Hiring Guide
The difference between a language tutor who helps you reach genuine fluency and one who keeps you busy is method. Too many learners spend years in tutoring sessions without moving beyond basic conversation because their tutor lacks a structured approach to vocabulary acquisition, grammar internalization, and speaking automaticity. This guide helps you find a tutor who can actually move the needle — whether you're learning for travel, work, a relationship, or long-term residency.
Defines proficiency standards for language teachers and learners — the ACTFL scale is used to benchmark language ability in the US.
The international standard for measuring language proficiency from A1 (beginner) to C2 (mastery) — helps you identify your level and set goals.
Comprehensive database of world languages — useful context for understanding the language you're learning and its global reach.
Use these in an intro call or first session to quickly assess fit and expertise.
1.What method do you use to build vocabulary, and how will you structure our sessions?
Why it matters: Reveals whether they have a coherent plan or are improvising week to week. Strong tutors can describe their system for building retention.
2.How do you approach teaching grammar — rules first, or in context through usage?
Why it matters: Context-first grammar instruction leads to faster internalization. This question reveals their pedagogical approach.
3.How quickly do learners at my level typically reach [your specific goal] with your tutoring?
Why it matters: Sets realistic expectations and reveals whether they've actually helped learners achieve similar goals — not just conducted sessions.
4.What will you prioritize in our sessions to make the most progress toward my goal?
Why it matters: A tutor with a plan will have a clear answer. Vague responses suggest they treat all sessions the same regardless of the learner's goal.
5.How do you recommend I study between sessions to reinforce what we cover?
Why it matters: Language acquisition happens between sessions, not just during them. Good tutors give you a system for independent practice.
Your tutor will start by understanding your current level, learning style, and specific goals. Sessions are flexible — whether you prefer structured grammar lessons, conversation practice, reading and writing, or a mix. A good language tutor adapts their approach as you improve, keeping lessons challenging and engaging at every stage.