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AEIS Tuition in Singapore: How to Help Your Child Pass Without Burning Out

Updated April 27, 2026Singapore
Tutorly.sg editorial team
Singapore-focused study guides aligned to MOE exam formats.
  • Tutorly.sg has been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA)
  • Tutorly.sg has been used by thousands of users in Singapore

If you’re looking for AEIS tuition in Singapore, you’re probably feeling a mix of stress and urgency.

Your child is trying to enter a local MOE school. The AEIS is only held once a year usuallyinSeptember/Octoberusually in September/October, and if they don’t pass, they may need to wait for the next cycle. On top of that, the syllabus is based on Singapore standards, which are usually more demanding than many other countries.

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In this guide, I’ll walk you through:

  • What the AEIS actually tests (in simple terms)
  • Whether you really need AEIS tuition (and what to look out for)
  • How to plan AEIS prep month-by-month
  • Common mistakes parents and students make
  • How an AI tutor like Tutorly.sg can support your child daily, on top of tuition

I’m going to be very practical and specific to Singapore, so you can actually use this to plan your child’s study routine.


1. Quick Overview: What Is the AEIS in Singapore?

The Admissions Exercise for International Students (AEIS) is an exam organised by MOE for international students who want to join mainstream Singapore schools Primary25andSecondary13Primary 2–5 and Secondary 1–3.

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You’re tested on:

  • English
  • Mathematics

There is no Science paper, but the English and Math standards follow the MOE syllabus, which is the same system that leads to PSLE, O Levels and A Levels.

AEIS vs Regular School Exams

Many parents underestimate the gap between their home country’s syllabus and Singapore’s.

Some differences:

  • Math here is very problem-solving based. Even at Primary level, you see:

    • Model drawing
    • Multi-step word problems
    • Fractions, ratio, percentage questions that combine several concepts at once
  • English focuses heavily on:

    • Grammar and vocabulary in context
    • Comprehension with inference questions (“Why did the character do this?”)
    • Editing and cloze passages

So if your child has been doing well overseas but is new to the MOE style, they may still struggle without targeted practice.


2. Do You Really Need AEIS Tuition in Singapore?

The honest answer: it depends on your child’s starting point and your timeline.

You probably need AEIS tuition if:

  • Your child has less than 6–8 months before the AEIS
  • Their current English or Math is one full level below their target e.g.aimingforSec1butworkingatP5standarde.g. aiming for Sec 1 but working at P 5 standard
  • You don’t feel confident teaching the Singapore syllabus yourself
  • Your child has never done MOE-style word problems or comprehension

You might manage without tuition (or with minimal tuition) if:

  • Your child is already familiar with Cambridge / MOE style questions
  • You can guide them regularly at home
  • You have strong, structured resources and your child is disciplined

But here’s the key thing: even with tuition, your child still needs consistent practice outside class.

That’s where something like Tutorly.sg can make a big difference. Instead of waiting till the next tuition lesson, your child can:

  • Ask AEIS-style Math or English questions any time, 24/7
  • Get instant, step-by-step explanations for questions they got wrong
  • Practise MOE-level questions that match Primary or Secondary standards

You can try it here:
👉 Tutorly.sg AI Tutor (Singapore)

Tutorly.sg has already been used by thousands of students in Singapore, and it’s even been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA), so you’re not just testing some random overseas tool that doesn’t understand our syllabus.


3. What Makes AEIS Tuition in Singapore Effective (Not Just Expensive)?

Not all AEIS tuition is equal. When you’re choosing a tutor or centre, look for these very specific things:

3.1 Alignment with MOE Syllabus

Ask clearly:

  • “Do you teach based on the MOE syllabus for the level my child is applying for?”
  • “Do you use local school papers or AEIS-style questions, not just generic worksheets?”

For example, if your child is applying for Sec 1, they should be comfortable with:

  • Whole numbers, fractions, decimals, percentage
  • Ratio, rate, speed
  • Basic algebra, simple equations
  • Geometry: angles, triangles, area, perimeter
  • Word problems involving multiple steps

If the tutor can’t list these out clearly, that’s a red flag.

3.2 Focus on Exam Skills, Not Just Content

AEIS is not only about knowing the syllabus; it’s about handling the exam format.

