How to Become a Tutor
If you want to become a tutor you need to make sure that you possess the necessary skills to be successful teaching the subject(s) for which you want to offer your services. Having college degrees or certifications is an excellent way to market yourself convincingly as being qualified to teach subjects in which you have expertise.
If you don't have a degree or certifications in the subject you want to offer tutoring services in, you might want to consider taking some courses to enhance your skills. Community colleges generally offer a wide range of courses at an affordable price, so you could start your search at a school that is local to you. Another option is to look online for some different educational opportunities. This might give you a broader range of choices, so take your time exploring options before you commit to a program of study.
If you plan to tutor children you will need to make sure what the laws and regulations are in your city, county, or state. Regardless of what the laws are where you live, always remember the importance of putting safety features into place before you actually begin meeting with students.
Never have students come to your home, even if there will be other adults present. Tutoring sessions should take place in a public location or at the student's house (but only when a parent is going to be home).
Know What You Are Going To Teach
You need to be familiar with the content and comfortable with your lesson plan before you meet with each student. This means that you will need to be able to devote a sufficient amount of time to conducting research about the subject and/or specific problem the student is having before you meet with him or her. If you go into a tutoring session unprepared you will appear unprofessional, and the student's parents will likely begin to doubt your competency.
Prepare lessons that focus specifically on each student's needs. Remember that the reason people hire tutors is to obtain help with specific educational issues that are posing problems for students. If you fail to focus on your student's tutoring needs you will not really be able to provide much help for that person.
Once you have created a lesson plan for a student you will need to spend a sufficient amount of time practicing and reviewing how the tutoring session needs to go. This requires a healthy amount of dedication to the job and a strong ability to display patience.
Take the Job Seriously, But Have Fun
One of the best ways to engage students emotionally and intellectually is to draw them in and pique their interest. When you are designing a lesson plan, think about the student you're creating it for. In addition to determining the areas that the student needs help in, try to find ways to incorporate some fun into it. Add in interesting facts or inventive ways of solving the problems at hand and you will probably have a much higher success rate as a tutor.
When you start advertising your services you can choose to advertise locally or online. In fact, you can choose whether you want to offer your services only to locals (in person) or via the internet. If you choose the internet as your medium you will open yourself up to a much broader student base as potential clients.
|
Sign up for our weekly Work at Home newsletter.
How to Open a Daycare
How to Minimize Email and Phone Distractions
Become a Wedding Planner
How to Become a Virtual Assistant
How to Become a Tutor
How to Become a Proofreader
Become an Event Planner
How to Stay Focused While Working at Home
How to De-Clutter your Home Office
Run From Work at Home Stuffing Envelopes Scams
Are Work at Home Psychic Jobs Just a Dream?
Make Work At Home Typing Work For You
Top 10 Work at Home Jobs
How To Find Legitimate Work at Home Jobs
5 Ways To Spot Work at Home Scams
A Work at Home Business Versus A Work At Home Job
So You Want to Work at Home?
|