivered by teachers or trained paraprofessionals rather than volunteers or parents, and stronger when delivered during the school day (Nickow, Oreopoulos, & Quan, 2020/2024).
Why addressing the emotional side improves academic outcomes, not just wellbeing
This is the closest existing evidence to the actual premise of Therapeutic Tutoring: that addressing a student’s emotional and behavioral barriers alongside their academic work produces measurably better academic results than academic instruction alone.
A landmark 2011 meta-analysis in Child Development, covering 213 school-based social-emotional learning programs and more than 270,000 K–12 students, found that students receiving this kind of support showed significantly improved social-emotional skills, reduced conduct problems, reduced emotional distress, and an academic achievement gain equivalent to an 11-percentile-point improvement over students who didn’t receive it (Durlak, Weissberg, Dymnicki, Taylor, & Schellinger, 2011).
Why anxiety specifically gets in the way of learning
It’s not just that anxious students feel worse. Anxiety appears to consume the specific cognitive resource that learning depends on.
Research on math anxiety and working memory found that anxiety most impairs the students who rely most heavily on working memory to solve problems — typically the higher-performing students — putting highly math-anxious students roughly half a school year behind their less-anxious peers. The same research found this effect measurable as early as first grade (Ramirez, Gunderson, Levine, & Beilock, 2013).
Why executive functioning coaching helps, particularly for ADHD
A 2026 meta-analysis in Collabra: Psychology, covering 178 studies and 655 effect sizes, found moderate effects of executive function interventions on executive function outcomes themselves, with smaller but statistically significant far-transfer effects to academic performance — and larger effects specifically in clinical samples, including ADHD, than in typically developing populations (Napolitano, Amaya, Rojas-Barahona, Castellanos, & Jiménez-Leal, 2026). A related 2025 meta-analysis of cognitive training interventions for executive functions in children reached similar conclusions about their value for regulation skills (Birtwistle, Chernikova, Wünsch, & Niklas, 2025).
Where the evidence is genuinely mixed: structured literacy
We want to flag this rather than skip past it. Structured, multisensory literacy approaches — of which Orton-Gillingham-based instruction is the best-known example — are endorsed by the International Dyslexia Association as best practice for dyslexia, and rest on a much older, well-established base of evidence for explicit, systematic phonics instruction generally.
But the most recent, most rigorous meta-analysis specifically isolating Orton-Gillingham-based interventions — a 2021 review in Exceptional Children covering 24 studies — did not find a statistically significant advantage over comparison instruction on foundational reading skills, in a still-fairly-small evidence base (Stevens, Austin, Moore, Scammacca, Boucher, & Vaughn, 2021).
The clinical logic that connects these pieces
Put together, the independent evidence supports a specific chain of reasoning, even without a study of the combined model itself:
- One-on-one instruction from a trained professional produces meaningfully better learning outcomes than group instruction (Nickow et al., 2020/2024).
- Addressing emotional and behavioral barriers alongside academics, not instead of academics, improves academic outcomes on its own (Durlak et al., 2011).
- Anxiety, attention difficulties, and low self-esteem impair the specific cognitive resources — working memory, executive function — that academic tasks require (Ramirez et al., 2013; Napolitano et al., 2026).
- Structured, explicit instruction is the current best-practice standard for specific learning disabilities, even where the evidence for any single branded method is still developing (Stevens et al., 2021).
Therapeutic Tutoring’s premise is that delivering these three things through the same person, in the same session, rather than through two professionals who may or may not coordinate, should reduce the friction and delay of translating insight from a therapy session into practice in an academic one. That premise is a reasonable extension of the research above. It has not, itself, been directly tested, and we’ll update this page if that changes.
Frequently asked questions
Is there research behind Therapeutic Tutoring specifically?
Does combining therapy and tutoring actually work better than doing them separately?
What’s the strongest evidence behind this model?
Is structured literacy instruction proven to work for dyslexia?
References
Birtwistle, E., Chernikova, O., Wünsch, M., & Niklas, F. (2025). Training of executive functions in children: A meta-analysis of cognitive training interventions. Journal of Cognitive Enhancement. https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440241311060
Durlak, J. A., Weissberg, R. P., Dymnicki, A. B., Taylor, R. D., & Schellinger, K. B. (2011). The impact of enhancing students’ social and emotional learning: A meta-analysis of school-based universal interventions. Child Development, 82(1), 405–432. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2010.01564.x
Napolitano, N., Amaya, S., Rojas-Barahona, C. A., Castellanos, A., & Jiménez-Leal, W. (2026). Interventions for executive functions in children and adolescents: A meta-analytic study on efficacy and moderators in clinical and non-clinical samples. Collabra: Psychology, 12(1), 162294. https://doi.org/10.1525/collabra.162294
Nickow, A., Oreopoulos, P., & Quan, V. (2020). The impressive effects of tutoring on PreK-12 learning: A systematic review and meta-analysis of the experimental evidence (NBER Working Paper No. 27476). National Bureau of Economic Research. https://www.nber.org/papers/w27476 — later published as Nickow, A., Oreopoulos, P., & Quan, V. (2024). The promise of tutoring for PreK–12 learning: A systematic review and meta-analysis of the experimental evidence. American Educational Research Journal. https://doi.org/10.3102/00028312231208687
Ramirez, G., Gunderson, E. A., Levine, S. C., & Beilock, S. L. (2013). Math anxiety, working memory, and math achievement in early elementary school. Journal of Cognition and Development, 14(2), 187–202. https://doi.org/10.1080/15248372.2012.664593
Stevens, E. A., Austin, C., Moore, C., Scammacca, N., Boucher, A. N., & Vaughn, S. (2021). Current state of the evidence: Examining the effects of Orton-Gillingham reading interventions for students with or at risk for word-level reading disabilities. Exceptional Children. https://doi.org/10.1177/0014402921993406
If you’re a parent, pediatrician, school psychologist, or educational consultant and want to talk through how this evidence applies to a specific student:
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