Good AEIS tuition should cover:

  • Time management: e.g. “For Math, aim to finish the easier questions in the first 30–35 minutes.”
  • Question prioritisation: “Skip very long questions first, come back later.”
  • Checking strategy: Re-do key calculations, check units, re-read the question.

3.3 Regular, Honest Feedback

You need to know:

  • “Is my child more likely to qualify for Primary 4, 5 or 6?”
  • “For Secondary, is Sec 1 realistic, or is Sec 2 too big a jump?”

Good tutors will:

  • Give you a clear level estimate after a few lessons
  • Suggest whether to aim higher or play safe for the AEIS level
  • Highlight specific weak areas e.g.fractionsandratioarefarbehindP5standarde.g. “fractions and ratio are far behind P 5 standard”

3.4 Support Between Lessons

This is where many tuition setups fail.

A child goes for 1.5–2 hours of AEIS class per week, then:

  • Goes home
  • Gets stuck on homework
  • Waits until the next lesson to ask

By then, they’ve forgotten how they were thinking about the question.

A more effective system is:

  • Tuition for targeted teaching and correction
  • Daily or frequent practice supported by an AI tutor like Tutorly.sg

With Tutorly.sg, your child can:

  • Type in any AEIS-style Math or English question
  • Get an instant answer plus a step-by-step solution
  • Ask follow-up questions like:
    • “Why did you divide by 3 here?”
    • “Can you show another method?”

This keeps learning going every day, not just once a week.


4. Understanding the AEIS English Paper

Different levels have slightly different formats, but generally, AEIS English tests:

  • Grammar and vocabulary
  • Editing (find and correct errors)
  • Cloze passages (fill in blanks)
  • Comprehension openendedandMCQopen-ended and MCQ
  • Sometimes simple writing components

4.1 Common Weaknesses for AEIS Students

From what I’ve seen with international students:

  1. Grammar tenses

    • Mixing up past, present, and future
    • “He go to school yesterday” instead of “He went to school yesterday”
  2. Prepositions and articles

    • “In the bus” vs “on the bus”
    • “Go to school” vs “go to the school”
  3. Comprehension inference

    • Students can find answers that are directly stated
    • But they struggle with “Why did the boy feel embarrassed?” or “What can you tell about the character?”
  4. Vocabulary in context

    • They memorise words but don’t know which fits best in a sentence

4.2 How to Practise AEIS English Effectively

Here’s a simple weekly plan you can use:

Daily (20–30 minutes)

  • Do 1–2 cloze or grammar exercises
  • Read a short article e.g.fromMOEapprovedreaders,orlocalchildrensnewse.g. from MOE-approved readers, or local children’s news
  • Ask your child to summarise in 3–4 sentences:
    • “What happened?”
    • “Who was involved?”
    • “How did it end?”

2–3 times a week

  • Do one comprehension passage
  • After finishing, go through answers together:
    • Why is this answer wrong?
    • Which sentence in the passage supports the correct answer?

If you don’t have a tutor sitting next to your child, this is where Tutorly.sg is useful:

  • Your child can paste a comprehension question and ask:
    • “Explain why the answer is C, not B.”
    • “Help me understand this sentence: ‘He was reluctant to join the competition.’”
  • Tutorly gives a clear explanation in simple English, aligned to local standards

Because Tutorly is built for MOE-style English, it’s much closer to what your child will see in AEIS, PSLE, and O Level English.


5. Understanding the AEIS Math Paper

AEIS Math is usually the more worrying paper for many students, especially those who have not done Singapore-style problem sums before.

The paper includes:

  • Multiple-choice questions
  • Short-answer questions
  • Longer structured questions (especially at higher levels)

5.1 Key Topics by Level (Rough Guide)

This is not an official MOE list, but a rough sense of what your child should be comfortable with:

Primary 4–5 entry:

  • Whole numbers: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division
  • Fractions and decimals (basic)
  • Simple geometry: angles, perimeter
  • Time, money, measurement
  • Basic word problems 23steps2–3 steps

Primary 6 / Sec 1 entry:

  • More complex fractions and decimals
  • Ratio and percentage
  • Speed, average
  • Area and volume (rectangles, triangles, simple solids)
  • Introduction to algebra
  • Multi-step problem sums

Sec 1–2 entry:

  • Algebraic expressions, simple equations
  • Linear functions
  • Ratio, rate, percentage (more advanced)
  • Geometry: angles, triangles, parallel lines, simple proofs
  • Mensuration: areas and volumes
  • Simple coordinate geometry

5.2 Typical Problem-Solving Style in Singapore

A classic style you’ll see:

A tank contained 120 litres of water. Tap A filled the tank at a rate of 5 litres per minute while Tap B drained water at a rate of 2 litres per minute.
After some time, the tank contained 200 litres of water.
How long was Tap A turned on?

