Math Tutoring in
Indianapolis!
Professional, 18-year math
tutor!
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Do you live in the
Indianapolis Area?* |
*Even if you don't, please keep reading! The math success
message is universal!
If you don't live in Indy,
but need some immediate help, click here.
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Do you go to one of these High
Schools? |
Do you need help in any of these
classes? |
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Arlington |
Center Grove
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Lawrence North
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Plainfield |
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Arsenal Tech
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Chatard
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Lebanon
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Roncalli |
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Avon |
Cloverdale
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Lutheran
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Scecina
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Beech Grove
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Danville
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Manual |
Southport
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Ben Davis
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Decatur
Central |
Monrovia
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Speedway
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Brebeuf
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Eminence |
Mooresville
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Tri-West
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Broad Ripple |
Greenwood
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Noblesville
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University
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Brownsburg
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Hamilton
Heights |
North Central |
Warren
Central |
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Cardinal Ritter
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Hamilton SE |
Northwest
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Western Boone |
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Carmel
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Heritage
Christian |
Park-Tudor
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Westfield
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Cascade |
Indiana
Deaf |
Perry
Meridian |
Whiteland
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Cathedral
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Lawrence
Central |
Pike |
Zionsville
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Any other High School (or
college!) in Central Indiana?
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Pre-Algebra First-Year Algebra Second-Year
Algebra College Algebra Business Math Geometry College
Algebra Trigonometry Pre-Calculus Calculus SAT (either part) Other Math?
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Would you like to have math explained to
you in English?
Do you wish your teacher would explain things in a way that you can
understand?
Are you making the grades at the high level you feel you really
deserve?
Has big brother/friend/mom/dad/another teacher/study group not
helped as much as you'd like?
Have you been "beaten down" to the point where
you now actually HATE math?
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Please, even if you never
contact me, at least read what I have to tell you about success in
math! |
It's truly amazing to me how many otherwise good students, who really CARE
about their grades and WANT to do well in all their subjects, just simply have
the worst time of their whole lives in math class!
That's just not how it has to be...
I've been tutoring in the Indianapolis area for 18 years, and I
think I can safely say "I've seen it all." I've answered the "Why do I have to
learn this stuff?" question more times than I can remember, and I've heard "Why
doesn't my teacher explain it that way?" just about as many times. It's not the
teacher's fault, though! I know it's hard to believe, but there truly are
not very many people out there teaching who've set it as their main
professional goal to intentionally confuse and frustrate kids! Maybe that's what
you feel like is happening to you, but there is another explanation: There are
quite a few people who simply don't learn well in a classroom environment. It's
really that simple! Learning is a combination of a lot of things, and what you
do in class is just the tip of the iceberg. Some people don't need to be in a
class at all to learn. Some people need more repetition than others. Some people
need to be talked to a little slower, and have it repeated until they "get it".
Some people need to go faster, so they're not bored. Some people learn by
seeing, some by hearing, some by doing. Pick any group of 25 people, and you'll
find 25 different learning styles! Part of tutoring is working with you to find
out exactly what's going to work for you, and there's just no place to
hide when you're working with someone who's going to see it in your eyes
when you understand it, and when you don't. In fact, you probably don't even
know what your own individual learning style is. And if you do, you may
have discovered that a classroom is not the optimal situation for you. The
classroom is just one aspect of learning, but if you're considering getting a
tutor, then there's probably a lot more to it than that for you. If you're
willing to do whatever it takes to find out what will work for you, and then
do it, then tutoring will be a fantastic resource for you to use!
What I do
I help you find what works
for you.
Everybody's good at something. Maybe for you it's music, or
acting, or sports, or reading, I don't know. But there's something you're
successful at, and I guarantee you that the things you do to be successful at
that will work for you in math, as well. Remember your coach telling you (over
and over and over...) that you'll play the way you practice? Well, how you'll do
on a test is pretty closely related to how seriously you take doing and
understanding your homework. And why do you have to practice all those
scales, or swim laps till you're beyond exhausted? Well, people who are really
good at music and triathlons have almost universally been found to have
done their scales and their laps to a point most people would consider neurotic.
If successful people did it, and it worked for them, then guess what? A
version of that work ethic will work for you! We just have to find a good
math-practice analogy, and the right ways of thinking that you can grab on to,
and then practice them daily. Perfect practice makes perfect, and doing homework
the wrong way only reinforces the wrong things.
I think out
loud.
Sometimes, it can look like your teacher does problems by magic.
