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The Role of the Tutor

The Role of the Tutor. Produced as part of the Partnership Development Schools (PDS) Strategy Phase 3 2008-09 (Lead PDS: The Park Community School. Contact Chris Ley (cley@parkcommunity.devon.sch.uk). First Thoughts.

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The Role of the Tutor

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  1. The Role of the Tutor Produced as part of the Partnership Development Schools (PDS) Strategy Phase 3 2008-09 (Lead PDS: The Park Community School. Contact Chris Ley (cley@parkcommunity.devon.sch.uk)

  2. First Thoughts • The periods that teachers spend with their tutor groups are an essential element of secondary education. Some head teachers have gone so far as to say that the form tutor is the linchpin of a school. Speak to any group of teachers, though, and it's clear that enjoyment of the role of form tutor varies greatly from person to person. Some love the opportunity it offers to get to know a group of children well and to really feel anchored in a school, while for others it's an unwelcome intrusion on their subject-specific work.

  3. The Challenge • Although your work as a tutor will inevitably involve some aspect of discipline and reprimand, this is not the central aim of tutoring. Regardless of how PSHEE is taught in your school, tutors have the task of delivering a social side of education the mortar to the bricks of the academic learning that students achieve at school. Good tutoring can make a child's experience of school, while ineffective tutoring can break it. Demotivation, demoralisation and despondency are all possible outcomes that sound tutoring can help avoid.

  4. Tutors….. • Inspire and boost morale • Counsel • Communicate • Solve Problems • Administrate • Nurture • Enable

  5. Tutors….. • Monitor progress • Monitor Social Development • Manage Behaviour • Give Praise • Motivate • Build a Team • Are a Confidant

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