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So how much do people normally pay for private tutoring?Follow

#1 Sep 27 2011 at 3:25 PM Rating: Good
I've met with my Urdu teacher for the first time today and when we negotiated prices, I was painfully aware of the fact that I have no idea how much you pay for this sort of thing nowadays.

I got the price down from £20 (~$30) an hour to £12.50 (~$20) an hour. I've been told anything over a 20% drop in price is really great, so I feel quite good about this, even though it's roughly 15% of my monthly income that goes toward two hours a week of lessons.

Now, the thing is, I clearly remember paying something like £7/hour for private tutoring in Chinese about 10 years ago and for more conventional subjects it used to be about half that, so am I getting ripped off or is this a fair price?
#2 Sep 27 2011 at 4:11 PM Rating: Good
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I have no idea about in Europe or in most parts of the US, but my friends who tutor get $20-30/hr, so that sounds about right.
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#3 Sep 27 2011 at 4:15 PM Rating: Good
Actually, come to think of it, when I did maths and English tutoring in the US, I got paid £40 per 90 minutes, so I suppose it's a similar price. I thought that was a lot of money back then...
#4 Sep 27 2011 at 5:30 PM Rating: Good
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£12.50 an hour doesn't look like crazy money to me, especially for 1 on 1 lessons in a not very common language.
#5 Sep 27 2011 at 7:03 PM Rating: Good
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Funny you should ask this, as I just began tutoring a few days ago. Her expectation seemed to be $20 (USD) an hour, but we ran into technical difficulties with her online homework so things ended up running longer and I didn't charge. From what I've seen posted around Campus, $20 (USD) is about as low as you're going to find.
#6 Sep 28 2011 at 1:25 AM Rating: Good
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Allegory wrote:
Funny you should ask this, as I just began tutoring a few days ago. Her expectation seemed to be $20 (USD) an hour, but we ran into technical difficulties with her online homework so things ended up running longer and I didn't charge. From what I've seen posted around Campus, $20 (USD) is about as low as you're going to find.
Not charging extra for the technical difficulties is one thing, but make sure you charge if they request a happy ending.
#7 Sep 28 2011 at 7:24 AM Rating: Good
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How do people generally get started with tutoring, how does a typical session go, and what kind of preparations do you generally have to make beforehand? I'd want to start tutoring in math, but I'm fairly anxious about doing a bad job.

I remember that on the math department email list there were people trying to get together for help with a certain class. Someone offered to tutor for $60 an hour when their only credentials were "I took the class last semester and got the highest grade." They get points for ambition, but for $60 an hour, you'd better be an experienced professional with a college degree and some real credentials.


Edited, Sep 28th 2011 8:29am by Sweetums
#8 Sep 28 2011 at 12:57 PM Rating: Good
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I've seen advertisements on my campus, but I'm not sure how effective they are. I received my tutoring job by being a friend of a friend.

In my first session there was far less teaching than I was expecting--not knowing much about tutoring--and far more helping with homework. I had read the chapter over a day in advance, which is very helpful for refreshing your memory on the specific problems a student will be dealing with. I started off by giving a general overview of the framework of the materiel she was working on and then she began to work her homework questions with me there to answer any questions and check her homework to make sure she had done everything correctly.

That's pretty much the extent of what I did. I was also fairly nervous my first time, but I realized that as long as I could tell her the right answers to her questions I was largely doing a sufficient job. Teaching, truly teaching, is harder and not something people become good at simply by mastering the materiel, and I don't think it's entirely expected a tutors (unless you're getting that sweet $60+ an hour).
#9 Sep 28 2011 at 1:44 PM Rating: Good
Sweetums wrote:
How do people generally get started with tutoring, how does a typical session go, and what kind of preparations do you generally have to make beforehand? I'd want to start tutoring in math, but I'm fairly anxious about doing a bad job.

I remember that on the math department email list there were people trying to get together for help with a certain class. Someone offered to tutor for $60 an hour when their only credentials were "I took the class last semester and got the highest grade." They get points for ambition, but for $60 an hour, you'd better be an experienced professional with a college degree and some real credentials.


Edited, Sep 28th 2011 8:29am by Sweetums



When I lived in the US, I started tutoring a middle school student and they gave me $27ish an hour (we did 90 minute sessions). The guidance counselor just walked up to me and asked me if I could do English and maths tutoring for this girl.
I wasn't even fluent in English, I have no idea what went on in her head.

