Now or never: When to get a tutor
Basics to Consider Before Hiring a Tutor
Before you begin your quest for the perfect tutor, ask the following questions:
- What do you want your child to be able to achieve as a result of tutoring?
- Do you want or need a diagnostic test to determine your child's skill gaps?
- Are you willing to commute for tutoring? How far?
- How much can you afford?
- Do you want flexibility (drop-in services) or a more formal arrangement?
- Would group tutoring be right for your child?
Rates Vary Widely
As a private tutor, Amy Alton Barrios has found that there is great variation in rates among tutors. She notes, "Tutors are pretty independent. Rates seem to vary according to the subject being taught. High school chemistry, calculus and SAT prep are more expensive than other subjects, and high school and college students charge less than a credentialed teacher."
Tutoring rates range from free online homework help (Tutor.com, for example) to $20 an hour for community tutors to packages at franchises for several thousand dollars. At the very high end, premier SAT prep tutors can command as much as several hundred dollars an hour.
Denise Corcoran, a full-time math tutor based in Burlingame, California believes that a good tutor is only half of the equation. "While a tutor can be a huge benefit to any student," says Corcoran, "I also make sure the student knows that she must meet me halfway in order to get the results. For some that means putting in more time each night with extra practice work, making a commitment to break old ineffective habits and replace with them with new ones and showing up consistently to tutoring. Even the greatest of tutors are not magicians and getting results means a mutual commitment and collaboration on both ends to get results. Great tutors are more than tutors. They are coaches who know how to bring out the true potential of a student."

