Raw mark or scaled mark for the subject your tutoring or in all your subjects?minimum band 6
final hsc mark for the subjectRaw mark or scaled mark for the subject your tutoring or in all your subjects?
okay thanks!final hsc mark for the subject
any tips on tutoring and communication?I would say mid-90s to even be considered by most students looking for tutoring
FYI: Just because you achieved high marks, does not mean, in any way, shape or form that you can help others do the same.
I have turned away state rankers as they just didn’t have the communication skills required to help OTHERS achieve.
Learning is not done via osmosis and being able to communicate what you understand is AT LEAST as important as the understanding itself
Honestly, some advice from someone who has gone from working in his garage with 4 students to owning a tutoring centre and working with several hundred students each year, get yourself out there, use forums like this, discord and socials etc to get a reputation and students will come, it’s just not as instantaneous (for most) as you would like.
If you’re happy with putting in work with no expectation of anything in return, give it a couple of years and if you’re any good, you will be amazed at what you can achieve.
any tips on tutoring and communication?
For me, it’s all about putting in the reps.any tips on tutoring and communication?
if u tutor a student for a whole term and they end up bombing their assessment task, like almost failing. whos fault is that? and is it justifiable for the student to blame the tutor and just stop doing lessonsFor me, it’s all about putting in the reps.
First time I taught Physics, I was alright (I actually was MUCH better at Chem). I only got better when I taught it more, got feedback from my students, worked on the areas I sucked at (mostly the long-winded theory parts) and eventually understood all the intricacies in the syllabus. It honestly took me years to get to the point where I could answer any question (relevant to the syllabus) thrown at me.
If you have a sibling or a neighbour or a friend in the year below you, offer them conditional free tutoring (even if it is for just the first term) and the condition is that they give you honest feedback every lesson (and if it’s a sibling, get them to clean your room, lmfao)
If I can get to where I am now in less than a decade, no reason why anyone else who puts in the effort can’t.
Just gotta put that effort in, don’t be afraid of hard work. You are not a special snowflake, you are not going to make $100k/week straight out of high school and it’s not going to be easier for you than everyone else.
Charge below your worth, get the reps, get some feedback, get some testimonials and then go for it
tysm!For me, it’s all about putting in the reps.
First time I taught Physics, I was alright (I actually was MUCH better at Chem). I only got better when I taught it more (I was forced into teaching Phys my first year out of uni and was the only Phys teacher at the school! So it took a lot of self-learning! ), got feedback from my students, worked on the areas I sucked at (mostly the long-winded theory parts) and eventually understood all the intricacies in the syllabus. It honestly took me years to get to the point where I could answer any question (relevant to the syllabus) thrown at me.
If you have a sibling or a neighbour or a friend in the year below you, offer them conditional free tutoring (even if it is for just the first term) and the condition is that they give you honest feedback every lesson (and if it’s a sibling, get them to clean your room, lmfao)
If I can get to where I am now in less than a decade, no reason why anyone else who puts in the effort can’t.
Just gotta put that effort in, don’t be afraid of hard work. You are not a special snowflake, you are not going to make $100k/week straight out of high school and it’s not going to be easier for you than everyone else.
Charge below your worth, get the reps, get some feedback, get some testimonials and then go for it
Honestly, it depends.if u tutor a student for a whole term and they end up bombing their assessment task, like almost failing. whos fault is that? and is it justifiable for the student to blame the tutor and just stop doing lessons