What would be the most logical procedure for hiring a tutor, based on the passage provided?
When faced with a difficult academic task, many students turn to tutors for assistance. Tutors range widely in specialty and cost, including tutors who focus exclusively on reading, and others who work in broad categories, such as the sciences. When seeking a tutor, however, realize that the use of specialists may incur additional fees or charges. Tutors may be found in a variety of ways, including through local school recommendations and online searches. When selecting a tutor, consider establishing a trial period to ensure personality types mesh well and services deliver what they promise.
Determine your student’s need for a tutor, place an ad on social media seeking a tutor specialized in your student’s area of need, set up an initial meeting with the tutor and gather information necessary to run a background check on this potential hire, negotiate a price and determine when tutoring should begin, contact the school and let them know you’ve hired a tutor.
Conduct an online search for people interested in tutoring, contact a potential tutor and negotiate a price, schedule a meeting with the tutor so they can meet your student and decide if they want the job, check with the tutor’s school to make sure the tutor is a student in good standing or has successfully graduated.
Select a tutor based on recommendations from coworkers, conduct phone interviews with potential candidates, schedule in-person interviews so you can see what the person looks like, conduct a background check, hire the most qualified candidate, determine price and schedule.
Ask the student’s school and other parents for a recommendation, contact several tutors and conduct phone interviews with each, ask potential tutors for references you can contact to discuss their work, set up an initial meeting for your student and the tutor to discuss goals and determine how well they work together, hire the tutor and plan a schedule of days and times for tutoring.
Be alert for words like better, best, more, most/mostly, main/mainly, major/majority, higher/highest, greater/greatest, biggest, largest, preferred, ideal/ideally, closest, special, especially critical, predominantly, and primary/primarily in questions. They indicate that there might be other answers that could work, but the correct answer is the one that is the best of the choices given.
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