Tutor.com reviews

3.3

46% would recommend to a friend

(595 total reviews)

Hyoung Jun (Joshua) Park

36% approve of CEO

33% positive business outlook

Tutor.com has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 595 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Tutor.com employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Educación industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

595 reviews
1.0
Sep 19, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible hours and some nice customers/students

Cons

I've been teaching on the college level for more than a decade but wasn't passing their assessments. They didn't like what I was doing, never tired of saying so, and basically ignored my sincere and humble calls for help. Customers liked what I was doing, but that clearly wasn't enough. The problem is, as another reviewer has noted, with their perception of "giving answers." They apparently want you to play a kind of ineffectual and insubstantial game with customers, all in the name of providing supposedly "educational" experiences. When I differed with the program and pointed out that I did have some experience as an educator, hoping I could bring something of value to the program, I was frostily ignored. When I pointed out that I had better ratings at the beginning of my time with them, before they began to actively mentor (i.e. micro-manage) me, my mentor told me that of course I was getting good ratings--I was giving away all the answers. At first this disconnect seemed baffling, but then I recognized it--it is simply the monolithic voice of Corporate America, telling the underlings how things must be and ignoring how they actually are. I used to hear it as a lowly corporate peon, when I hadn't age, experience, or qualifications going for me. Now I have plenty of those and I still hear it. These are the kind of people who, in the name of Quality Control, want to control everything. The people who do not trust a human being to provide customer service on the phone, so they require employees to answer with thank-you-for-calling-barnes-and-noble-it's-a-beautiful-day-in-the-universe-today-this-is-Fred-speaking-how-can-I help-you? I regret that this opportunity did not work out. It seemed like a great way to occupy quiet office hours and stretch a few teaching muscles with some new technology. But I can't deal with their total lack of respect. I should add, in accordance with other reviewers, that Tutor.com will not back the employee against the abusive customer. Many people logged in with no desire to learn, seeking answers, hoping someone else would do their work. I've resisted such users and received bad ratings and bad language, only to be criticized for doing so by my mentor. I'm amazed that the company enables these (often insulting) abusers and dares to call itself an education-based program.

1.0
Sep 15, 2012

Tutors are not treated well!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-As many have mentioned already, the flexibility in scheduling. -Are not forced to do concurrent sessions (I think some other online tutoring companies do that) -Tutor at tutor.com if you have nothing better to do with your time, or if you're desperate for the extra little money

Cons

I have no clue why some reviews praise the mentor system. Your mentor rarely (if ever) offers much encouragement and berates you for the tiniest infractions. Your boss (aka mentor) suggests "improvements" for your sessions even for the very sessions I receive excellent feedback and ratings on just to hold you back from promotion and to keep you on your toes. They pay tutors the same regardless of which subjects you tutor. If you're planning to tutor chemistry, physics, or calculus, beware that the questions can be extremely random and they expect you to be an encyclopedia (when they pay so little!), so that will hurt your ratings and stats. For example, college students log in and ask upper year civil engineering questions as "Physics" and if you decline them, your stats look bad and your boss gets angry at you.

1.0
Sep 4, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible time, some students are sweet!

Cons

1). The so called mentor is extremely extremely extremely extremely extremely extremely extremely extremely nitpciking you for just about anything, especially criticizing you for "giving answers", sometimes you explain 1+1, and the student say it is 11, and 5+6 is 56, the student can be VERY rude and very pushy, I has 70 sessions with 19 of them give me 5/5, another session give me 3 (most sessions are not rated at all) , and the so called idiotic mentor still criticize you for the tiny things, I mean their goal is to make your life hard (don't trust this, give a try and you will know) 2). Virtually no help from anywhere, they insulate you so you can't review feedback for the student 50% of the time, they don't allow you to identify the student, even indirectly, so basically you have no clue what kind of level the student has. 3). the rating system can be VERY abusive! so many tutors include me, the no.1 thing in our mind is to find a potential troublesome situation and minimize the impact on your rating, and if certain session (based on your experience) is difficult, everyone will avoid it, I've seen students were kept waiting for 50 min at 9PM, where there are probably 30-50 tutors, no one want to help!

Viewing 571 - 573 of 595 Reviews

Glassdoor has 943 Tutor.com reviews submitted anonymously by Tutor.com employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Tutor.com is right for you.