¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Tutoring
1. tutor [v] - See also: tutor
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tutoring
Literary usage of Tutoring
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Peer Justice and Youth Empowerment: An Implementation Guide for Teen Court by Tracy M. Godwin, David J. Steinhart, Betsy A. Fulton (1997)
"tutoring One factor identified in research as influencing delinquency is poor
... To address this issue, some teen courts have incorporated tutoring as a ..."
2. World War Issues and Ideals: Readings in Contemporary History and Literature by Morris Edmund Speare (1918)
"By tutoring in self-government was understood the effort of a country to develop
to the uttermost the latent capacity of a backward dependency, ..."
3. Types of Schools for Boys by Alfred Ernest Stearns, Leigh Robinson Gignilliat, Milo H. Stuart, Eric Parson, Joseph John Findlay (1917)
"The Church School Not a tutoring School.—One must at the outset distinguish
between the church school and the tutoring school. ..."
4. Vital Forces in Current Events: Readings on Present-day Affairs from by Morris Edmund Speare (1920)
"By tutoring in self-government was understood the effort of a country to develop
to the uttermost the latent capacity of a backward dependency, ..."
5. Woman's Share in Social Culture by Anna Garlin Spencer (1912)
"Woman, from the first, enjoyed the special tutoring of that most persistent and
effective trainer in industrial education which the world of nature has yet ..."
6. Tackling Tech: Suggestions for the Undergraduate in Technical School Or College by Lawrence Wickes Conant (1922)
"Preparation by tutoring tutoring gives a student close personal contact with the
instructor. It practically assures a much more thorough understanding of ..."
7. Ten Years at Yale: A Series of Papers on Certain Defects in the University by George Frederick Gundelfinger (1915)
"... EVIL OF tutoring Anything which destroys responsibility, or transfers it,
cannot be other than injurious in its moral tendency and useless in itself. ..."