Pros
-Sporadic and low hours, which is only positive if you're going to school or working many jobs.
Cons
-The EMR tutor position is marketed as a hard-skills position. It's not. Don't expect to become an EMR software expert. In reality, you barely know more than the people you're supposed to assist. In fact, you probably know less because you're never taught basic healthcare workflows. You're the healthcare equivalent of a Walmart greeter.
-You'll be expected to assist in classes that you haven't taken yet, and these classes may involve software functions you've never heard of before. I hope you're good at faking it in front of doctors.
-Despite working at many different locations, you'll never be given access to any of the buildings. You'll also never be told who to contact to get into the buildings. You'll have to resort to asking random employees to let you in, so hopefully you're not too sketchy looking.
-While most everyone else is wearing business casual or "better," you'll be wearing cheap, unisex scrubs. Instead of looking professional, you'll look like Poseur, M.D.
-Any complaints, no matter how professionally written, will not be heard. Worse, they probably won't even be acknowledged.
tl;dr: If you have a background in IT, education, or have any sort of professional self-respect, this job isn't for you.