
Why do you want to become a tutor?
Why do you want to become a tutor?
It’s a question I’ve been thinking about a lot recently.
If I’m honest, when I started tutoring, I didn’t have a business plan.
I didn’t have a mission statement.
I didn’t have a grand vision of building a tutoring business, writing books, or supporting other tutors.
In all honesty, I just didn’t have the confidence to say no to someone who suggested I might enjoy it.
So I started.
And somehow that small decision became something far bigger than I ever imagined.
Recently, I was speaking to a tutor about a child who was struggling, and there was a sense that supporting her might be setting himself up for failure.
That has played on my mind since.
Because sometimes I think adults decide far too quickly what a child is capable of.
We see the struggle.
The anxiety.
The gaps.
The resistance.
And we come to the conclusion that: “They probably won’t get there.”
But what if they simply haven’t yet been shown in a way that works for them?
What if they need more time?
More patience?
A different explanation?
That's what dad offered me and it changed my life.
Tutoring is interesting because, if I’m honest, you’re probably never going to build a business that gives you a private jet and a yacht in the Bahamas.
And if ego, status or external validation are the main reasons for doing it, tutoring may be a difficult path.
Because tutoring asks something different of us.
It asks us to put the child first.
To look beyond the label, the report, the predicted grade, the assumptions.
And ask:
What is possible here?
What if they can?
What if they just need someone that explains something in a different way, like dad did for me.
For me, that is why tutoring matters.
Not because it creates competition.
Not because it boosts ego.
But because sometimes one person taking the time to understand a child can change the direction of that child’s life and the ripple effect of those around them.
And I don’t think there is anything “just” about that.
