Sweatshop Work with No Contact With Other Tutors - Tutor Tutor.com Employee Review

1.0
Oct 11, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

(1) Flexible Hours (2) Work at Home in front of your computer -- which kind of isolates you from real people (3) Almost better than nothing if you're unemployed -- but it gets you stuck there and prevents you from exploring other tutoring options.

Cons

(1) Close to minimum wages -- you're better off advertizing your tutoring services on your own. I think they started me at about $9-$10. You get ripped off in comparison to what they charge the students. (2) They have no interest in you as an individual -- tutors are identified as Jennifer S. or John P., etc. (3) Many of the tutors and mentors are not experts in their tutoring area -- I've seen many tutors transfer simple questions to other tutors and go in the wrong direction on simple calculus problems. Most tutors get away with it because tutor.com is not supposed to give answers to students' questions. The management tries to get you to get the answer from the students, not show them how to do the problem correctly. Most tutors end up wasting a lot of time on a problem that could takes 5 minutes if they were allowed to show the steps to the student. (4) You get a lot of abusive students who ask you questions without knowledge of any basics. (5) The management and the mentors constantly get on your case about time limits or trying to show the student the steps to do the problems. Instead you have to kiss the management's ass and wait like an idiot for the student to write something that makes some kind of sense on the interactive board, which is awful to write on and to communicate with the student. (6) The management is more interested in quality control and high student ratings than in giving students sound problem solving techniques and correct information. (7) If you kiss the management's ass and don't argue with difficult students, they might let you stay. If you show too much independence, you're likely to get fired and get cut off from any communication with the company. Getting fired from tutor.com was the best thing that happened to me. Now I see students in person, get paid twice as much and don't have to deal with ignorant mentors and quality control police. Tutor.com is like a big conveyer belt that recycles tutors without regard for their individuality or depth of knowledge. There are other places like brainmass.com or liveperson.com that allow you to share your knowledge and set your fees and where you're not some faceless tutor working in sweatshop-like atmosphere of tutor.com.

Explore other reviews about Tutor.com

5.0
Nov 3, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Reliable tutoring job that's available online. Easy to use system for the tutor.

Cons

They have a long onboarding process and a lot of links to keep in mind.

1.0
Jan 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The students are usually nice. Work from home.

Cons

There is no appreciation of employees. They give badges instead of raises. Don't be fooled by the $22 per hour posts. They do not pay that much for most tutoring. Most work is under $20/hr. The job that pays $22/hr is horrible according to most tutors. There is twice as much unpaid work involved compared with regular tutoring. This is not a job that pays a living wage. If you think you can stick out a low wage for a few years and then get a better wage from them, think again. They never give raises. The piddly 50 cents in January is not a raise. It is simply based on the minimum wage going up. It's an insult. If you think you can gain experience and then move on to another job think again. They don't give recommendations either. I hate working for this company. They have repeatedly tried (unsuccessfully) to get me to work without pay for things like training and meetings when they only pay min. wage even when they do pay. If they had their way, they would send all jobs to India, but their contract with the DOD is holding them back. This company is owned by the Chinese. Don't expect fair wages. I have to work more than 40 hours a week to get paid for 25 of them. Work-from-home jobs do not pay well, so keep that in mind when you are thinking about the benefits of working at home.

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