Meanwhile, my mother is going insane that I'm taking extra lessons and getting involved in lots of activities that might actually look good on my CV instead of working in retail in my free time. I'm not on a scholarship so I can work in retail, ugh. I'll probably still end up doing it for a bit just to see how that goes, but to be honest extra lessons & societies/SU stuff are more important to me since I actually don't need the money right now and want to get in on all the cool activities!
She also doesn't like a fact that she's never heard of the language and doesn't really care that it's spoken by some 100m people worldwide.



Edit: I'll see how it goes with this guy. He used to be an electrical engineering lecturer at NED University Karachi (which is very prestigious), so he does have teaching experience, albeit not in teaching a non-native speaker his city's primary language. Meh.

Edited, Sep 28th 2011 7:46pm by Kalivha
#10 Oct 13 2011 at 6:08 PM Rating: Decent
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I always used the colleges free tutoring center... but I think what you are paying to learn Urdu sounds like a great deal. Finding a tutor for that language has to be pretty difficult
#11 Oct 14 2011 at 3:33 AM Rating: Excellent
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On the plus side, 33% of all Bollywood movies will be watchable sans subtitles. WIN!

Edited, Oct 14th 2011 3:33am by Bijou
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#12 Oct 16 2011 at 5:00 PM Rating: Decent
Friar Bijou wrote:
On the plus side, 33% of all Bollywood movies will be watchable sans subtitles. WIN!


33%? You realise that Urdu is basically formal Hindi with Islamic slang, right? And that even if something isn't Hindi/Urdu, as long as it's in some North Indian language it'll be similar enough that it's not much of a problem to understand it?

I watch movies in Hindi/Urdu without subtitles all the time because my flatmates do. They're fluent in both just because of the television, heh.


Nio, actually over here it's not that hard to find a teacher for Urdu - it's just hard to find one who isn't Punjabi. The one I have now is Sindhi, which is better.
(Basically Punjabis sound like drunk Japanese people trying to speak Hindi/Urdu. It's totally adorable, but I'd rather learn the language properly.)
#13 Oct 17 2011 at 5:51 PM Rating: Excellent
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Kalivha wrote:
Friar Bijou wrote:
On the plus side, 33% of all Bollywood movies will be watchable sans subtitles. WIN!


33%? You realise that Urdu is basically formal Hindi with Islamic slang, right? And that even if something isn't Hindi/Urdu, as long as it's in some North Indian language it'll be similar enough that it's not much of a problem to understand it?

Holy ****, it's almost like most people don't really care about Urdu
#14 Oct 17 2011 at 8:59 PM Rating: Excellent
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Sweetums wrote:
Kalivha wrote:
Friar Bijou wrote:
On the plus side, 33% of all Bollywood movies will be watchable sans subtitles. WIN!


33%? You realise that Urdu is basically formal Hindi with Islamic slang, right? And that even if something isn't Hindi/Urdu, as long as it's in some North Indian language it'll be similar enough that it's not much of a problem to understand it?

Holy sh*t, it's almost like most people don't really care about Urdu

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#15 Oct 18 2011 at 10:16 AM Rating: Good
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Timelordwho wrote:
Sweetums wrote:
Kalivha wrote:
Friar Bijou wrote:
On the plus side, 33% of all Bollywood movies will be watchable sans subtitles. WIN!


33%? You realise that Urdu is basically formal Hindi with Islamic slang, right? And that even if something isn't Hindi/Urdu, as long as it's in some North Indian language it'll be similar enough that it's not much of a problem to understand it?

Holy sh*t, it's almost like most people don't really care about Urdu


I had a friend at school who learned because his parents made him. Otherwise, pretty much what Sweetums said.

Edited, Oct 18th 2011 12:17pm by Nilatai
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#16 Oct 19 2011 at 11:27 AM Rating: Default
It all depends on the quality of the tutor and the subject. I used to pay $25 an hour for french lessons, $20 if i got 2 per week, so do your math.

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#17 Oct 19 2011 at 2:57 PM Rating: Good
As I was writing that I realised that sounded way more pissy than intended, but was too lazy to edit it.


Tomorrow is Indo-Pak movie night. That should be fun. (It'll be just like sitting in the living room at home, just with a cinema screen!)
#18 Oct 19 2011 at 3:14 PM Rating: Decent
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You're cute when you're nerding out over Pakistan/Urdu.
#19 Oct 19 2011 at 3:23 PM Rating: Decent
I've gotten increasingly good at finding the cool stuff going down over there even before the locals know.

Like I found Beygairat Brigade one day after they released their first single and now everyone is talking about them. <3
#20 Oct 19 2011 at 4:07 PM Rating: Decent
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Goddamn hipster.
#21 Oct 19 2011 at 6:50 PM Rating: Good
Nah, just need a new hobby.
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