Position Description
MCAT Instructors
Are you interested in working with students to raise their MCAT test scores?
Then come teach for The Princeton Review! Our programs help more and more students each year improve their MCAT scores through our unmatched techniques and materials. You won’t find a more rewarding teaching opportunity!
A few great things about teaching for the Princeton Review:
• Competitive class sizes – We generally cap these classes at 20-25 students.
• Excellent training – We give you all the materials and make you an expert in the techniques that will help your students succeed. We also provide classroom management training.
• Tailored Classes – We give you a syllabus and provide you with the structure for the course. But we also count on you to decide how to best address your students’ needs.
• FUN – These students are great and will keep your class lively. Princeton Review classes are a privilege to be in so students come excited to learn!
What we are looking for in our MCAT instructors:
• Expertise in one of the following areas:
• Biology
• General Chemistry
• Organic Chemistry
• Physics
• English (Reading Comprehension)
• A desire to work with some of the brightest students on Long Island
• Confidence in your ability to convey complicated information
• Willingness to have fun
Requirements:
We are looking for smart, dynamic, and energetic communicators. We offer a starting pay rate of $23/hour with opportunities for advancement. Candidates must have reliable transportation.
To apply, send a resume to infoli@review.com as soon as possible. If you have MCAT scores available, please attach them. If you are selected for training, you will receive more information about available schedules and locations.
The Princeton Review is committed to a policy of Equal Employment opportunity and will not discriminate against an applicant or employee on the basis of age, sex, sexual orientation, race, color, creed, religion, ethnicity, national origin, alienage or citizenship, disability, marital status, military or veteran status, or any other legally recognized, protected basis under federal, state or local laws, regulations or ordinances.