Case Study: Toranj Tuition
Empowering through Education

Twenty years ago, three Iranian nationals were studying for PhDs at the University of Hull. Shocked at the low educational record in the city, they set up Toranj Tuition.

  • Loan:£97,500
  • Grant:£27,310
  • Total Investment:£124,810
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Twenty years ago, three Iranian nationals were studying for PhDs at the University of Hull. Shocked at the low educational record in the city, they set up Toranj Tuition.

Research and Development Officer, Dr Pedram Saeid, said: “At the beginning, we were a formal network of like-minded people. As social activists, we believe education is at the heart of social mobility. Through education, people can improve their opportunities.”

They started with just four schools.

“It grew very fast. To date, we have worked with more than 50 schools, and have recruited over 100 mentors.”

It offers in-school tuition, homework clubs, and science workshops.

Many of the children are from deprived backgrounds, or have recently relocated to the UK as asylum seekers or refugees.

“Our approach was to use local resources to address local problems. A university city, we decided to leverage the human capital of the university.” Its mentors are students who are trained, certified, and paid by the hour.

“It is a win-win situation, student gains experience and children improve their education. Young people as tutors proved very successful as they build a good rapport and are part of youth culture. They are role models for children.”

Dr Saied said: “The root of problems is not just material poverty, but poverty of expectation. The children are surrounded by adults who have not been in full-time jobs or higher education. They copy their parents. So, we encourage our tutors not just to support them in their academic subjects, but to inspire them and raise their expectations. It’s been a very successful model so far.” Toranj Tuition is one of just a few organisations approved as National Tutoring Programme providers.

Its science workshops are supported by the Royal Society of Chemistry, the Institute of Physics, and Royal Academy of Engineering.

For adults, it offers English language and employability training, and is one of the few organisations in the north supporting highly qualified migrants at risk of being jobless or in lower paid jobs.

“We help them to build their confidence and advance their language to pass the required exams to re enter their past professions.”

Many of the forced migrants they support fled from war torn or unstable countries such as Afghanistan, Ukraine, the Middle East, or African countries.

“We were heavily dependent on EU funding. We have been trying to move from grants to contracts and sales, but still there is a long way to go.”

During Covid, Toranj Tuition’s premises were used as a food bank and it expanded into a community hub.

It realised it needed a more accessible building, with the current premises in need of repair and unfit for purpose.

To support this, in 2021 Key Fund gave a £100k loan to help them purchase a building in the centre of Hull.

“Without Key Fund support, our future wouldn’t have been very bright. We were renting a building that wasn’t energy efficient. Now energy is more expensive, we wouldn’t have been able to afford it.

Owning our own building offers stability. We rent out extra rooms, which provides surplus money.

What’s more, all the tenants are start-up businesses by ethnic minorities who receive our advice and support, so we have a kind of informal business incubator.”

They also organise socialising and community events from the building to enhance community cohesion.

Currently around 60 people take part in film and book clubs.

“People come together, socialise, have fun because loneliness is a common problem, especially for migrant people.”

Toranj Tuition has two part-time staff and 50 tutors, paid by the hour. Its turnover is between £150- £200k.

Like the other directors, Dr Saied works largely on a voluntary basis. They are dedicated to changing lives for the better.

“My passion is to help. The cause that we believe in keeps us going. We are hopeful that things get better.”

“We encourage our tutors not just to support them in their academic subjects, but to inspire them and raise their expectations”

Dr Saied
Toranj Tuition

 
Spotlight

Vera

Vera, 41, is a refugee from Ukraine. A doctor, Toranj Tuition is helping her get back into her profession in the UK. She is enrolled in their advanced English language class and book club.

“We lived in the centre of Kiev. After bombing not far from our home, my five year- old son became very afraid and had to sleep in a shelter”

 

Vera, 41, is a refugee from Ukraine. A doctor, Toranj Tuition is helping her get back into her profession in the UK. She is enrolled in their advanced English language class and book club.

“We lived in the centre of Kiev. After bombing not far from our home, my five-year-old son became very afraid and had to sleep in a shelter.” Vera explained.

As a doctor, she specialised in dermatology. Her husband, a sculptor, found it hard financially to continue as an artist and got a job in the Post Office in Kiev to support his young family.

Because of the war, jobs became difficult.

“We both had really bad problems finding work to survive. There was no money. At the Post Office, it was really terrible, because when the alarms would go off, he had to hide. I was afraid all the time in case something happened to him. The last bomb attack was not far from his workplace.”

Vera’s last proper job was in plastic surgery, treating skin diseases.

“I worked in the summer in Kiev as a consultant doctor in a private clinic, I had to work 40-hour weeks for a month for just $100, and we couldn’t survive on that kind of money.”

What’s more, Vera was afraid for her son’s future. She came to Hull with her family in November 2022.

“At school in Ukraine, children had anti-Russian petitions, and my son’s grandmother is from Moscow,

So it’s very unpleasant. Here, he seems happier; he doesn’t talk about how he wants to kill Putin or hates Russians.”

Vera found a sponsor in Hull – a lady who had a flat they could stay in temporarily. Her husband supports Vera, who has suffered cancer, twice.

“I think because of Chernobyl, a lot of people in our country have pollution in their bodies. Although I’m recovered, I sometimes need his help. I just don’t feel very strong after the chemo.”

The English classes will make a vital difference.

“I want to get my licence here to become a doctor.

I found the Lincolnshire Refugee Doctor Project [which supports refugees who are medically qualified to continue their careers in the UK], which I’m very happy about, but before, I need to pass an English test.”

Her husband is attending English classes too, and both go to the book club. “Our teacher is very friendly. It’s a very good place. In the book club, everyone is Ukrainian.”

“Firstly, I want to be a doctor and help people.

Secondly, it will mean I can get money for my family and we can rent somewhere and support my son to learn English. He says in the morning before school that he doesn’t want to go because he can’t play with children as he doesn’t understand them.”

Her hope is her husband will also have the opportunity to succeed as a sculptor. He has connected with Hull council to explore the idea of creating a monument to say thank you to the city, and its people, for welcoming Ukrainians.

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