Whether you are working with the slow learner, fast learner, or in-between learner, you as a math tutor must be able to get inside that student’s head and find out what makes him or her tick. You also need to assess whether your particular student is an auditory learner, visual learner, tactile learner, or some mixture of these. It certainly does not hurt to find out the interests of your student and gear your remediation of the troubled subject toward this particular interest. Thus if sports is dear to Johnny, the struggling algebra student, then you should try to center your lessons around sports and interject some sports related problems to the sessions. For example, in remedying Johnny’s problems with decimal equations, you might relate decimals to batting averages and percentages such as a pitcher’s earned run average (era). In dealing with projectile motion problems, certainly use Johnny’s favorite quarterback as the one who throws the football, which is governed by the equation to be solved, in the air.
Techniques such as those mentioned above will not only stimulate interest in the subject but also show the student how such seemingly irrelevant courses in school can actually relate back to the student’s world and realms of interest. Remember, you can thoroughly understand both integral and differential calculus, but if you cannot teach your students to navigate in these waters, your knowledge is essentially self-serving. Identify with your tutoring students and watch both them and you grow to become better learners and better teachers. See more on my tutoring here Private Math Tutoring.
This article is free for republishing
Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_110214_22.html
Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_110214_22.html
About the Author





