I want to get some tutoring experience. Does it matter if you tutor your classmates in a subject while getting paid vs tutoring kids younger than me (in middle or high school) in a subject for volunteer work? Are both viewed equally good experience?
Doesn't matter.
I'm in the mood to write a bit of a rant...
The only experience that you need... such that adcoms can view it as a GOOD experience is "relevant healthcare experience/clinical experience". Reference:
LizzyM's: If you can smell the patient, it is a clinical experience.
CodeBlu Wisdom: DO NOT, DON'T AND I MEAN IT WHOLEHEARTEDLY (hence the CAPS), do something just because of how it will be viewed by an adcom. Do stuff because you want to do it! You wanna volunteer in an ER? Do that. You wanna take ballroom dance classes? Do that. You wanna play a varsity sport? Do it. You need to be able to justify your experiences on your AMCAS app and in your interviews.
Example: "So CodeBlu, I see here you volunteered in this emergency department for 600 hours. Why so many hours? What did you gain from this experience?"
Another one... "So CodeBlu, I noticed you mentioned that you enjoy climbing mountains. What got you started into that?"
Imagine if the answer to any of the above was "because I thought you'd like it better"
[Aside: Don't get me wrong... there are some things we do to "build our resume", but by no means do you HAVE to do anything specific. There is no formula to get into medical school.]
Now, tutoring either for money, or volunteer wise is excellent. Medicine is not just about yourself, you need to be a teacher, not only to your patients, but those subordinate to yourself in the field. As a resident you will be teaching medical students, and residents younger than you.
TL;DR: Being able to tutor/teach effectively is a GREAT skill. Don't do something just for your application, do it for you.
