Tutor Leaves 12-Year-old Boy Alone a Lot, and Now Outside or Garage - WWYD?

Updated on April 27, 2012
R.F. asks from Thousand Oaks, CA
14 answers

My 12-yr-old son (6th grade) has been seeing a tutor since last summer. He hates going. He hates having to go 2x a week. DH & I feel he needs help academically (which she has provided as his math scores have soared) and he needs homework help (he manages to complete a lot in that 1 hour and 15 minutes = $75.

He's been complaining to me since the beginning. She leaves him alone a lot (to yell at her nanny, deal with her phone calls, cook, deal with her landscapers) and he's stuck waiting for her. Then she comes back to him to chit chat about her life and complain about the nannies. She is a lovely person, but I find all of this inappropriate and unprofessional. He's worked very hard and his grades result that. She takes the credit for his grades and tells him, "I don't know where you'd be without me. You know it's thanks to me your grades are so great." It really bugs him. He's a little kid. Even if she is kidding (which I don't think she is) it's inappropriate. "You think 6th grade is bad, wait till 7th grade." Gee thanks for the encouragement and instilling fear.

I wanted to fire her in Jan. My husband was dead-set against it because he argues my son is manipulating me (his ultimate goal is not to see her anymore) and will say anything to achieve his goal (bang on me, because it will get results). He may have a point, but I have a BIG problem with what I'm hearing.

Last Spring, our son was in Mathnasium. After a few months, he was complaining he wasn't getting anything out of it and I could see it was no longer effective. So I pulled the plug and found this new person. DH was so mad at me. But I was so right. Because the new switch was a very positive move for a few months. During the summer, she worked with him and get him prepared for 6th grade.

I did fire her in Jan. and DH was so angry because I misunderstood his "go ahead and fire her" statement. I thought I got the green light. I rehired her 2 days later because he wasn't talking to me and fuming.

I was asking for a compromise with DH, how about tutor 1x a week? No. OK, fine.

The latest issue is that the tutor is ultra paranoid about getting sick. For the past few weeks, she has forbidden my son from being inside her home (she had a separate office for her clients) and now he's outside in the patio. He hates it. If it's too cold, too hot, too windy outside, she puts him in her musty garage.

The worse part: he told me he sits on a stool without a desk. WHAT? How can that be? Am I being lied to? That's bad enough. But even if there were a desk and a nice chair, I don't like to work in someone's garage and I doubt she'd put her kids or herself there as well.

DH drives him there and back (because DH is immune to his complaining) and I couldn't go yesterday to do a surprise inspection. He shows up and puts DS on the spot "OK son, since this is an issue, let's air it out right now." DS was shocked and didn't want to be rude, so said, "um yeah, whatever it's fine." She lead him to the side yard again and back inside the garage. DS was surprised. This time she provided some simple little temporary table. Then she made some sarcastic comment, like "really? This isn't so bad." And DS said that now she's annoyed with me because I'm complaining. I told him, not to worry about that. But it bugs him.

No, really it is bad. Nobody choose to work in a filthy garage with horrible smells. I have no idea what state her garage is in, but mine is pretty "good" yet I wouldn't work it in or put a child to work in it.

So... what do I do? I don't want to start WWIII with my husband. It's not like we live in Alaska with only 1 tutor in town. I'm in the process of researching area tutors to have a back up. I want to send an email to the tutor and plaining and firmly spell out I don't want him in the garage or outside, period. I don't want to talk to her on the phone because I'm so angry and I don't want to say something rude, though I can maintain control of myself.

I DO HAVE BOUNDARIES ISSUES with my son. Meaning I've been too permissive and he's entitled. We just hired a great parent coach, who came to our house last week to observe our nighttime routine. Son has a touch of ADD and gets very distracted at homework time and it would take DH 3 hours to help him finish assignments or homework. So the tutor to my husband is a God-send.

DH doesn't want any big changes now because we are already changing things up. That's also why he's against switching tutors now.

Though one perk of the parent coach either talking to the tutor on the phone or better yet, visiting her house, would be she can either confirm or deny what DS is reporting.

