Why Is Tutoring Important?

Sometimes a student doesn’t have clear goals and may need help establishing and reaching goals. Some students have clear goals but lack some specific subject matter knowledge in the sciences, mathematics, humanities, social sciences or foreign languages. These students can do well in certain academic areas, even excel, yet nearly every student experiences challenges in a particular subject at a certain point in time.

Still others need to take a test for a variety of reasons including entrance into undergraduate and masters level colleges, exams required for careers, credentialing, certification, high school equivalency, and even entrance into the military. When a grade or test score counts for something, even just for personal academic achievement, or more commonly, to help create additional college and career opportunities, that is when tutoring is most effective. Helping a student set a targeted goal, and then hitting that goal is what tutoring is designed to do.

The reality is that every single one of us needs help with something once in a while. All the better if we can learn how to do something from an expert, who has patience and is able to explain things in terms that we can understand. In our company, we have a name for these experts, who are constantly learning new and interesting things in their own lives, striving to help others, and to utilize their knowledge. We call them “know it alls”. However, knowing it all is not enough. Our proven tutoring success system makes sure each know it all is a gifted communicator, motivator, educator, and is laser focused, attentive, consistent, working one to one, providing individualized academic instruction.

A know it all is an expert tutor, no exceptions. We have a six hundred year tradition to uphold. Hundreds of years ago, only the nobles and super wealthy could afford personal tutors for their family members. Know It All is accessible to all families. Part of every hour is donated to a nonprofit that provides Know It All’s for many families in economic transition.