Overview
Socratic questioning in tutoring is not asking questions instead of explaining. It is a disciplined method of guiding a student's reasoning through a sequence of questions that expose the structure of the concept — questions that make the student do the thinking and arrive at understanding rather than receiving it.
Most tutors who attempt Socratic questioning end up playing 20 questions: asking narrower and narrower questions until the student guesses the answer. That is not Socratic method. Genuine Socratic questioning exposes the student's reasoning, identifies where it is incomplete or inconsistent, and asks the question that makes the student notice the inconsistency themselves.
The Socratic Questioning Guide provides a calibrated question sequence for any concept, including the key decision points: when to push deeper, when to backtrack to a prerequisite, and when to abandon Socratic method and give direct instruction.
What you get: - Diagnostic question set: reveals the student's current understanding and where it fails - Guided discovery sequence: the questions that lead from current understanding to target concept - Backtrack triggers: the responses that indicate the student needs prerequisite work before the concept is accessible - The conceptual breakthrough question: the specific question most likely to produce the "aha" moment - Direct instruction threshold: when Socratic questioning is the wrong method for this student/moment - Response analysis: what each type of student response means and what the next question should be
Built for: tutors, academic coaches, teachers conducting one-on-one conferences, and any educator using questioning as an instructional tool.