Communication Techniques
			
			We Learn... 
			
				 
				10%...of What We Read
				 20%...of What We Hear
				 30%...of What We See
				 50%...of What We See and Hear
				 70%...of What We Discuss With Others
				 80%...of What We Experience Personally
				 95%...of What We Teach Others
			
			William 
			Glasser
			
			It has been estimated that it takes only three or four minutes for 
			the average person to form a positive or negative first impression. 
			What does this mean to a tutor? Make that first meeting with your 
			tutee a positive experience. Be consistent in
			body language. voice and words. Initiate eye contact. Listen 
			with your body by smiling and nodding your head. Nonverbal messages 
			are the most powerful form of communication. Take the
			
			communication skills test and find out how your communication 
			skills rank. Establishing rapport with your tutee is very important. 
			You can help create a good rapport by listening patiently and 
			remaining open to what the tutee has to say.
			
			It is also important to know why the student has requested tutoring. 
			Some students know exactly where they are having trouble. Some 
			students point out general areas of difficulty. Some students can 
			only vaguely describe the source of their confusion. To help these 
			students, simply ask them where they are having problems. It could 
			be that they fear the subject because of past failure. It could be 
			that they are taking the class because it is a requirement; 
			therefore they have no interest in the subject. The students could 
			also be lacking confidence in their ability to master the material, 
			or they could be overwhelmed by the time requirements imposed on 
			them for this particular class. The reason for the tutoring request 
			is important because it will give you a focus to plan your future 
			tutoring sessions.
			
			Another approach to finding out why the student is seeking 
			assistance is to review the course materials with the student. Use 
			the course outline, text, or assignments to figure out precisely 
			where the student is having problems. Ask questions that encourage 
			students to state what they know about the material.
			
			A technique critical to a successful tutoring session is the ability 
			to ask the right question. Tutors should develop a strategy for 
			asking
			effective questions. 
			
			It's important to use the right words. Try asking "What do you 
			understand?" If you ask students what they don't understand, they 
			will be clueless. Another important aspect of asking questions is 
			waiting for an answer. Many tutors are too quick to answer their own 
			questions. Give students an opportunity to reflect on the question 
			before they volunteer a response. Always wait at least 20 seconds 
			for the student to answer your question. This "wait time" might be 
			uncomfortable at first, but it can greatly improve the tutoring 
			session.
			
			Remember to ask leading questions. Questions that can be answered 
			with yes/no have less value that those that ask the student to 
			demonstrate understanding. "What if" questions and analogies are 
			excellent strategies for expanding student understanding. Become 
			familiar with the
			Socratic Method of teaching. It is the oldest, but still the 
			most powerful teaching tactic for fostering critical thinking.
			
			Tutors can perform a valuable service when they assist students to 
			figure out answers by themselves. There are three steps that can 
			help you provide this service: Provide instruction, require a 
			response, and give feedback. In other words, present the information 
			briefly, have the student respond and talk about the material, let 
			the student know when the answer is correct or incorrect. Learning 
			to
			
			handle right and wrong answers is a vital part of tutoring. 
			
			There are many options available to a tutor when deciding how to 
			talk with a tutee. But its important to remember that the best 
			teachers talk the least. When you are not talking that means either 
			the tutee is talking (which is what you want) or you are allowing 
			space for the tutee to respond. Experienced tutors use a variety of
			Effective Ways to Work with Students to prompt tutees to talk 
			through their learning experience.