To solve:

  1. Net rate = 52=35 - 2 = 3 litres/minute
  2. Increase in water = 200120=80200 - 120 = 80 litres
  3. Time taken = 803\dfrac{80}{3} minutes

This kind of question mixes rates, difference, and basic algebraic thinking, even at Primary level.

If your child is not used to this, they may:

  • Try to guess
  • Struggle to set up equations
  • Get lost in long-worded questions

5.3 How to Practise AEIS Math Effectively

Step 1: Build core skills

Make sure your child is solid in:

  • Multiplication tables
  • Fraction operations
  • Basic percentage
  • Converting units (cm to m, hours to minutes, etc.)

Without this, no amount of tuition will help.

Step 2: Do targeted problem sums

2–3 times a week, pick 4–6 word problems and:

  • Let your child try first (with a time limit)
  • After that, use Tutorly.sg to go through questions they got wrong

Example of how your child can use Tutorly:

“I tried this question but got 120 minutes. The answer is 26 2/3 minutes. Show me step-by-step how to solve it.”

Tutorly will:

  • Check the final answer
  • Then show a full step-by-step solution from start to end
  • Explain in simple language how each step works

Your child can compare with their own working and see exactly where they went wrong.

Step 3: Simulate exam conditions

Once every 2–3 weeks, try:

  • 1 full paper or a 1-hour mock test
  • No calculator if the level doesn’t allow it
  • Strict timing

After that, review:

  • Which topics are weak?
  • Were there careless mistakes?
  • Were they stuck on one question for too long?

Then adjust your tuition and home practice accordingly.


6. How to Plan AEIS Preparation (6–9 Months Timeline)

If you have around 6–9 months before the AEIS, here’s a rough plan you can adapt.

Months 1–2: Diagnose and Build Foundations

Goals:

  • Know your child’s actual level vs target level
  • Fill big gaps in basics

Actions:

  • Do 1–2 diagnostic papers (can be school papers from the level below their target)
  • Get a tutor or centre to give you a level assessment
  • Focus on:
    • Grammar basics
    • Core Math operations (fractions, decimals, percentage, ratio)

Use Tutorly.sg daily to:

  • Clarify doubts from homework
  • Practise 3–5 questions per day per subject

Months 3–4: Strengthen Exam Topics

Goals:

  • Start doing more AEIS-style questions
  • Build speed and accuracy

Actions:

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![Secondary Science topics you can practise on Tutorly.sg]/app/blogimages/middle2.png/app/blog-images/middle 2.png

  • Tuition: focus on common AEIS topics and weak areas
  • At home:
    • 2–3 comprehension passages per week
    • 3–4 sets of Math word problems per week

Use Tutorly to:

  • Get step-by-step solutions for tough Math questions
  • Ask for explanations of English phrases or comprehension answers

Months 5–6: Full Paper Practice

Goals:

  • Get comfortable with full-length papers
  • Improve time management

Actions:

  • Do 1 full English and 1 full Math paper every 1–2 weeks
  • Track scores and identify recurring mistakes

Use Tutorly:

  • After each mock paper, your child can:
    • Key in selected tough questions
    • Ask, “Explain why this answer is wrong and how to do it correctly.”
  • This turns every mock paper into a learning opportunity, not just a score.

Final 1–2 Months: Fine-Tuning

Goals:

  • Stabilise performance
  • Reduce careless mistakes
  • Build confidence

Actions:

  • Focus on:
    • Weakest topics
    • Common AEIS formats
  • Practise under exam conditions (timed, no distractions)

Use Tutorly for:

  • Quick revision of concepts (e.g. “Explain ratio again with examples.”)
  • Last-minute practice when your child suddenly remembers a doubt at night

7. Common Mistakes Parents Make with AEIS Prep

Mistake 1: Only Starting 2–3 Months Before

AEIS is based on years of MOE learning. If your child is new to the system, 2–3 months is usually too rushed, unless they’re already very strong.

