Pros
Since it's a center, clients are assigned to you. No need to find them or deal with the cons of self-employment. If test prep or high-school level, materials are available to you and get training for it. Pay is better than similar type centers. Kids are typically sweet and motivated. Since most is online/on-location, it's pretty convenient to only have to commute once instead of going between homes. Honestly, pretty minimal amount of meetings besides a weekly touch base with your team leader which is nice. Outside of actual sessions, I didn't need to spend much time preparing materials, doing paperwork, and doing assessments which is good because "admin hours" bill at a lower rate.
Cons
Not truly a flexible schedule since you can only really work around school hours. There's a pressure on tutors to also take the responsibility of client retention/acquisition by recommending additional tutoring that sometimes feels a bit like a conflict of interest. Think like: if this student does well and no longer needs me, my billable hours goes down. Not necessarily a con, but just comes with any "caring"/"helping" profession. It hurts a little bit seeing parents are usually paying like $150/hour for a session, but the tutor receives around 25% of it. Not much progression unless you want management position, but that's just the work.