I tutor because I enjoy helping students gain clarity and agency in their learning. Watching students move from uncertainty to confidence is deeply rewarding and reinforces my commitment to education and mentorship.
I worked with a student who felt “bad at writing” and avoided assignments. By focusing on outlining, revision strategies, and reframing feedback as a tool—not a judgment—their confidence grew. By the end of the term, they independently planned essays and earned their highest writing grade.
My strengths are patience, active listening, and scaffolding. I help students break complex writing, statistics, and problem-solving tasks into manageable steps, while building skills and confidence through interactive, student-centered sessions.
A positive learning environment is supportive, structured, and low-pressure. Students feel comfortable asking questions, making mistakes, and thinking aloud, while expectations remain clear and progress is guided collaboratively.
Being a mentor means supporting students beyond immediate coursework: helping them develop skills, confidence, and strategies they can carry forward. Mentorship is about empowerment, not dependency, and meeting students where they are while encouraging growth.