Quote Originally Posted by mutton View Post
generally i can't stand extensive one-on-one tutoring
if they need to pay for a private tutor, chances are there is something fundamentally off
this is sort of true, sometimes. in some cases the kid has a condition (from add to autism; these kinds of things are treated most effectively in one-on-one learning sessions), in some cases the parents have fucked up and raised an bastard or a lazy-ass kid, and in some cases a student's just missed something integral early on and needs a tutor to pay special attention. in an ideal school system, the tutor's job would be made redundant.

the "tutoring" i do now is i sit in a common room and random people come in to ask for help
this supplements my teaching in 30-student tutorials, which i prefer given not all faces are blank
i did that as a teaching assistant at kumon and i also did private tutoring. i found kumon to be ineffective, frustrating and stupid. kids hated being there, and i hated its form of "teaching". kids i tutored privately liked me, they had a good time during sessions and, at least the students i had when i got good at it improved drastically, which was something i generally didn't see at kumon.

kumon kids picked up stuff like what a noun is and memorised their times tables, but they never really learnt stuff.