VamPyroX
bloody phreak from hell
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2003
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It's a two-way method.I am interested to know if you had a method to overcome this difficulty in tutoring. I had been thinking the past few days about possible experimental teaching methods, but I first need to understand more about how ASL works (I stopped learning it at a very young age, and don't think the way I used it is nearly the same as others)
So any insight would be valuable to me.
Basically, an English tutor helps a student with what the student needs help with. If a student doesn't do anything, then what is there to help with?
So, what the student needs to do is do his/her part to get started. If they're given a handout by the teacher, they need to READ the handout first. If they don't understand it, then the tutor can ask what part they don't understand. If they don't read it at all, then how does the tutor know where to begin?
Also, it requires time and patience. Students can't expect to be "cured" overnight. It's a step-by-step process... especially with English. Since English is somewhat of a "gray" style learning, it's something to fine-tune... to improve on. Math is "black & white" style. You teach someone that 2 + 2 = 4, then they can apply that to 3 + 3, 4 + 4, etc. But with English, there are a million ways of saying one thing... it's just a matter of understanding what makes sense and what doesn't make sense.
Students need to be patience with you and communicate everything with you.
There is no perfect tutoring method. I've had to give up on some students because they simply won't work with me. I had one student who relied 100% on her MS Word program. It got to the point where her grammar was so bad that MS Word couldn't fix it. She asked me to her room one night and asked me to proofread her paper. Her whole paper had green squiggly lines (which is grammar error). In order to fix it, I would have to rewrite it and I couldn't do it. I fixed a couple sentences and she kept saying, "Why? Why?" without listening.