Founded in 1996 by qualified, long experience, bilingual Nicaraguan professor, Roger A. Ramirez, One on One Tutoring is particularly suitable for people who lack the time for long-term language study and/or who are looking for the ultimate in intensive language training for results.
The professors at One on One Tutoring are trained and certified from beginning to advanced levels, using techniques which are recognized as effective for learning a foreign language by the National Technical Institute of Nicaragua (INATEC).INATEC is a government board which regulates technical and vocational schooling in Nicaragua. One on One Tutoring has been, for the last twenty five years, the only language school in Granada to pass the rigorous INATEC certification process.
The school director, Roger A. Ramirez Sr. and his son Roger Jr., are always present; therefore always a constant high level of teaching as well as supervision and evaluation. Concern about every aspect of the process of learning will remain a top priority.
Professionalism: Our faculty, in Granada Nicaragua, is composed of qualified native Nicaraguan Spanish speaking instructors trained to teach Spanish as a second language.
Technique: Our Spanish school in Granada Nicaragua offers each potential student four bright instructors per hour, the same four instructors every day.
Our professors possess vast experience in teaching Spanish as a second language not only to adults but to children as well. Each one is dedicated, and strive to make learning Spanish a pleasant and fun experience for our students, using easy to follow and consecutive Spanish Program with beginner, intermediate and advanced levels.
All of One on One Tutoring teachers are trained in our second language teaching method contributing in creating our teaching materials, leading and participating in the complementary afternoon or morning activities, and dedicating themselves to the student’s best achievement of Spanish skills.
From my youth, my father instructed me in the craft and art of teaching this wonderful Spanish language. However, this year, the shadow of his passing has darkened my life. Despite his absence, I continue this work, though no longer in the school that was once our home. That school, full of memories and laughter, was taken away by my uncle, who took advantage of the fragility of my grandmother, the rightful owner of that house that housed so many years of family happiness and joy. That family was not only my father and me, but also the students, who made us feel that they were part of our nucleus, in addition to the teachers that my father had also trained with so much care.
Now, it is as if we are starting all over again. My wife and I teach classes together at my mother's house in Granada, or in hotels and lodges in Granada and Managua, trying to rebuild what once was.