Tutorship in a sentence as a noun

One to one tutorship would be great, but we wont have enough teachers for that.

"You already have the in-person tutorship in the form of teachers.

Good cover, but one could argue that the pros of devoted tutorship and freestyle curriculum outweigh the cons of limited socialization.

I think we can find better solution for them, like forbid them to use any bank account themselves by placing them under tutorship, it would probably cost much less to the society

That's a model I think would work great in education, not a premium on the content itself, because the focal point is "sale of content = money" not "providing excellent tutorship = money.

Of course, they aren't all Oxford-educated intellectuals but, to elevate a big fraction of population to that level, I'm guessing we would need a ton of 1-on-1 tutorships, which would be extremely costly.

With education it's less challenging since in most scenarios the lectures are non-interactive anyway, the exercises have to be done individually or in very small groups, and the tutorship can be done online too as it does not require the same amount of communication as full-scale symmetrical collaboration.

Tutorship definitions

noun

teaching pupils individually (usually by a tutor hired privately)

See also: tutelage tuition