These are the handling courses and instruction sessions we've (the mrs has taken part in
many of these days too) most enjoyed over the past 10 years or so:
Motorsport Events
http://www.motorsport-events.co.uk/
Ed and Natasha Moore are the people I rate highest of all. They offer the full range including trackdays, handling areas, on track instruction through to 1-1 tuition and an Academy scheme. I've had some great days with them and the sessions are always well controlled and safe. I found it best to stick with one instructor so you can really judge your progress over time.
Ultimate Car Control - Car Handling:
http://www.ultimate-dek.co.uk/4-dynamics.html
We enjoyed learning from 90s Touring Car Champion Robb Gravett at Ultimate Car Control. Well worth the money as you get to use both their cars and your own car on the day(s). He was just starting out in the training world when we did the courses and it seems he has a whole range on offer now. You will learn an incredible amount in one day alone, plenty of spins and grins especially in the RWD cars too. If you do the follow on days they will
help you set up your car for whatever you are going to do with it. I got a lot more out of my coil over equipped WRX STi after these courses, it's about knowing what settings to use when and how that changes car balance and so on. Robb's training has cost me a few ££££ in extra brake upgrades and wear over the years for sure, better car control means you are arriving at the next corner sooner and faster so all that energy has to go somewhere.
Safe and Fast Road driving:
http://www.macdrivertraining.com/
We had this course free with the EP3 CTR and it was excellent, ex police instructors who teach
how to read and use the road effectively. We both still find these techniques useful everyday. It's not just about going faster it's about being safe too.
Phil Price Rally School - just for fun!
http://www.philprice.co.uk/
This one was much more just for fun, always wanted a go in a rally car so we went on this course. Great fun learning to oversteer the Escort MkII which all helps if and when things get a bit out of shape. This was useful learning many times during kit car ownership, especially in the wet. The dual control Impreza on the rally stage was fun, slow, but fun all the same. The passenger ride in the WRC STi was as wild as you'd hope!
There have been quite a few others but these were the best. I did 'ring school back in the 90's but that experience is way out of date now. The RSR Academy looks awesome if you are thinking of learning the 'ring and want some instruction first. The only days I'd suggest avoiding are the 'Supercar' type experiences you get nannied to death by overly nervous instructors and they won't let you use the potential of the car so it becomes pointless.