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Hiring Tutors For
Homeschooling
Some parents just aren't particularly suited to providing
education. Yet they want the best education possible for their
child and know that public school can't provide that. Private
school is often economically out of reach, and still often a
second-best in terms of quality. The solution is to hire a
tutor.
The first step to hiring a tutor is to research the
availability of the type of tutor you seek. That means,
deciding on the type of homeschooling approach you want to take
for your child. That will, naturally, involve thinking deeply
about the learning style of your individual progeny. Matching
tutor to child is key to avoiding those initial bumps that can
be foreseen. Tutor or no, that is crucial to the long-term
success of homeschooling.
One popular method of homeschooling tends to focus more on
observing the child, rather than having the child observe the
teacher. That shift, advocated by Maria Montessori and many
other education innovators, means finding a tutor of a certain
sort. But there are many flexible, innovative educators still
around today.
Other approaches to homeschooling are more structured, such as
the Classical method. Modeled after monastic education, in
which students have a rigorous set of challenges to stretch the
mind, this kind of tutor is also popular. Such individuals are
highly educated, have keen minds and provide a wealth of
resources to provide to students.
As with many things in the past 10 years, the Internet has
affected tutoring - usually for the better. In the past,
finding a tutor, affording one and monitoring their results was
a huge task. But all those things have been
simplified.
Starting the search for a tutor can be as easy as typing
'homeschool tutor' into a search engine and sending off a few
emails. As with any work-for-hire situation, parents will want
to take care to apply good standards when selecting a stranger
to provide education for their child. But with the growth of
social networks, forums and other online venues, getting
trustworthy recommendations has gotten much easier.
Some tutors work entirely online. That method can work well in
a homeschooling situation. Many homeschool students are
motivated and eager to learn. All they need is some guidance
and the resources that a good tutor can provide. With email,
interactive video software and other contemporary tools, that
assistance can often be given entirely online. That expands the
pool of tutors available to parents to a very wide area.
Next, parents have to consider the cost of tutoring.
Affording a tutor is a concern of many parents who desire
homeschooling. Yet, once all the real costs are accounted for,
parents often find that tutors can actually be a modest cost
option.
The Internet has driven down the cost of tutoring, in many
cases. The hours spent by a parent on homeschooling could be
spent on a home-based business that makes more than enough to
compensate for the cost. Adding it all up makes tutoring
attractive, from a money and time-savings perspective. Then
there's that all-important criteria: the development of your
child's mind.
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