They skip little steps here and there, and they lose you about a third of the
way through their explanation. That turns everything else they're saying into
that WAH-WAH-WAH stuff from Charlie Brown, and it's all over. With some math
subjects, the only way to "teach" it is to show you the things that someone who
already knows how to do it thinks about while they're doing it. This can make a
five-second problem take ten minutes to work through, but if you don't know how
to think, then how will you ever get it as easily as they do? And conversely, if
you DO get the chance to see, step by step, just exactly what's going on behind
that "magic" thought process, and then you try it, you'll see how easy it really
can be!
I know how to do the problems.
Of course, that seems
like it would be a given. Unfortunately, there are a lot of people who help
students with math who do not have every single section of every single chapter
of every single subject absolutely under their command in fifteen different
ways. If a tutor doesn't have that, how can they instantly pick the right
way (or the right five ways) to explain something to you? How do they know how
what you're doing right now will affect what you're going to do two or three
years from now? How will they read the non-verbal feedback they're getting from
you, to KNOW that you're getting it or not, if more than 5% of their brain is
tied up with how to do a problem? Tutoring is NOT knowing how to do
the problems, it's making sure YOU do when you leave.
I speak
English, not math.
Well, of course, I can "speak math", if I
thought it would work. But if you already "spoke" math, you'd have understood it
in class, and you wouldn't be looking for a tutor, would you? I see math as a
language that you need to become as fluent in as you can be. But your native
language is English, right? So, that's what we speak. That glazed look in most
math students' eyes is all the proof the teacher should need that they're not
being talked to in a language they understand. You can be sure that the amount
of "math" I speak to you is only going to increase as your fluency level
increases.
I tell you what's critical to know, and where the "tricks"
and pitfalls are.
Let's face it. There are some things that you really
won't use very much after you take the test on them. But then, there are things
that you'll use every single day of your mathematical life. There are sections
where the teacher can throw so many "trick" questions at you, you'd better know
what the rules are, and what you are and are not allowed to do. There are tests
that are so long that no one gets done, because the teacher was trying to test
how efficiently people could do the problems. For that, you need to have
understood and practiced the "tricks" until you mastered them! But did
you know that ahead of time? The teacher probably said it, but maybe you didn't
hear it. Oops. As one who used to write the same kinds of tests, I can tell you
just what you need to know, what you can figure out as you go, what you need to
have memorized, and what you need to be rock-solid fluent at! I can tell you the
kinds of things to watch out for, because they'll be the "gotcha"s on the test!
I call it "street-wise" math....
I do everything in my power to be
positive, non-threatening and stress-free.
While I certainly do want you
to learn the stuff, prepare the right way and get much more practice than you'd
probably like to, I am about the most laid-back teacher (in presentation style)
that you'll ever have. Yeah, I want you to watch your signs, and do every step
right, and think the right way, and work to the best of your ability, but we can
get that done by just sitting down and doing some math together. No one's born
knowing anything, so the only thing I see wrong with not understanding something
is if you give up trying. Even though it's not always easy, the
deal will always be that if you don't give up, neither will I.
I show
you the right way to think.
In Calculus, the books are just plain
not written in English. In Trig, they always seem to teach things "the hard
way". In Geometry, proofs and "always-sometimes-never" problems always seem to
be the sticking point for most people. In Algebra, it's those darned word
problems. Getting past these problems kind of goes along with my "thinking out
loud" strategy, but there's more. I see tutoring, ultimately, as mentoring a
person towards greater fluency in math, acting as a role model in everything,
from the way you organize your homework folder, to how you plan a Geometry
Proof, to which Trig identities you MUST know, to how you read a formula out
loud, to the order that you write things when you're completing the square or
factoring the sum of two cubes, to keeping the promises and commitments you make
to yourself, to crossing your "z"s so they don't look like "2"s, just
everything. No place to hide, if you just insist on doing things in a way that
won't be helpful. Not that there's only one way to do things, but that there are
pitfalls in doing anything other than the way that fluent people have found to
be useful. Kind of like why we've all decided it's a pretty good idea to stop
for red lights, and a bad idea to put makeup on while driving through a school
zone....
What I don't do
I don't
tutor in groups or pairs or "study sessions" (except for a
"night-before-the-final" review session I've done a couple of times in the
past).
The idea of tutoring is that it's one-on-one. I can have
five sessions with five different people on the exact same review sheet
(even if they're in the same class with the same teacher!), and
they will be five completely different experiences. Sure, I can make more money
by seeing multiple people at once, but it's not anywhere near as effective.
