QuiteLiterate
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2024
- Messages
- 13
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- Female
- HSC
- 2013
Hi everyone!
My name is Bec, and I have over ten years of experience as a state-ranking/prize-winning English tutor and teacher. I've started a new Substack/blog where I muse about English teaching/tutoring, education, and the tutoring industry. I thought I'd share a little bit from my first blog post here in case it helps anyone in their search for English tutoring! If you have any questions or would like any advice/a link to my blog, please PM me and I'd be very happy to help out.
Today, I’ll be exploring a question that I have been asked on countless occasions by students, guardians, and even teachers.
The Questions
To begin, some basic context.
Some tutoring companies might be very experienced in taking students who are high achievers (likely to have already achieved a Band 6 independently) and pushing them to a mid-Band 6, but they may work very poorly with a student who needs serious literacy intervention, and vice versa.
Then, there’s a second tier of consideration. Aside from the results and marks you’d like to achieve, there are important cultural and pedagogical factors you need to consider.
Key Advice 2: Don’t buy into company marketing and what companies write on their websites.
Websites are useful to assess the offerings, identity, tone, and image they want to advertise. However, the most effective and efficient way to gauge the quality of a tutoring company is to speak to the staff directly and to speak to students who are enrolled there.
To do this, you need to ask unconventional, unexpected questions—questions that are highly specific to your struggles with English—and assess the competence and subject-specific knowledge of staff. For example:
My name is Bec, and I have over ten years of experience as a state-ranking/prize-winning English tutor and teacher. I've started a new Substack/blog where I muse about English teaching/tutoring, education, and the tutoring industry. I thought I'd share a little bit from my first blog post here in case it helps anyone in their search for English tutoring! If you have any questions or would like any advice/a link to my blog, please PM me and I'd be very happy to help out.
Today, I’ll be exploring a question that I have been asked on countless occasions by students, guardians, and even teachers.
The Questions
- How do I go about finding the right tutoring company?
- What should I look out for and keep in mind?
- What do I need to know as I enter this overwhelming market?
To begin, some basic context.
- First, tutoring is a regulated industry; HOWEVER, the quality of tutoring services and the claims made by various tutoring companies generally go unchecked.
- Second, tutoring companies are businesses. They have to try to turn a profit or at least breakeven. They are engaging in sales and marketing strategies!
- Third, quality absolutely varies. Not only across the different companies, but also within a single tutoring company.
There can be just two amazing tutors and dozens of very average tutors within a single company. Every tutoring company has taught students who have benefited from their services and considered them to be of great value AND students who have regretted enrolling and viewed the services as a waste of money. - Fourth, tutoring is not a substitute for (and will not make up for) a lack of independent effort and engagement with school work and tasks.
Tutoring is not necessary for a student to achieve their personal best and succeed. You should do everything within your power to improve independently before opting for English tutoring. Arrange a time to respectfully ask your head teacher or English teacher for support if you are a student who doesn’t even know where to start. Tell them that you know you’ve slacked off and that you want to start taking it seriously and want to ask them for advice on what you must do and change to improve. Tutoring should be viewed as a TOOL, and its effectiveness will be maximised only if used in addition to your independent work ethic and engagement at school. - Fifth, tutoring companies are not schools, and they cater to the instrumental view of learning for tangible, quantifiable results.
That is how effectiveness is determined in the realm of tutoring for the vast majority of students/guardians. Teachers know that schooling and education serve far greater, varied purposes, but for this post, and given the volume of guardians who pay for tutoring, I will assume that an interested reader is interested in seeking results-effective tutoring.
- What do you want to get out of English tutoring?
- Why do you need it/what results do you want to achieve?
- What do you need? Group lectures, seminars with discussion, individualised attention, small classes with discussion and individual assistance, and marking, etc. Think carefully about what would actually benefit you in addition to what you already access at school.
- Have you already done everything to try to improve independently? You should read your syllabus and texts, develop a strong, respectful relationship with your teacher, complete homework tasks and write practice responses for feedback, actively participate during school classes, and genuinely try to reflect on your learning and feedback and apply what you learn at school. If you aren’t even doing the bare minimum, it’s difficult to accurately assess whether or not you’ll need or benefit from additional tutoring.
- Are you a student who is looking for a 99+ ATAR and 94+ in English?
- Are you already likely to achieve a low Band 6, and looking to increase the chances of a mid-high Band 6?
- Do you already work very hard in relation to English? Or are you a student who lacks discipline, motivation, and structure?
- Or, are you a student who is less concerned about the ATAR and more focused on a Band 6 in English?
- Or, are you a student who doesn’t care too much about a Band 6? You are really struggling and just want literacy support—someone to help you with homework and assignments and to help you understand your texts.
Some tutoring companies might be very experienced in taking students who are high achievers (likely to have already achieved a Band 6 independently) and pushing them to a mid-Band 6, but they may work very poorly with a student who needs serious literacy intervention, and vice versa.
Then, there’s a second tier of consideration. Aside from the results and marks you’d like to achieve, there are important cultural and pedagogical factors you need to consider.
- Are you looking for someone to motivate and inspire you? Or is this not important?
- Are you looking for someone who will provide you with structure and set clear tasks and deadlines? Or are you self-motivated?
- What kind of marking and feedback do you want? The quality of marking varies greatly across and within tutoring companies.
- How much do you value administrative support and flexibility? This generally reflects the culture of a tutoring company as a business.
Key Advice 2: Don’t buy into company marketing and what companies write on their websites.
Websites are useful to assess the offerings, identity, tone, and image they want to advertise. However, the most effective and efficient way to gauge the quality of a tutoring company is to speak to the staff directly and to speak to students who are enrolled there.
To do this, you need to ask unconventional, unexpected questions—questions that are highly specific to your struggles with English—and assess the competence and subject-specific knowledge of staff. For example:
- ‘I’m really struggling with understanding how to differentiate between Keats’ poems in Module A because the themes overlap. What kind of advice would your tutors recommend?’ Assess whether their response is generic, salesy, genuinely academic and insightful, or so on and so forth.
- ‘I’m a student who has performed really poorly in Year 11 despite achieving so highly in Years 7-10; why do you think this is the case? Do you think I can improve in time for Year 12?’ Look for how they frame their response to this question. Are they trying to encourage you to pay up and enrol, or are they invested in giving you helpful advice?
- You could share with them the teacher feedback/comment from your most recent Module A essay and ask, ‘I’m struggling to understand and interpret the teacher’s feedback here. How would [the company] interpret this advice and convert it to an explicit recommendation?’
- When you’re assessing the vibes through a student who attends a tutoring company, make sure you speak to someone who’s in a similar boat to you—someone who has a similar need for support. If you’re a student who is looking to go from a 94 to a 97, there’s no use speaking to someone who is improving from a 85 to 90, or a 65 to an 80, and so on and so forth.