If you’re short on time:

  • Focus on core topics and exam skills
  • Use both tuition + daily AI help to compress learning

Mistake 2: Overloading with Too Many Assessment Books

Buying 10 different AEIS books won’t help if:

  • Your child doesn’t finish them
  • No one explains their mistakes properly
  • They repeat the same errors

You’re better off with:

  • A few good books
  • A reliable AEIS tutor
  • Tutorly.sg to explain wrong answers and guide them step-by-step

Mistake 3: Ignoring English Because “Math Is More Important”

Both English and Math matter.

If English is too weak:

  • Your child may not understand Math word problems properly
  • Even if they pass AEIS, they may struggle in local school later (Science, History, Geography are all in English)

So make sure English gets consistent attention, not just last-minute cramming.

Mistake 4: Not Practising Under Exam Conditions

Doing questions slowly is different from doing them under time pressure.

At least once every 2–3 weeks:

  • Sit your child down
  • Set a timer
  • Treat it like a real exam

Then review their performance with the help of a tutor or Tutorly.sg.


8. Where Does Tutorly.sg Fit in If You Already Have AEIS Tuition?

You might be thinking, “My child already has AEIS tuition, do we still need an AI tutor?”

Here’s how many Singapore families use Tutorly together with tuition:

8.1 Between Lessons

Your child:

  • Gets stuck on a Math problem or grammar question
  • Instead of waiting for the next lesson, they:
    • Paste or type the question into Tutorly
    • Get a step-by-step explanation
    • Ask follow-up questions until they understand

This keeps the momentum going and prevents small doubts from piling up.

8.2 Daily Bite-Sized Practice

Even on busy days, your child can:

  • Log in to Tutorly.sg
  • Do 5–10 questions in 15–20 minutes
  • Focus on their weakest topics (e.g. fractions, comprehension, cloze)

Because Tutorly is built specifically for Singapore students and MOE syllabus, the style of questions and explanations match what they’ll see in AEIS, PSLE, O Levels, and A Levels later on.

8.3 For Parents Who Can’t Always Help

If you’re:

  • Working late
  • Not familiar with the MOE syllabus
  • Not confident with English or Math at this level

Tutorly acts like a patient, always-available tutor your child can turn to any time, even at 11 pm before a test.


9. How to Get the Most Out of AEIS Tuition + Tutorly.sg

Here’s a simple routine you can follow:

On Tuition Days

  • Before class:
    • Spend 10–15 minutes on Tutorly revising last lesson’s topic
  • After class:
    • If there’s homework, let your child try first
    • For any question they can’t do, use Tutorly to:
      • Check final answers
      • See a full solution
      • Understand where they went wrong

On Non-Tuition Days

Aim for 30–45 minutes total:

  • 15–20 minutes English
  • 15–25 minutes Math

Using Tutorly, your child can:

  • Practise problem sums or comprehension
  • Ask concept questions like:
    • “Explain how to convert fractions to decimals.”
    • “Show me how to answer inference questions in comprehension.”

This way, tuition is for targeted teaching, and Tutorly is for daily support and reinforcement.


10. Final Thoughts: Is AEIS Tuition in Singapore Worth It?

If your child is serious about entering a local MOE school, and the AEIS is your main route, AEIS tuition can be very helpful—especially if:

  • Your child is new to Singapore’s syllabus
  • You don’t have time or resources to teach them yourself
  • You start early enough ideally69monthsbeforeideally 6–9 months before

But tuition alone is not enough.

Your child needs:

  • Consistent practice
  • Timely explanations when they’re stuck
  • Familiarity with MOE-style questions

That’s why I strongly recommend combining AEIS tuition with a reliable AI study partner like Tutorly.sg, which is:

  • Built specifically for Singapore students (Primary 1 to JC 2)
  • Aligned to the MOE syllabus
  • Already used by thousands of users in Singapore
  • Featured on Channel NewsAsia (CNA)

You can explore Tutorly’s AEIS-friendly AI tutor here:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore


Ready to Support Your Child’s AEIS Prep Daily?

If you want your child to have help any time they study—not just during tuition—let them try Tutorly.sg.

They can:

  • Ask AEIS-style English and Math questions 24/7
  • Get instant answers plus clear, step-by-step solutions
  • Practise at the exact MOE level they’re preparing for

Start here and let your child try it out today:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/app


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👉 Try a question now and see how fast you can improve.

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