As a tutor I strive to create in my learners a thorough perception along with confidence when answering test questions and being capable to handle unfamiliar issues. The base of my approach is the idea that learning occurs in an environment of reciprocal recognition where the student is encouraged to think and find new links on their own. My experience has been that personal training has a unique usefulness to students due to the opportunity to resolve the students' own restraints to study in a manner that sets the bases for a long-term and deep discovering of the topic.
Student’s needs and learning style matter
My approach differs depending on the student's learning style and needs. My teaching philosophy is built upon motivating students to think on their own, operating existing situations whenever it can be. |I think that it is crucial to provide learners with a working knowledge and to teach them problem-solving skills for building upon this knowledge. Training anyone to think critically is at the base of the things a student should intercept from any subject class.
The most important contribution
Mentoring learners is among the most enduring contributions a tutor can bring in, and it is a technique, that I find interesting and beneficial. From my experience, I found out the effect of engaging children with the help of models and of delivering data at a degree which implies comprehension and yet not specifically knowledge, mixing the unknown with the known within a combination which provides the child the disposition of possibility instead of that of impossibility that impressive and official techniques can impose.
How I teach
I begin with questions the students are good with and move progressively to more challenging areas seeing that their peace of mind is being developed. I really don't lecture to students or request them to memorise Information.
I usually concentrate on exam-style as well as past queries in order to test, practice and refine the scholar's comprehension and technique. I will also give a lot of emphasis to a number of the not so much obvious yet necessary skills for example, logical thought, essay technique and structure, and the efficient use of graphs and numbers.