Thursday, 9 May 2013

Three Home Tuition Tips For Parents And Kids

By Michal Foster


Children learn differently from one another. While some do well in the typical classroom setup, others don't. If your youngster happens to fit in the latter group, you have to find other means for them to learn the best they can.

Home tuition is among the most common ways of dealing with such increased academic requirement. This typically requires hiring a tutor from an agency and then agreeing on the subjects that need more focused training. Because this is a new setup for most children, it pays to prepare them well enough in advance. The following will help you make the transition easier so that it achieves its goal in the end.

First, consult with your child on the different areas concerned in the setup. This doesn't only mean getting their consent for the home instruction programme itself. It also means getting them to agree on the schedule of the lessons. For example, kids will cooperate if they still get to have their piano or swimming classes at the same time. The less this additional academic workload interferes with your child's interests, the more they will welcome it. After all, children do need to balance their academic and non-academic activities.

Second, do not settle for just about any tutor. As soon as your child agrees to the home-based tuition setup, your next challenge is to find somebody competent enough as a teacher but amiable enough for your child to relate with. Kids love teachers they could talk to, ask from, and share experiences with. Finding one with all the qualifications is great, but pinpointing one from your tuition agency who would click with your child is even better.

Third, get feedback on the system from both the tutor and your child, but do this separately. By doing this, you would know the thoughts of both parties and assess the setup from a balanced point of view. Ask your child how well he or she receives the lessons, the tutor, the schedule, or any other aspect you think significant. You can also ask the tutor to give you a regular progress report of your child as well as ways by which you could follow through the lessons at home.




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