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Many of you reading this will be in the midst of trying to support your child as they work to maintain their educational journey in these trying times. You may have found it difficult, stretching and frustrating at times. Knowing that we are likely to be faced with no schooling until September you will undoubtedly be worried about how prepared your child will be for another academic year.

The need for support for your child will be even more paramount as we move forward.

Alvaro and ErinAlvaro and Erin.

Many of you may have considered previously engaging a tutor either at home or in an academy. Here on the island there are many such individuals who offer these services but it is important to choose wisely. Consider what you want and what you consider effective tutoring.

Thinking back to a few weeks ago, when we were working face to face I remember our students; arriving after school or on Saturdays, of various ages ranging from 6 years old up to 18. Some were wearier than others, but the overriding feeling was how they were all treated by the tutors at MTA. Every student was welcomed into the academy with positivity and energy. Even as these strange times began the approach of the tutors exuded energy and encouraged the student to want to get the best out of and enjoy their learning experience.

With the stresses of no schooling the number of students working with tutors will continue to grow. Working with students on a 1:1 or small group basis is immensely gratifying for both the tutor and the tutee.

MartynMartyn.

However, it is not easy to get the right person for the job. Tutors will routinely improve student performance and increase students’ efficiency if they are the right person. I have found several consistent factors that continuously make for successful tutors:

Ability to build strong, personal relationships with their students

Tutors fill a different role than teachers and parents; that puts them in a unique position to support students. Personal relationships are the foundation to student success; the more connected a student feels to his or her tutor, the more the tutors creates trust and respect. An excellent tutor will spend time listening to his /her student and building their relationship.

A recent study found that 95 percent of students were more likely to increase self-study and homework completion with a tutor who has built a sting personal relationship, whilst 86 percent were more likely to set goals, use a weekly planning agenda and generally improve their organisational skills.

Emily and LuciaEmily and Lucia.

Ability to communicate at all levels

Communication and collaboration with all parties are key factors to student success. When tutors focus on goal setting, creating benchmark and planning forwards, this sets students up well. A successful tutor should build an individual learning plan in collaboration with parents, teachers and the student themselves. When tutors can communicate and leverage insight from key adults in students’ lives it has been proven that up to 83% are more likely to participate in class.

Successful tutors have specific content expertise

A truly successful tutor can make learning real, relevant and rigorous. Such tutors are experts in their academic content – they know the subject’s concepts, ideas and problems inside out. Tutors can engage students more fully if they turn assignments into project based activities and relevant to what they have to learn. Where tutors make the learning appropriately rigorous; challenging enough, but not too tough that student gets frustrated and stops trying, the student will show visible growth and improved academic achievement.

Ability to teach the student to learn independently

As a tutor the ultimate goal is to help the student to become an independent learner. He /she will not be there in the examination giving all the answers, the student has to think for themselves. This is probably the most important element of our roles. You must remember we are not miracle workers or solely responsible for the student’s progress. This must come from the student themselves. Sometimes the hardest part of the tutor role as most students do not want to take on the responsibility of learning independently.

Other things to look for in a tutor are

  • Honesty: it helps build trust and rapport.
  • Flexibility: we all need to be willing to adjust techniques and approaches to match the learning style of the student.
  • Patience! This speaks for itself

Building the ideal partnership works

In essence we are looking to build the ideal partnership. Excellent tutors recognise the importance of aligning their instruction with what is going on in the classroom. Teachers and parents see the student everyday whereas the tutor may only have the opportunity once per week.

The idea is that together we leverage the learning from each other. Teachers do not have time to personalise the learning enough in the classroom therefore a regular communication between tutor and teacher will not only check progress but review strengths and weaknesses and can identify where key areas for growth are needed.

Parents often set the tone for the student’s relationship with a tutor and have the opportunity to reinforce lessons. As a parent you should talk to your child’s tutor regularly as well. The learning goes in both directions, from tutor to student, student to parent and back again. Be prepared to ask your child what they have learnt at school or in their tutoring session is a great way to increase understanding.

For tutors we are lifelong learners. Even expert tutors can always improve. We need to think of goals ourselves and measure ourselves by key performance indicators.

A tutor needs to ask him /herself

  • How often am I checking in with parents and teachers?
  • How often am I checking in with the original goals of the student?
  • How am I measuring student growth and progress?
  • How should I change my delivery to meet the learning needs if the individual?

In summary many parents have turned to or will in the future turn to private tutoring for their children in the run up to internal and external examinations. It is often an additional expense on top of an already hefty private education bill. Therefore my advice is to fully understand what you are getting for your money. Consider what you are expecting, what is being delivered and the overall effective on the academic achievements of your child.

Effective tutoring works but it starts with the right connectivity in the first place.