A Parent S Guide To Tutors And Tutoring

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How to Tutor Your Own Child

Author: Marina Koestler Ruben
language: en
Publisher: National Geographic Books
Release Date: 2011-08-02
Tutoring today is a $4 billion industry (yes—billion) with companies like Sylvan Learning Center and Kaplan Tutoring cashing in. So, what are parents of today’s overextended students to do? Top professional tutor Marina Koestler Ruben empowers you to take a do-it-yourself approach to your child’s after-school enrichment. As a parent-tutor, you will learn how provide holistic academic support for your children and create an intellectual environment in the home—strengthening your relationship and improving parent-child communication in the process. Ruben’s accessible guide shows you how to balance big-picture curiosity with the academic nitty-gritties of homework assignments, organization, and electronic resources. Building on her proven “Six-Step Session” format, Ruben shares the secrets to tutoring children in any subject from kindergarten through high school—all with a warm, entertaining tone that will inspire you to inspire them.
A Parent's Guide to Tutors and Tutoring

Author: James Mendelsohn, Ph.D.
language: en
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Release Date: 2008-10-14
A Parent's Guide to Tutors and Tutoring offers a survival guide for helping parents decide whether or not to hire a tutor; advice for choosing the right person; and ideas for evaluating if the job is well done. In addition, the book includes suggestions for selecting a tutor for kids with special needs and shows what it takes to tutor for an individual child's unique weaknesses and strengths. Praise for A Parent's Guide to Tutors and Tutoring: "James Mendelsohn understands how tutoring and education must fit the unique core nature of every child. His ideas, methods, and techniques are brilliant and can make a big positive impact on improving your child's success in school and in life." —Michael Gurian, author, The Minds of Boys, Boys and Girls Learn Differently, and Nurture the Nature "This book shows parents how to avoid the stress and pressure of competition and instead pay attention to what our individual kids really need for success at school and in life." —Michele Borba, Ed.D., author, Parents Do Make a Difference and Building Moral Intelligence "Dr. Mendelsohn has written a wonderful book that is a great gift and resource to any parent struggling with the question of whether—and if so, how—to tutor their kid. For them, it is a must-read." —Alvin Rosenfeld, M.D., coauthor, The Over-Scheduled Child "If you are lucky, you might find a tutor like Dr. Mendelsohn. Reading this book should certainly be your first step." —Jane M. Healy, Ph.D., educational psychologist and author, Your Child's Mind and Endangered Minds
Regulating Private Tutoring for Public Good

Recent years have brought global expansion of private supplementary tutoring alongside regular school systems. This expansion has far-reaching implications for the nurturing of new generations, for social and economic development, and for the operation of school systems. Some dimensions are positive while other dimensions are problematic. Supplementary tutoring is especially visible in Asia. The formats of tutoring range from one-to-one provision to large classes. Some tutoring is provided by teachers and by specialist companies, while other tutoring is provided informally by university students and others. Using a comparative lens, this book examines possible government responses to the expansion of private supplementary tutoring. In general, the book suggests, the sector should be given more attention. The work shows wide diversity in the regulations introduced by governments in the Asian region. It notes not only that these governments can learn much from each other, but also that policy makers in other parts of the world can usefully look at patterns in Asia. The book also stresses the value of partnerships between governments, tutoring providers, schools, teachers' unions, and other bodies.