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Private High School English Tutors

Admittedly, this is not a skill that is required of all English students when you are in high school, so this may not apply to you. In my high school, you had the choice toward your junior and senior year of bumping up to honors English or even AP English. <br>https://premiertutoring.com/private-english-k-8-tutoring/

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Private High School English Tutors

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  1. Private High School English Tutors

  2. High school English was the single most difficult class for me. There is something about the fact that everything is so subjective that just makes it an annoyance. I was never one to need private K-8 English tutors, but that definitely changed when I got to high school. There are a few things that step up the difficulty level and make English a bit more complicated. Here is an overview of some of the stuff that you should target with private high school level English tutors.

  3. Annotation Admittedly, this is not a skill that is required of all English students when you are in high school, so this may not apply to you. In my high school, you had the choice toward your junior and senior year of bumping up to honors English or even AP English. If I remember right, it was AP English that emphasized annotations. Now, I am not someone who likes writing in a book’s margins and to dog-ear a page looks so sloppy to me that my OCD kicks in and tells me that I need to stop, but these are the essential skills with annotation. The point is that you are taking note of things that strike you as you go, so you can go back to those points later when needed. If you look at a high school English teacher’s copy of the same book that you are reading, you might notice that they have deeply annotated their copy to help guide the class. As much as you note what you feel is right, knowing what is important and what is not takes practice and that is something that you can learn with a tutor. You might even bump up to private college level English tutors because they tend to have more experience with annotation.

  4. Shakespeare Another of the most difficult parts of English class is Shakespeare. As much as people say that his works were written in English, the language is so old fashioned and out of date that it is almost impossible to understand. I would have to read and reread over and over to make sure that I understood what was being said. Only when I was about to graduate did I find No Fear Shakespeare, which is a service provided by Spark Notes that, instead of summarizing like they usually do, takes advantage of the lapsed copyrights on Shakespeare’s work to publish the full play, but translated into modern English. It is a life saver that I did not find until way too late.

  5. Research Papers and Citations Finally, high school brings a new set of challenges when it comes to research papers. At the lower levels, you are just learning how to write and how to structure your ideas, but you are not quite ready to get into citing your sources. Proper attribution is key in this day and age, so you need to learn how to create a citations page and cite sources throughout your writing. MLA, APA, and Chicago formats are all things you might need to know. Source: https://medium.com/@louilitzau/private-high-school-english-tutors-d45278be886

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