There is a lot to be said about transferable skills learned….when interviewing for competitive programs.
Awesome. I asked about remote tutoring and not waiting tables.
There are many interesting careers. I requested to stay on topic. Please read title!
Might I remind members of the forum rules: “Our forum is expected to be a friendly and welcoming place, and one in which members can post without their motives, intelligence, or other personal characteristics being questioned by others."
Please be mindful of your communication and leave off the snark.
That said, stay on-topic to the OP’s request.
Chegg is not currently hiring new tutors. They never have more than 1000 tutors employed at any one time.
However, if your d wants to start the verification process for working for them, she can do that. Once her expertise is verified, she’ll be placed on a waitlist until a new chem tutor is needed.
The most successful tutors tutor in multiple different subjects areas, not just one. If your d hasn’t yet earn a bachelor’s in her tutoring field, she’s required to submit her transcripts, plus take a exam to demonstrate her level of knowledge
Chegg pays a flat rate for tutoring . It’s currently $20/hour and is pro-rated by the minute. IOW, if it only takes 7 minutes to answer a student’s question, she’ll only be paid for 7 minutes of her time.
Tutors must have a PayPal account to receive payments which are disbursed bi-weekly.
Not all of the service providers listed offer science tutoring. One is only for foreign languages. Another is only for ACT/SAT prep. StudyGate advertises with pride that it only hires tutors from Ivy League schools.
Deleted. This thread somehow showed up as current, but it’s not.