February 9, 2012

Getting Committed Tutors From a Singapore Home Tuition Agency

Getting Committed Tutors From a Singapore Home Tuition Agency

In Singapore, many parents and students want only committed tutors from tuition agencies. However, as much as they would like to recommend committed tutors , they cannot guarantee that all their tutors will be 100% committed due to various difficulties and reasons. From our past experience, below are some of the factors that may affect the suitability and commitment of the tutors :

 

Location
If a tutor’s student lives near his house, the tutor may settle for a lower tuition fee and may be more committed since he is able to cut down on travelling time and thus save on transportation fees.
It is therefore beneficial for a parent to provide a tuition agency with his or her postal code and/or detailed address, so that the tuition agency can find tutors as near to the parent’s residence as possible.

Salary
A tutor’s salary may not be the most important of all, but it is significant.
Tutors who take up a low-paying assignment may not commit for a long period. A tuition rate that is -15 less than the market rate may be acceptable to a tutor. However, if a parent pays about less than the market rate, the tutor will most likely not commit for long. He or she may even feel unmotivated towards teaching as well.

It is well known that teaching is a respected profession; and MOE teachers nowadays are well paid by the ministry. So our advice to parents is that: give the tutors out there the rewards they deserve. The popular saying “Good stuff comes at a price” applies in this case as well.

Difficult Students
Usually, tutors want to commit their time to teach students who are keen to learn and improve. Moreover, tutors may not be able to help students who don’t wish to help themselves. It takes two hands to clap. So before a parent requests for a change of tutor, he or she should find out whether his child is keen to learn from the child’s tutor in the first place. In certain cases, it may not be the tutor’s fault at all when there is no academic improvement.
So, when a parent request for a tutor from a tuition agency, letting the agency know the character of the child may help the agency in finding the right tutor.

Peter Schiff: Why College Tuition Is So Expensive peterschiff.tk for more http for more peterschiff.tk for more http for more

Meridian Management Announces New Tuition Refund Insurance Product






Home




News Center




Blog



Login











Front Page


Arts


Business


Education


Environment


Government


Industry


Lifestyle


Sports


Tech

OtherAutomotiveComputerEventsHealthHome and FamilyLegal / LawMediaMiscellaneousOpinion / EditorialPodcastingScienceSociety









rss.gif
RSS


E-mail Newsletters


Put PRWeb on your site












Meridian Management Announces New Tuition Refund Insurance Product
TuitionProtect, powered by Meridian Management Group, LLC, a leading developer of specialty health insurance related products and services, in partnership with the Education Security Division of the Expense Management Association, is pleased to announce a unique tuition refund insurance product for students who are enrolled in a college, university or trade school.






Share ThisShareThis



Email ContactEmail



PDF VersionPDF



Printer Friendly VersionPrint






Quote startThe member can also select the appropriate benefit level based on how much tuition insurance protection they need. Most other tuition refund plans require the student to be enrolled at a participating school, and purchase an amount based on a full year of tuition in advance. The ESD/EMA membership is payable in affordable monthly payments for as long as desired.Quote end

Oradell, NJ (PRWEB) April 24, 2009

With the high cost of tuition and the uncertainty in today’s economic markets, parents and students have more financial concerns than ever. TuitionProtect, powered by Meridian Management Group, LLC, a leading developer of specialty health insurance related products and services, in partnership with the Education Security Division of the Expense Management Association, is pleased to announce a unique tuition refund insurance product for students who are enrolled in a college, university or trade school. TuitionProtect has been designed to provide tuition insurance benefits to college students in the event the student has to withdraw from school as a result of an accident or illness. Students who enroll in the Association will have the ability to select from ,000 to ,000 of tuition protection coverage per term of classes. Also included in the plan coverage is ,000 of Accidental Death Insurance.

“As a member of the ESD/EMA the student will receive the Tuition Protect Plan without the school having to be the plan sponsor or policyholder,” says Kevin Leys, President of Meridian. “The member can also select the appropriate benefit level based on how much tuition insurance protection they need. Most other tuition refund plans require the student to be enrolled at a participating school, and purchase an amount based on a full year of tuition in advance. The ESD/EMA membership is payable in affordable monthly payments for as long as desired.”

