My aim as a teacher is to develop in my learners a deep understanding and self-confidence when answering assessment questions and being able to tackle unfamiliar cases. My approach is actually based on the concept that learning develops in an environment of mutual respect wherein the scholar is motivated to think and find links on their own. My experience has been that one-to-one private training has a special value to students through the opportunity to break down the students' own boundaries to study in a way which sets the foundations for a long-term and thorough discovering of the subject matter.
Analytic thinking
My approach differs depending on the student's needs and learning style. But, my teaching ideology is built upon encouraging scholars to think on their own, operating existing situations whenever it can be. |My opinion is that it is really important to supply children with a working skills and to exercise problem-solving skill-sets for establishing upon this knowledge. Tutoring a person to think analytically is at the core of the things a student must intercept off any subject class.
The most important contribution
Mentoring children is one of the most durable increases a teacher are able to make, and it is a procedure, that I find fun and rewarding. From my experience, I learned the importance of involving children by using patterns and of delivering data at a degree that assumes perception but not always knowledge, mixing the unknown with the known as a synthesis which gives the student the feeling of possibility rather than that of impossibility that impressive and formal ways may impose.
Using a lot of practising
I start from topics the children are comfortable with and proceed progressively to more complex fields as their self-esteem is being established. I bring into play questions and examples to confirm getting permanently. I don't ever lecture to students or request them to memorise things. Neither do I accomplish the scholars' assignments for them!
I constantly involve exam-style as well as recent paper questions to inspect, practice and develop the scholar's perception and practice. I also give a lot of emphasis to many of the less evident yet vital skills which include logical thought, essay structure and technique, and the helpful use of numbers and graphs.