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Does My Child Need A Personal Tutor?

By Leon Gay

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Most families never regret having made the choice to get a personal tutor. Face up to it. Folks simply can't do it by themselves. Pam Fowler says she knows what has worked for her family repeatedly. “My kids have benefited beyond my expectancies. They have received the type of explicit instruction in grammar and writing and reading comprehension and arithmetic that my kids aren't going to take from me.” Like lots of other elders, Fowler knows that her folks made the right move when they invested in a personal mentor.

Fowler, a teacher herself, enthusiastically believes private tutors because she's asserts she's witnessed first-hand some of the existing trends in the classroom today that leave children with less than the best instruction. “They’re losing out on the fine detail. I believe that the current philosophy of embedding mini-lessons and not explicit instruction is leaving some of our kids behind, and, I believe, especially for kids that have delinquencies, or perhaps a chaotic life, or elders that have busy lives and can’t spend that kind of time with them, that they are losing out on the foundational skills.” Fowler announces she and her husband discovered a way to get a private mentor for every one of their three youngsters.

Vet teacher Marcia Galiano recommends elders making an attempt to choose whether to get a personal mentor. Galiano explains why most students so readily benefit from the mixed efforts of the team of teacher, parent and private mentor. “When they are one on one with that mentor, they aren't scared to screw up. They are not frightened to ask what might be stupid questions. They are not frightened to maybe employ a learning style not accepted by the teacher.

For example, humming a tune to remember some rote memory activity, or, maybe drawing a picture that reinforces what they learned. The teacher might address it adversely, and the next thing the class is laughing. Hence the personal mentor encourages them to expand on how they learn. The mentor picks up on that learning style. And, the non-public mentor picks up on that learning style and uses it.”

Marcia Galiano, who has experience that goes from classroom teacher to New York public college principal continues,” That won't occur in a situation when they are in a clinic, a lab, or a complete group situation. And, and it’s definitely not happening in school.” Galiano says she can't recall in her 37 years as a teacher when investing in a private tutor was the incorrect choice.

To understand more on the advantage of non-public mentor andThe Benefits of Private In-Home Tutoring

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Topics: Home Schooling | Comments Off

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Article Citation
MLA Style Citation:
Gay, Leon "Does My Child Need A Personal Tutor?." Does My Child Need A Personal Tutor?. 23 Jan. 2012. uberarticles.com. 24 Apr 2012 <http://uberarticles.com/reference-and-education/home-schooling/does-my-child-need-a-personal-tutor/>.

APA Style Citation:
Gay, L (2012, January 23). Does My Child Need A Personal Tutor?. Retrieved April 24, 2012, from http://uberarticles.com/reference-and-education/home-schooling/does-my-child-need-a-personal-tutor/

Chicago Style Citation:
Gay, Leon "Does My Child Need A Personal Tutor?" uberarticles.com. http://uberarticles.com/reference-and-education/home-schooling/does-my-child-need-a-personal-tutor/


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