You'll sense that as we're doing it, and you'll know it once you leave.
Your friends can have their own hour if they want.
I don't tutor by
telephone, Internet, or e-mail.
Same deal. If I can't see your eyes, and
watch you write, then I can't tell if you're really getting it. The only time I
make an exception to this is to give a follow-up explanation for something we've
already been working on, or to help with a problem for you if you're having
trouble the night before a test, and we don't have time to get together before
you need to have an important question answered. (In that case, I have all the
math-writing software to make sure I can write all the symbols in correct math
style.)
Of course, having said that, I'll tell you that if
you've stumbled across this site, and live in Anchorage, and need help with a
problem, I won't tell you I won't help you with it. Just e-mail
me and we'll figure it out. Of course, I can't really be
your "tutor" at that point, but I sure won't leave you high and dry the night
before a test. I would appreciate your paying a little something for my
time, though. :-) And no, ...
I don't do your homework
for you.
I will do sample problems to help teach you things, and to show
examples of things to watch out for, but I'm not there to do your homework for
you, or to watch you plow through it because you "didn't have time" before
seeing me. That just doesn't help anybody. You do homework for one reason, and
that's as practice to help you learn the skills you need to succeed at your
test, and to give you the foundation you need to learn the next level of stuff.
If anything, I'll ask you to practice more than the teacher assigns. But
I'll also tell you why that'll help, and I won't let you waste your time
by practicing it wrong. And no, the grade your teacher gives you for doing your
homework is not the main reason you do it! (Though it is the main reason
you should try everything in your power never to not do it!)
I
don't let you get by with making careless mistakes, or being sloppy in your
thinking.
You play the way you practice, and if you're going to take the
time to practice, you might as well do it right to get the most benefit.
Ignoring details is what gets you in trouble in math, but the upside of having
to pay such attention to details is that if you follow all the rules, and do
everything right along the way, then (as long as you have your teacher's
blessing,) you're allowed to do anything you want, and you will get the
right answer. (Life isn't always like that, but math is!) The catch is, you have
to follow all the rules, and do everything right along the way! So, we practice
doing that. But, we can't ever undermine what your teacher expects of you, so
there'll be no using of non-teacher-accepted "short cuts". You can't skip steps,
or go faster than your ability to do the problems consistently
correctly allows. And no fair doing anything unless you can tell me
why you're doing it. If you don't know why, then that's something for us
to talk about. But you can be sure that in understanding and doing math
problems, the "why" is just as important as the "how"!
I don't talk
down to you, or "go on anyway" if you don't understand something.
This
one should be obvious. I don't like lecturing at people, I like just doing math,
explaining as we go, and bringing you along with me. In class, some kids are
always going to get left behind, and some are always going to be bored. That's
terrible, but it's just unfortunately the way it is. Many teachers have many
techniques to try and minimize this, but whenever you have more than one person
you're teaching, you're going to find variances in the way you have to present.
With tutoring, we can go back and review adding fractions or the multiplication
tables during a trig lesson if we have to, and there's not one person
who's going to be bored by it. You get the attention you need to make sure you
understand it, or at least, to know what you need to work on at
home!
What I ask of you
Come
prepared
Book, paper, pencil, assignment, old tests, review sheets - you
know the drill. But even more than that, I ask you to try your best to know
what'll help you get the most out of your session. Be organized, so you can find
things without having to dig. (That's part of the whole "good student" thing.)
Was there a topic you just plain didn't understand? Do you have a test coming
up? Do you even know when your next test is? Do you have problems from your last
quiz that you missed, and want to go over? Do you need help with some homework
you tried but couldn't do? Have you done all the problems you could do
already? If you just took a test, do you know what topic you'll be covering next
(so we can preview it)? Did you think to ask your teacher? I'm not there in
class with you, and I can't possibly know what your assignment is, if you don't.
But if I can see your syllabus, and your notes from class, then I'll know almost
instantly the things your teacher emphasized, the things I don't have to waste
your time worrying about, and whether or not you're at the level of
understanding I'd expect from someone whose test is only x days away. How
I go about conducting a session from the first minute greatly depends on
these things, so any time I spend having to gently pry information out of you is
time we could've spent filling holes in the knowledge base. Keep a "things I
need to ask my tutor" list through the week, and hit me with it when you sit
down. You can literally bring me anything, and I will work a solid, productive
session out of it. We can still be productive even if you're not prepared, but
remember: We're trying to find problems and fix them. Time spent finding
problems can be useful, but it takes away from time we can spend fixing. I can
find all the holes in your knowledge by watching you do problems, talking to you
about them, and using my experience to know what things might be sore spots for
you. But that's not the best substitute for your taking the initiative in
"knowing what you don't know". In other words, do the best you can to help make
sure our time is able to be spent as productively as possible!
