Becoming a Math Tutor: Is My Plan a Good One?

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The discussion centers on the potential of becoming a math tutor after mastering a business calculus course in university. The individual currently attends two different tutoring sessions: one with a popular tutor who teaches multiple students at once for $20 an hour and another with a more effective one-on-one tutor charging $25 an hour. The individual is considering turning tutoring into a full-time job, estimating the potential to earn up to $200 a day by teaching multiple students simultaneously. However, there are significant challenges to consider, including the intensive nature of tutoring, the necessity of a deep understanding of the material, and the lack of motivation among many students who may only seek good grades rather than genuine comprehension. The discussion highlights the financial viability of tutoring while cautioning about the demands and realities of the role.
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okay so I'm in my first year of university and I've been going to 2 math tutors for a business calculus course. The one is an older lady who has a very large amount of people who go to her she makes around $500 a day, she does this by tutoring 5 kids at once I was actually there where a day before a test 15 people were there at $20 an hour for 2 hours. The other one is a guy who does the labs for the course he does one on one and charges $25 an hour but I learn a lot more from him than the other tutor. So what I'm getting at is I'm thinking of trying to master this course after I take it, and just understand it extremely well so that I could be a tutor for it. This course is pretty well mandatory for first year commerce students, and when your in your first year and your taking math, your bound to have a lot of troubles at least I've noticed this with the others in the class a long with myself. So would this be a good idea, I'm actually thinking I could make this my only job and I could pull in up to $200 a day at least through the school year, and when I start to build up a lot of clients I could teach 3 or 4 people at once for $20 an hour that's when you can start making a ton of money.

So any thoughts on if my plan is a good one?
 
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Beware, tutoring is not just easy money. Tutoring somebody can be really intensive and exhausting. You must really understand the student's problem very well to be able to answer the questions. Just knowing the stuff isn't good enough.
Furthermore, most students just aren't interested in the course. So they will make no effort what-so-ever. They're not interested in understanding anything, but just in a good grade.
 
where do i apply? that's more than i made as a professor.
 
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