Preparing Your Child For Tutoring - Seven Tips For Tutoring Success

7 Tips for Tutoring Success- Preparing Your Child For Tutoring

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Preparing Your Child for Tutoring

Increasingly more parents are using tutors for their children to obtain academic excellence in their demanding school environment. If you've determined a tutor is needed for your child, it's important to plan for that crucial first tutoring meeting.

 

Seven Ways to Tutoring Success

  1. Meet with the tutor before the first tutoring session. Your kid will have the best quality first session and ongoing relationship if he or she has met with the tutor before that session. Coordinate to meet with you and your child at a comfortable place. Here, you will want to plan for a casual conversation to build rapport. A coffee shop, bakery, book store, or sandwich shop are all excellent options for a meeting place. Even the park could work, depending on the environment. Your kid's personality type, as well as your kid’s comfort level at receiving assistance will determine the location. You will also need to build a rapport with the tutor so that you can do your part as a parent and so that expectations are clear from all parties (parent, child and tutor/mentor).

  2. Explain to your child the need for tutoring. Many reasons could motivate you to get help for your child's education. You might want your child to get ahead in their knowledge, or you want them to meet their class goals. Whatever the justification for a tutor, your child needs to understand the rewards and advantages that tutoring is offering.

  3. Encourage sharing feelings. Some children may not be willing to share their opinions about the teacher or the tutoring process, particularly those who are having serious trouble in school. Explore hopes and fears about the subject area or school generally with your child The more you're mindful of your kid's emotions and concerns, the better the whole tutoring process.

  4. Buy new supplies. Kids love getting new notebooks, pencils, and other supplies. Find school supplies decorated with their favorite movie or sports star to spice up the material. These images of familiar people or events might ease the anxieties and increase their attentiveness to learning. 

  5. Applaud your child's successes. Children love praise for the things they have achieved in the classroom. Remind your kid how proud you are of her or his accomplishments, big or small. Tell them that tutoring improves those successes.

  6. Be there to help. Sometimes a child may be worried that tutoring will be a considerable burden. Make sure you or some other adult are always present to help him with any problems. Tell your child that even if you're uncertain about the ideas, you're going to work with them to find resources to find the solution. With assurances like this, your child will be convinced both of you are in this tutoring process together!

  7. Provide motivations. Use incentives to increase effort and interest in learning, just as teachers do. Kids love getting prizes! Think about what motivates your child to work for specific goals, like dinner at a favorite restaurant or a fun outing can provide that extra spark your child needs to succeed at a task. Each tutoring session then becomes another step to reaching their desired prize.

You can help your child to be on their way toward academic success by following these simple suggestions for best practices.