Spending on a Tutor Could Save Your Finances

| July 30, 2013

English: Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (Feb. 22, 2005) ...

We’ve all been told over and over that a good education is the foundation to the future. We know this to be true. Do well in school to get into a good college, all so that you can get a better job and provide a better life for yourself and family. The question this creates is when this “good education” should start. Should you be applying your children to expensive preschools and private elementary schools? Should you move to be in the best school districts? What if these options aren’t possible? There are so many questions, but let’s focus on just one: Will spending more on education now save money in the future?

The simple answer is yes, but this begs the question, why? The answer again is simple: finance. Plain and simple, kids are expensive. Adding another expense seems like a bit of a stretch, but not when you look at it from the finance point. For example, if a child is struggling in elementary school with reading, if the problem isn’t corrected, it will cost more in the long run. A kindergartner who isn’t picking up the alphabet is going to have troubles with sight words and then putting it all together for reading. If someone doesn’t catch the issues quick enough, the child may have to repeat grade levels. Each grade the child passed—and shouldn’t have—is a waste of supplies, time, and money.

Investing in a Tutor

Now, in the same scenario, what would happen if the parents got a tutor for their child as soon as the problem was addressed? In that time, the youngster would have caught up and probably surpassed a lot of his/her classmates. Sometimes, as children are learning something new, they just need a little extra time and attention that a teacher isn’t always able to provide in a classroom setting. A tutor can focus on just the subjects a student struggles with, thereby, helping to make a more rounded student.

How This Investment Can Help Your Finances

In some schools, when students do poorly they can re-take tests or classes to improve their score. Colleges allow this too, and guess what, it costs money. Retaking classes means spending more time in college, and therefore, paying for it. Having a tutor to help your child through difficult classes the first time, helps him/her create good study habits that will continue to work in the future. This will save money when none of the college courses are repeated.

Grades Matter

Grades don’t always seem like they mean anything, but the future education of your child does depend on them. Higher marks, higher test scores open doors to higher education. That’s not to say that someone with poor grades can’t get into college—they can. But those with the higher marks can get into the top tier of schools. You want your child to attend Harvard or Yale, Duke or Stanford? These are schools that only take the top students.

Tutoring when your child is young can help set the foundation for these top schools. The same can be said for standardized tests. Besides GPA (grade point average), tests like the SAT and ACT can mean the difference in being able to pay for college. Many scholarships are based on the scores of these tests. The higher the score, the more money the student will receive.

Finance and education don’t always seem to go together, but they do. Education sets the basis for the future. Finance pays for the future. College graduates, especially from the top tier of schools, are sought after in the job market. Many leave school with employment already set. Finding a job these days is hard enough. Giving a children the leg-up they needs with tutoring at the start of the struggle, gives them a better chance to finance their future.

Author Bio

Ryan Ayers is a writer who creates informative articles in relation to education. In this article, he explains the long term financial benefits of a tutor and aims to encourage further study through UNE Masters of Education Programs .

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Category: Family Finances

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