I'm considering visiting local massage schools and offering private/small group tutoring in anatomy and physiology. I received a 98% on the A&P portion of our State Boards recently, and I was in the education field before becoming a massage therapist. I've taught study skills and tutored before at the college level (formal logic, mostly), and I know that I'm good at it. I don't feel right about offering tutoring in the massage portion, because our state just switched from Kellogg to Beck, and I don't have an intimate knowledge of the material they're teaching now.
I know there's a need, because only 55% of students across the state pass the exam (75% is the minimum to pass) in any given year. I think that's atrocious. Students are not getting the support they need from their schools.
My question is, what do you feel is a fair price for tutoring by a competent individual who does not have a degree in the subject area? I was thinking of $30 an hour, which can be used by one person who wants individual attention, or can be shared by up to 4 students who want to split the cost by getting group tutoring. My experience with leading study groups is that more people than that is too distracting.
$30 is what individuals tutoring at the elementary/middle school children are typically charging in my area. College-level tutors tend to charge more, but they also tend to have degrees in their subject areas. I'm smart and I know my stuff, but I don't want to rip people off.
For teachers: does this seem fair? would you recommend something like this to students who were struggling?
For students: would you pay for this, if you wanted help with anatomy and physiology?
Kat
I know there's a need, because only 55% of students across the state pass the exam (75% is the minimum to pass) in any given year. I think that's atrocious. Students are not getting the support they need from their schools.
My question is, what do you feel is a fair price for tutoring by a competent individual who does not have a degree in the subject area? I was thinking of $30 an hour, which can be used by one person who wants individual attention, or can be shared by up to 4 students who want to split the cost by getting group tutoring. My experience with leading study groups is that more people than that is too distracting.
$30 is what individuals tutoring at the elementary/middle school children are typically charging in my area. College-level tutors tend to charge more, but they also tend to have degrees in their subject areas. I'm smart and I know my stuff, but I don't want to rip people off.
For teachers: does this seem fair? would you recommend something like this to students who were struggling?
For students: would you pay for this, if you wanted help with anatomy and physiology?
Kat