In my attempts to nurture job skills, I'm looking into many opportunities. Recently, I have volunteered as an English tutor for non-native speakers. I'm mostly grading homework, but also I am making practice tests up for problem areas. I have already noticed certain difficulties my students have--punctuation, capitalization, when to use the word "a", and gerunds. I also notice there are certain letters they have difficulty in pronouncing.
I would appreciate any advice from people who have learned to speak English as a second language, or anyone who has taught them. I'm open to advice from other people too if there is something useful you think you can tell me. I am interested in what was particularly difficult in learning English as far as grammar rules of the language, and what letters were hard to pronounce for you. What was helpful in learning English? Also, if you can think of any common idioms in the language that perplexed you, that could be useful. Was there anything that made you feel that your teachers didn't understand that made it difficult for you to learn? (for instance, our facial muscles may not be able to pronounce words a certain way...for instance, I can't trill Spanish double r's...so I have to resort pronouncing the words with an "rdr"...which isn't perfect but makes me understood). Any cultural problems you've encountered is worth mentioning as well.
I will be tutoring students from all over the world, but for the moment the majority of them seem to be from India. If there are any particulars about this country you think will help me, I'd appreciate it.
Mainly, I welcome all advice that will help me do my job. If I do it well, not only will I help other people, but the company will start paying me...and at the risk of sounding like a capitalist American, I'd like that.


, I'd like that.
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We mostly utter the sounds as we can pull them out of our mouths
To sum up, it's apparently possible to acquire the trilling ability, through the proper training method and practice.
I wish you a very nice salary as a teacher
and the best of lucks
Language is very important, and sadly it is one subject that often has deplorable teachers. It is unfortunate. Ninety percent of our communication may be based on non-verbal cues, but our ability to communicate and be understood determines how we are treated. How you speak can get you a job or get you disqualified, make people like you or distrust you, get you help or leave you stranded, etc. Immigrants often are already at a disadvantage because they are often unfamiliar with the culture as well, so it is really important to be able to speak the language. They can prevent a lot of resentment and exploitation if they can. I know I have gotten irritated in the past because they would do something that was inconsiderate, and I thought they did it on purpose--but if they were able to communicate, I soon learned that it was a misunderstanding due to cultural differences.
), and as you can see, my casual grammar isn't the best. If they're really high level though, especially for writing papers and such, I would recommend The Writer's Digest Grammar Desk Reference or something similar. When I worked with all adults I would photocopy pages (shhh...) sometimes to give them access to the rules of English as laid out in English. At least in Japanese based textbooks, the English rules they give are really not always English (and it drives me nuts when non-native English teachers here teach the incorrect rules and tell me I'm wrong even when I bring in native English sources to back me up.
). That's partly to say your students may have learned English incorrectly. The book I mentioned I use all the time when I have specific punctuation or grammar questions in my own papers. If nothing else, something like it might be handy for you to have so you can clearly explain the rule when you see the mistakes instead of just pointing out and fixing the mistake each time.