The benefit paid will be the “unreimbursed portion of tuition” which means up to 100% of the paid tuition, room and board and other eligible fees for the term of classes- including tuition paid through loans, grants or scholarships-less any refund or credit due the covered student from the education institution. (The benefit does not include off-campus housing, fraternity or sorority fees or other non-school sponsored fees.)

Association members also receive many valuable benefits and services relating to their education experience with the goal being to promote the health and financial wellness of the college student. Featured membership services provided to all association members include: Emergency Travel Assistance Services, ID Theft Resolution Services, Emergency Roadside Assistance Services and an interactive wellness website resource.

For additional information, visit the TuitionProtect website at www.tuitionprotect.com.

###





Share:


























Contact



Ginny Simon

Project Marketing, Inc.
610-889-2036
Email





Past News Releases

Group RssSubscribe













PRWeb Home


News Center



We’re here to help.

Call 1-866-640-6397




Twitter


LinkedIn


Facebook





Why PRWeb


How It Works


Who Uses It


Pricing


Learning


Blog


About Vocus


Contact Us


Partners


Subscribe to News


Terms of Service


Privacy Policy


Copyright


Site Map



upshot-50.gifupshot-50.gifcodie-2009.gif







Vocus©Copyright 1997-2009, Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Vocus, PRWeb and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.







Comments

  1. biohax says:

    for every dollar increase in federal loans, universities raise their tuition by 97 cents.

  2. aviomaster says:

    alitou001 — everyone is saying how capitalism is good … BUT look at Mexico they are capitalist they have few TOP ten billionaires …. and the people there are DIRT poor …

  3. JunkOnVideo says:

    oh, sure, waiters make so much money #FAIL

  4. alitou001 says:

    Don’t bother to go college if you are living in a capitalism country,at least your parents are rich !!

  5. rustyscrapper says:

    @takla3210 tried it brah. Canada revenue assumed the debt then started garnishing it off my Ei cheques. EI is only 55% of your income and they took another 50 so I was getting 27.5% of my income. Why unemployed??? 2 years couldnt find a job. Now I work a labor job where education means absolutely nothing. Turns out the 2 year course I took means nothing and I need at least 3 more years co-op, or the 5 year add on to be meaningful to any decent employer because EVERYONE ELSE has it!

  6. fathead8489 says:

    Community colleges are still dirt cheap. Unfortunately they don’t offer many programs but you can still get two years out of them with core classes that can transfer to a better college and cut out two years of insanely high tuition.

    That said I agree that college is way to expensive. Also the bigger problem is what I once heard described as “degree inflation” where jobs that otherwise would never ask or require a degree, now do simply, because there are so many degrees in the workforce.

  7. SpazzzDog says:

    bwahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!

  8. takadi says:

    College is a fucking scam

  9. aegisforex says:

    Well, you and your business partners are the exception, not the rule. How many of your college educated friends actually have a degree in something useful like accounting, engineering, or nursing? I don’t know of any college educated accountants, engineers, or nurses who don’t make at least $30k to start. Try applying for one of those jobs without a degree. Your resume won’t make it to the HR-bot’s desk.

  10. vociti says:

    @aegisforex Me and all my business partners are non-college educated and very successful. However, several of my friends that do have college degrees from big schools barely make 30k a year and still have student debt. The lucky ones maybe make 50k. The whole system is backwards.

  11. aegisforex says:

    I hope you got into a Top 25 law school. Otherwise you’re wasting your time/money.

  12. lakid87 says:

    gonna cost me approx. 120k to go thru law school…pinche pavosos

  13. TenderTrap86 says:

    - America will be in a world of sh*t in 20 years-

    America is in a world of shit right now. Are you blind? Do you really think that this economy has already had a full rebound and now we can get back to “normal”?

    Peter Schiff talked about how the economy would collapse two years before the warning signs even popped up in 2007. People actually laughed in his face. Now he’s saying the govt. is making it exponentially worse and people are still deaf. Nobody saw it coming? Yeah, right.

