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Posted: Mon Jul 09, 2012 7:38 pm
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Law School Discussion Forums
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https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=188885
When I spoke to the company, she confirmed that they really go after tutors who have the ability to teach. She said that the score matters, but the tutors are monitored for their teaching abilities before they're hired on. Now, that could've been a sales pitch, but it seemed like she was being honest. I may contact and ask if she can provide me with the tutor's success rate, and any references before I purchase. If they allow that.NYCLSATTutor wrote:For tutors it depends much more on whether the tutor themselves are good or bad and much less on whether the company is good or bad. I would try to find out information about the particular tutor they want you to work with as opposed to trying to find out information about the company.
Your best gauge for this is actually talking with the instructor. It's really, REALLY hard to gauge any of this based on success rate (which most companies won't have for tutoring students) or references (because they'll give you the people who improved, which may or may not have been because of the tutor). Best way is to get a single session, see how it goes, and then order more if you feel the tutor is solid. If the company won't let you do that, I'd be wary.westie25 wrote:When I spoke to the company, she confirmed that they really go after tutors who have the ability to teach. She said that the score matters, but the tutors are monitored for their teaching abilities before they're hired on. Now, that could've been a sales pitch, but it seemed like she was being honest. I may contact and ask if she can provide me with the tutor's success rate, and any references before I purchase. If they allow that.