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PROOF POINTS: The life of an online tutor can resemble that of an assembly line worker

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Leo Salvatore is one of 3,000 online tutors for the company Paper, whose business has boomed with the pandemic. (Screenshot from Zoom interview with Jill Barshay of The Hechinger Report.)

Leo Salvatore graduated from college in May 2022 and dreams of becoming a philosopher. While he applies to graduate school, the affable 23-year-old holds a part-time job that barely existed before the pandemic: online tutor. From his home in Baltimore, Maryland, Salvatore logs in for one of his four-hour shifts three times a week and earns $20.25 an hour. Often, he has two or three students in different grades simultaneously text chatting with him about different homework assignments. It might be a fourth grader in Los Angeles struggling with English, an eighth grader in Palm Beach, Florida, asking about history, and a 10th grader in Las Vegas needing help with French verb conjugations. 

“It can be overwhelming,” Salvatore said, in an interview, describing his life as an online tutor in the time of coronavirus. 

We want to hear from you. If you have worked in online tutoring or experienced it as a teacher or student, please reach out to Jill Barshay. We won’t share your name or story without your permission. 

A couple of times, Salvatore recalled, he tutored as many as seven students at once. Keeping track of students’ questions and chatting with them in real time can feel more like being a short-order cook during the breakfast rush than an educator. At least his commute to work is great.

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Jill Barshay

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