IB Theory of Knowledge Tutoring
TOK is about big questions: How do we know? What counts as knowledge? Our tutors help you develop philosophical depth for essays and exhibitions that earn top marks — and the crucial bonus points that can transform your diploma score.

What You'll Master in IB Theory of Knowledge
Comprehensive coverage of all key topics and skills required for SL and HL success.
Personal and shared knowledge, perspectives, bias, and the nature of certainty
How technology shapes knowledge production, access, and authority
Language as a way of knowing — translation, metaphor, and the limits of expression
Power, propaganda, expertise, and the politics of knowledge claims
Responding to prescribed titles with structured philosophical argument and real-world examples
Connecting three objects to an IA prompt — selection, justification, and commentary
What Earns an A or B vs Common Mistakes We Help You Avoid
Our tutoring covers both levels with targeted strategies for each.
Our students' average: A–B
Our students' average: C–E range
Common Questions.
TOK is unlike any other IB subject — there's no textbook to memorise and no right answers. Students need to think philosophically about knowledge itself, which requires a different kind of thinking than most subjects demand. Many students default to describing what they know rather than analysing how they know it. Our tutors help students make this crucial shift from content-based to epistemological thinking.
The TOK essay responds to one of six prescribed titles and is graded A–E across four criteria: Understanding Knowledge Issues, Knower's Perspective, Quality of Analysis, and Organisation of Ideas. Examiners look for a clear thesis, well-developed arguments with specific real-world examples, genuine counterclaims, and a nuanced conclusion. Our tutors teach students to address each criterion explicitly.
The TOK Exhibition is an internal assessment where students choose an IA prompt and connect it to three real-world objects. Each object needs a 950-word commentary explaining how it demonstrates knowledge concepts. Our tutors help students choose prompts that allow depth, select objects with genuine philosophical significance, and write commentaries that demonstrate critical thinking rather than description.
Yes, significantly. TOK and the EE are combined in a bonus points matrix worth 0–3 additional points. An A in TOK with an A in the EE earns 3 bonus points — the difference between a 38 and a 41, which can determine university admissions. Crucially, an E in TOK results in automatic diploma failure regardless of subject scores. These stakes make TOK support essential, not optional.
Absolutely — and this is very common. Science-minded students often see TOK as abstract and pointless. Our tutors connect TOK concepts to the student's own subjects: How do we know a scientific theory is true? What counts as evidence in chemistry vs history? When does a model become 'wrong'? Once students see TOK through the lens of their own interests, engagement and grades both improve dramatically.
Most students benefit from 1-2 hours of TOK tutoring per week during the essay and exhibition preparation periods. These are typically concentrated in specific terms rather than spread across the full two years. Our tutors work with your child's school's TOK assessment timeline to provide support exactly when it's most needed.

Ready to Excel in IB Theory of Knowledge?
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