
Heather: Sugar Land tutor
Certified Tutor
Undergraduate Degree: Brigham Young University-Provo - Bachelors, English Education
Hiking, volleyball, music, reading, writing, gardening, kayaking.
Adult ESL/ELL
Adult Literacy
American Literature
Elementary School Reading
Elementary School Writing
High School English
High School Level American Literature
High School Writing
Mandarin Chinese 1
Mandarin Chinese 3
Mandarin Chinese 4
Middle School Reading
Middle School Reading Comprehension
Middle School Writing
Other
Spelling Bee
What might you do in a typical first session with a student?
You can't teach a student you don't understand, so my first session is dedicated to just that: understanding the student. What motivates this student? What are this student's strengths and weaknesses? What learning goals does this student have? What is this student's primary learning style? Once you understand the basics, it becomes much easier to communicate and teach in a way the student can understand and relate to.
How can you help a student become an independent learner?
You help a student become an independent learner by giving her the right skills. Just as an artist uses canvases and paintbrushes, an English student needs frameworks and strategies. Once they are given these tools, they are able to navigate their own way to discovery and success.
How would you help a student stay motivated?
Students stay motivated when they focus on what they do know instead of what they don't know (hey, who doesn't like to feel like they're smart?), and when they connect an assignment in a relevant way to their own life. I'm there to help them feel successful by limiting their frustration to a missing puzzle piece rather than a broken puzzle, and to help them make literary connections to the world around them. Learning is much more fun when it's relevant.
If a student has difficulty learning a skill or concept, what would you do?
As mentioned before, learning is like a puzzle, and oftentimes a student comes into a tutoring situation feeling like they're completely broken. I feel that if the student and I can figure out what she DOES know, we can help pinpoint which puzzle piece is missing. Also, I keep in mind that there are many learning styles. A process that may work well and make sense to once student may not work for another. I'm there to help discover the best way for my student to learn, and then move forward in a positive way until things click.
How do you help students who are struggling with reading comprehension?
Reading strategies are the best tool. Nearly all of the time, if we can re-learn those reading strategies and level the student correctly, comprehension problems disappear.