Demand for academic tutors is growing. Not just for school students, but for college / University students too. In many places, however, there is a shortage of tutors. If you think you might enjoy helping students succeed at school, college or University, you’re in luck: tutoring can offer a rewarding lifestyle and a good rate of earning. You don’t have to be a qualified teacher to work as a private academic tutor. In fact, there are no formal requirements to be a tutor so there’s no expensive course to complete before you can start. All you need is a good knowledge of a subject and a willingness to help students. You could start looking for work tomorrow if you wanted. Tutoring could be ideal for stay-at-home mums or dads, college students, retirees, part-time workers, and even full-time professionals; anyone with a few spare hours a week.& maqui berry #13;The most obvious benefit of tutoring is to earn some extra money. Tutoring can be an excellent way of funding an annual holiday, getting cash together for significant purchases, paying off a credit card, financing investments, or supplementing retirement income. Tutoring generally pays more per hour than many other types of casual work, and can be as financially rewarding as any part-time job, but with much more flexibility. You may even find you are able to work full-time as a tutor. Tutoring also tends to be very personally satisfying too. Tutoring is one of very few businesses with almost no set-up costs. All you need is some time to devote to securing your first clients (word-of-mouth referrals tend to build up the rest of your business), some minor expenditure on stationery and so on, and thats about it. You can even work from home.