  14. remmyjable says:

    aegis is correct. If you eliminate education spending, America will be in a world of sh*t in 20 years. You sound like a dumbass teabagger. Go suck Ron Paul’s cock.

  15. TenderTrap86 says:

    Tuition rates are too high anywhere and they keep rising. They will come back down. It’s another bubble waiting to burst.

    Don’t forget that even with all the inflation this country has experienced in the last decade, Americans are still making less money in dollar terms than they were in 2000. How is anybody supposed to keep up? Even at a public university. It will cost $500,000 on average to put one kid through school by 2020.

  16. TenderTrap86 says:

    Why shouldn’t manufacturing and agricultural jobs come back to America? Do you know why China is now the second largest economy in the world? It’s the world industrial giant.

    Who says that if you don’t have a college degree you’ll end up working at Burger King for minimum? I know plenty of people without them and they probably make more than you do.

    And the reason there are cesspool cities like Detroit, Cleveland or Pittsburgh is because their manufacturing jobs went overseas in the 70′s.

  17. TenderTrap86 says:

    But where does the money come from for a public univeristy grant, loan, lottery etc.? It comes from taxes. Also, whenever you take on any debt whether it’s a mortgage or a student loan, the money supply is expanded and inflation ensues. It’s a hidden tax. Look at the Dow priced in dollars compared to the Dow priced in gold, silver, copper, oil, iron ore, etc.. It’s keeps plunging. Public university are paid for in taxes. Hence “public university”.

  18. aegisforex says:

    “Should people who aren’t going to school have to pay for the ones that are?”

    Those who aren’t attending school will slowly be filtered out of the system. If you think you’ll enjoy working at Burger King for minimum wage until you die, don’t go to school. But don’t bitch and moan that you’re paying for socialized education when public universities are reasonably priced and Pell Grants are easy to obtain if you’re 24+. A large chunk of that money comes from lottery proceeds anyway. Big deal.

  19. aegisforex says:

    The tuition rate at public universities is not “too high”. It’s very reasonably priced. Private universities with lax admission stands, especially for-profit schools like University of Phoenix, are the real issue.

  20. aegisforex says:

    The agriculture and manufacturing jobs aren’t coming back to America nor should they. If you’re a Luddite, move to Asia or become Amish. You need to go to school and learn a real skill.

  21. aegisforex says:

    “It’s not free! You’re paying for it. Oops! I’m sorry. Everybody’s paying for it! Should people who aren’t going to school have to pay for the ones that are?”

    You knew what I meant. Of course we all pay for it, but the FAFSA system is broken and needs to be overhauled. You also drive on socialized roads and are protected by socialized firefighters and socialized police. Should we privatize them as well?

  22. TenderTrap86 says:

    -It should be free like it is in Europe and most nations in the developed world-

    It’s not free! You’re paying for it. Oops! I’m sorry. Everybody’s paying for it! Should people who aren’t going to school have to pay for the ones that are?

  23. TenderTrap86 says:

    The US has to bring back manufacturing and agricultural jobs if we want to have a sustainable economy.

    The government doesn’t have to subsidize education. Education ought to be fully privatized. No more taxing us for mediocre public school education and free lunches. Some kids come out of high school and can barely read and they’re garaunteed a student loan by the government to go to college. Let the free market take over instead of more government and more taxes.

  24. TenderTrap86 says:

    Costs would be cut if we got back to a real economy. It used to be that a man could get a job working in a factory and have enough money to buy a house and raise a few kids. Now that’s impossible due to the inflationary, phony economic system that’s been in place for almost 40 years. Now it takes two college educated people to accumulate enough wealth to equal what that man earned in the 70′s. Prices are out of control. Why? Horrible economic policy.

  25. TenderTrap86 says:

    It’s still too high. Stop thinking “It’s not high in terms of …”. It’s just too high and it needs to come down.

  26. Home tutor says:

    I think that the tuition rate at public universities is not too high…Its all depend upon you….its not true that if you are living in capitalism country, than your parents are rich !!every capitalism country not having too much money…

Powered by Yahoo! Answers