MY FEAR: DS already hates going to school. Now he hates the obligation of going to a tutor. He doesn't see how he's being helped, by being left in a room or outside and ignored to work alone. He has questions and has to wait for her. This burns me up because we are paying So Much. DH thinks this is working just fine and doesn't want to change it. I think I can find someone more palatable for DS, though he would probably resent any tutoring.

What can I do next?

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So What Happened?

DH & I had a truce, to keep that tutor until the end of June. Then I could hire a new one. Fine. Now with the new school year, I decided to hire a college student, a young kid from a tutoring service that hires young, motivated, students that my son can bond with and look up to.

I toured Huntington & Sylvan and it was too impersonal and corporate for me. I would hate sitting there and feeling trapped. I know my son would hate it also. They say its personalized, but I talked to someone who used Huntington and she said it's really not.

I'm also going to hire an educational therapist to help him get organized, plan ahead, and develop compensatory strategies for the ADD. He needs this as much as the tutoring.

The former tutor tried to argue with me to keep her job, "I care about your son, I think I work really well with him, blah, blah, blah."

He'd go to her house, right from school and wouldn't offer him a snack, or offer him cheese sticks. This won't be happening anymore because the tutoring will be at my house.

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M.P.

answers from Los Angeles on

I would tell the tutor what son is saying but that you believe he is only saying it to get out of tutoring. That you will be sitting reading or whatever you like to do while she is tutoring him so he has no excuse and it saves you time from driving back and forth. Tell her you are about to pull him out because you are tired of hearing it from him. Maybe loosing the money will make her change and you sitting there you know what is going on. Good luck !

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J.B.

answers from Boston on

This is so far beyond wacky I have no idea why you would have put up with this nonsense for so long. I am a private tutor. I work for a test prep company but we also do academic tutoring. WE go to YOUR house (or the library or wherever), where you are home to observe, pop in, ask questions etc. Your child works in a comfortable space, in his own home, that is equipped with good lighting, supplies, and space to spread out materials. If such a space doesn't exist in your home, or it's too distracting, then we arrange for a room at the local library. When we give a student short bursts of work to practice exercises independently (as in 10 minutes at a time at most), we may do something non-distracting like check e-mails on our phone or organize our notes and this is only because students can feel uncomfortable with someone just sitting there doing nothing while they work. But we certainly don't do anything like talk on the phone or attend to other business. Please fire her and get someone else.

Everything about this woman is unprofessional. Please do not continue to give her your business. There are many, many, many qualified tutors out there who will build a good relationship with your child and treat him with dignity and respect.

5 moms found this helpful
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D..

answers from Charlotte on

So get another tutor already. If your husband just really wants him to be tutored, then find one who doesn't act like a babysitter. He will do much better.

Something is wrong with this picture with your husband. Is he friends with her? Does he just want to pay her, regardless of the job she does?

If your son complains about the next tutor and there are stories like this, THEN you know it's your son. Otherwise, the problem is the woman.

You know, Sylvan Learning Center doesn't charge that much and there are rules in place to keep this kind of stuff from happening.

Good luck.

Dawn

3 moms found this helpful

M.J.

answers from Milwaukee on

Geez does your husband have a crush on this lady? Get a new tutor and tell your husband to suck and egg.

3 moms found this helpful
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☆.A.

answers from Pittsburgh on

Has it ever occurred to you that you could find a new (real) tutor for your son? I think it's beyond time.

3 moms found this helpful

B.K.

answers from Chicago on

Your husband wants to continue to pay big bucks for mediocrity? Why on earth would you continue to take your son to this woman? There ARE other tutors you know. And it's not rocket science research to find one. Ask your school for a recommendation or two. Switch now. Stop giving your money and your trust to someone who does not deserve it.

And you don't have to "fire" her. Just simply thank her and tell her you won't be needing her services anymore. (If your son already hates school, imagine how much more he must hate sitting in someone's garage with nothing to do....)

2 moms found this helpful

M.L.

answers from Houston on

Well, your husband is an idiot. Why put your husband through this woman's poor set up and attitude? Seriously, go find another tutor, go to a tutor program in a controlled environment like Sylvan learning center... it's not that hard to make a change.

If your husband wants to throw a big, huge, hissy fit, than he should sit in the garage and listen to the tutor go make dinner and yell at the kids while he supervises the visit. I can't believe this woman is actually getting paid to do that.