Don't
cancel at the last minute
Please, if you have to cancel, then try to give
me a couple of days notice so I can juggle the old schedule, or maybe get
someone else in your time spot. Usually, I have to ask that you pay for a
session that you cancel at the last minute, but it's not because I'm trying to
punish you. I really do spend a lot of time and effort in getting my schedule
lined up, and when I get a last-minute cancellation, I usually have to end up
sitting and doing nothing for an hour. That's time I'm not at home with my
family, because I've already promised it to you. And you've promised to make the
commitment to do the best job you can do in trying to become the best student
you can be. Keeping that promise to yourself is the simplest thing you can do to
ensure that we have the chance to get you to succeed. So, please, know what your
schedule is to the best of your ability (that's part of the whole "good student"
thing, too), make an appointment you know you can keep, remember what it is,
keep it, and then we can start worrying about math!
Do your
best
If you've decided you need a tutor, then that's all I need to hear
to know that you're motivated to do well. If you want to learn, then there's
nothing that you can't learn. It's really that simple. A tutor will be only one
of many tools you use to reach your goals, but it will be a very valuable tool
for you.
A note on "special needs" kids
About Me
First, the boring stuff: I have a B.S. in Math from Purdue University, with
minors in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering. I also have a grade 7-12
Teacher's License for math, and was a traditional classroom math teacher in High
School and College before leaving for Industry. I speak German and Spanish, am a
professional-level musician, an instrument-rated private pilot, and have
traveled the world chasing total eclipses. I'm married with three kids, and live
way out in the country, just west of Indianapolis.
I tutor at libraries,
at people's houses, at fast-food restaurants, just wherever and whenever is
convenient. Most of my students live on the north side, so that's where I do
most of my tutoring. But I also see people on the west side, northwest,
southwest, northeast, just wherever. I see quite a few people every week, so I
usually try to schedule times for us to meet that are somewhat consistent, but
always subject to week-to-week fluctuations to accommodate things that come up.
I usually see most of my students on the weekends, but of course, after I get
off work through the week is fine too. We usually meet for an hour at a time,
though I do see some people for a half hour.
I tutor throughout the
school year, and try to stay somewhat busy in the summer. I can introduce an
entire course with a few meetings during the summer, and give you that "head
start" into the class that will make a big difference when the teacher is
explaining the subject for (as far as you're concerned) the second
time!
The most important thing is that I try to do what you need, when
you need it. I've seen some people ONE TIME only, right before a big Calculus
test they just wanted to make sure they got an A+ on. Other people, I've seen on
a weekly basis for all four years of high school, mentoring them and being that
fluent math role-model they needed to get them through. (Then, it was their
little brother's or sister's turn!)
Whatever your situation, you can be
sure that we can work through it, and you can achieve up to your
fullest potential. It may not be easy, but then, if it were, that diploma or
degree you get at the end wouldn't be worth much, would it? If you go to one of
the above-listed schools, I may already be on your Guidance Counselor's math
tutor list. Call or e-mail me, and we'll get something going right away. (If I'm not on their list, or if you just want
to get hold of me right away, then please e-mail me with your phone number, and
I'll call you. I just prefer that my home phone number not be openly published
on the Internet....)
Most
importantly...
Thanks, and good luck in
school!
Update Nov 2007:
On a whim, I decided to
take the SAT. No prep, no time to think about it, just sign up and take it two
weeks later. Partly to see how I'd do, partly to be able to relate to what the
kids have to go through, and partly to help me better prepare them for the
questions they'll face. I'd hoped to ace the math, and at least show well in the
English. Well, I'm happy to say that I got a 2350 out of 2400! (800 Math / 800
Writing / 750 Critical Reading). I then took the Math Level 1 and Level 2 tests,
and got 800s on both of them. The experience really opened my eyes to what high
school kids have to go through (that Level 2 test is extremely
challenging), and hopefully will help me better prepare the kids that are going
to be going through it themselves.
© 2008 Dan
McGlaun
(dan@mcglaun.com)