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J.P.

answers from Los Angeles on

Fire her...without a doubt....on so many levels.

There is a LOT of manipulation going on in your little circle. Your tutor manipulates your son. Your husband manipulates you into hiring her again by not talking to you? Who does that????

Find a college kid who will come to your house, so it is under your supervision and your child might actually like the person and the person takes an interest in your son. We have friends that have found tutors on Skype. One of our friend's sons is taking Spanish from a teacher on Skype who lives in Ecuador. How cool is that?

Another option is to offer the money to your son that you would be paying the tutor, if he gets his own grades up. At that age, money is already a big motivating factor.

I homeschool, so I know the challenges of teaching my kids. My son is good at math, but hates it. We just keep figuring out what he's not understanding, so that he gets it....and we keep the motivation up. My 9 year old son gets up at 6am and starts his homework. By the time I get up, he's nearly done with most of it. We give him incentives, like you earn video games by showing us your maturity, etc. We started homeschooling because my son came home from kindergarten graduation not ever wanting to go back to school. He is excelling at home...and loves learning.

1 mom found this helpful

K.M.

answers from Chicago on

Go to a reputable company like Sylvan learning centers where everything takes place in a building vs in a home. I got a lot of help from a math specific tutoring center, but the environment was a HUGE factor for me. In fact, my teachers accomodated me to take my tests in a quiet room with no other students and I succeeded in school with that help. So, I urge you to find a reputable tutor that is held to a standard.

1 mom found this helpful

N.G.

answers from Dallas on

I think it is insane that your son is still going to this tutor. How inappropriate! And I agree with Melissa, what is your husband's hangup???

Get a new tutor.

1 mom found this helpful
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L.S.

answers from San Diego on

You definitely need to find a "professional" tutor either out of a location like Sylvan, Lindamood-Bell, and countless others that help kids with their work and where some even specialize in learning disablities like ADD, Aspergers, ADHD. There are strategies that these professionals can use in order to help them with class work and homework. I have a tutor for my asperger son who is not only lovely and encouraging as a person but she is very professional. She always makes her session "positive" and focuses on what he can do not on what he can't. Your son is probably right about her and doesn't respect her. You certainly can't get that back as a teacher once you've lost it. My tutor concentrates on his studies and work completely during the two hours that he sees her. Currently she is tutoring at my home as she is looking for a new office space. You are paying $75.00 for 1 hour and 15 minutes? That is a lot to me. We pay $50.00 for two hours. Good luck and I know it could be frustrating but find the right place and tutor.

1 mom found this helpful
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K.F.

answers from Salinas on

It seems you (and your husband) are making this whole thing WAY too complicated. You are paying premium tutor prices for a less than premium tutor, if your son is being honest.

My daughter has used several tutors over the years to maintain her A in math (her challenge subject). Her Dad and I set up the appointments and pay and she meets with a positive attiutude, works hard and gets As.

Over the middle school years she had 4 different tutors with only really mild complaints about one. She just didn't get as much out of her teaching style and yes there were issues of the tutor being distracted too. So after a few months we politely said "thanks for your time but DD will be working on her own for now."

It's time your son was more in control of his life concerning school. If you plan everything and hover around trying to make everything right he will let you do the heavy lifting. Middle school is a time for parents to let go academically and letting the kids take control of their work and schedules. If you are "driving" your son too much and the only reason he's doing well is becuase of your involvement it will all fall apart in a couple of years. You just won't be able to be involved at all in High School, it'll be up to him.

You say he hates school, that's a red flag. I mean not all kids are going to love all aspects of school but if I was hearing that from my child I would be concerned.

It's kind of like the old kid phrase "I'm bored" not OK in our house. If he says he hates school, ask him to elaborate. What does he hate? There must be parts he enjoys, talk to him about life and responsibility, finding joy in the parts he does like and buckling down to get the work he's not crazy about done. If he is not invested in being a good student, on his own, then it won't last no matter how hard YOU try.

1 mom found this helpful
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T.B.

answers from Los Angeles on

None of this is appropriate. I agree with others that you need to find a new tutor preferably one that comes to your house. You need to be available to be sure your son is being treated with respect and in an environment condusive to learning. Good luck.

R.H.

answers from Austin on

You sure seem to love to fire folk. Is your son ever to blame on any if this?

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