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Award-Winning Calculus Tutors

Certified Tutor
2+ years
From limits and derivatives through integration techniques, Allan teaches calculus with an emphasis on understanding what's happening graphically before diving into computation. His coursework at Swarthmore extends through multivariable calculus, so he sees the full arc of where these ideas lead and...
Swarthmore College
Bachelor

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Aerospace engineering at Rutgers means Anudeep uses calculus daily — computing velocity from acceleration curves, modeling orbital trajectories, and analyzing how forces change across a flight envelope. That hands-on context lets him teach derivatives and integrals as tools that actually do somethin...
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
2+ years
Limits, derivatives, and integrals each represent a genuinely new way of thinking about change and accumulation, which is why calculus can feel so different from everything before it. Bereket breaks these concepts down with the patience and rigor of someone studying them at an advanced level at MIT,...
MIT
BS
Certified Tutor
2+ years
A chemistry major works with calculus constantly — reaction rates are derivatives, concentration-over-time curves demand integration, and equilibrium models lean on differential equations. Aaron brings that applied-science fluency to teaching calculus, connecting each rule to the quantitative reason...
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
2+ years
I am a Master of Divinity student at Princeton Theological Seminary. I graduated Harvard College in 2016 and was a peer tutor at Harvard. Before Divinity School, I taught high school and middle school debate and was an SAT/ACT tutor in Birmingham, Alabama. I then taught middle school debate at Succe...
Harvard University
MD
Certified Tutor
2+ years
Limits, derivatives, and integrals each require a different mental gear, and switching between them mid-problem is where most calculus students lose points. Margot teaches each concept with an emphasis on when and why to apply a technique — recognizing a chain rule setup versus a product rule, or ch...
Boston College
AB
Certified Tutor
2+ years
I love to teach. I love young minds and fresh brains. Those are just like clean sheets of papers I can draw anything I like. I really like to help young people to achieve their full capacities with my long experience of teaching. I am very patient and good at explaining complex concepts in simple t...
University of Pennsylvania
PhD
Certified Tutor
2+ years
I enjoy helping students learn more about math. It is a great feeling to see the "light bulb" turn on. I have been a math teacher and tutor for over 10 years, which includes teaching secondary, collegiate, and graduate courses. I earned a B.S. in mathematics from the University of Notre Dame. ...
Indiana University
MBA
University of Notre Dame
MBA
Certified Tutor
2+ years
Tahirah
As a dedicated tutor pursuing a Bachelor's in Biomedical Engineering from Duke University, I have over 5 years of experience in helping students excel in mathematics, including subjects like Algebra, Calculus, and Differential Equations. My teaching approach centers on fostering a supportive learnin...
Duke University
Bachelor's (in progress)
Certified Tutor
2+ years
I'm a mechanical engineer, educated at MIT and Stanford. Previously, I have worked as a design engineer in the medical device design field. I like being able to help someone figure out how to make something work--to help them accomplish something they're struggling with. I love the 'I get it now' ...
Stanford University
MS
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MS
Top 20 Math Subjects
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Benjamin
AP Calculus BC Tutor • +3 Subjects
Full-time tutor, former Chemistry graduate student at University of Pennsylvania, BS Chemistry with Math Minor from Rochester Institute of Technology. My philosophy is that students learn best when they can understand why they're learning the material. I aim to help students effectively utilize and seek out tools for learning concepts while also practicing examples and building knowledge of the concepts themselves. I have a passion for mentoring students in chemistry and mathematics and giving them the knowledge and tools they need to comprehensively understand the foundations and applications of the material they're learning and to succeed in their education.
Miles
College Algebra Tutor • +5 Subjects
I'm a Cornell University alumnus with a BA in Philosophy and Mathematics. My minor was Linguistics. Currently, I'm finishing an MSc in Logic from the University of Amsterdam. I tutor math, chemistry, logic, philosophy, English, Latin, and ACT prep. During my senior year, I was an undergraduate course assistant for Calculus I at Cornell, grading homework and conducting weekly homework study groups. I also taught courses on the philosophy of physics, mnemonics, and category theory to middle school students for a program called Splash. While living in Amsterdam, I was the TA for an introductory cognitive science course that included propositional logic and formal language theory. I took pride in giving highly detailed responses to students' questions, providing concrete examples and analogies to more familiar topics. My teaching philosophy is one of kindness, optimism, and patience. Also, I like to make my lessons as entertaining as possible, which is not difficult because I can be a goof even when it's not intentional. I can break complex topics down to their atoms. I never skip steps or assume that something is understood without confirmation. I try to see everything from your perspective. Most importantly, I work hard. I will go the extra mile to help you. Outside of the classroom, I enjoy writing stories and music. I spend about 2 hours every day exercising, and I love being outdoors!
Soung
Calculus 1 Tutor • +1 Subjects
I'm a highly skilled, professional tutor with over 20 years experience. I have an exceptional ability to teach math to students with severe learning challenges. I make all levels of math understandable and foster confidence in the student. I'm also expert in SAT/ACT test preparation and high school admission tests. I have a BA in Chemistry from The University of Chicago and a PhD from Northwestern University. I'm a former research scientist. I enjoy tutoring and have the gift of teaching.
Hannah
Pre-Calculus Tutor • +3 Subjects
When I was in school, I loved math, but there were some topics I struggled to grasp. I had some really great teachers and tutors help me work through these challenges. My favorite feeling was mastering a topic that I'd worked hard on, and seeing how it went from impossible and scary to second-nature. That type of mastery is what I'd like to help you achieve! I've been intimidated by my fair share of math problems (all the way through an engineering master's degree), but I've learned that you can figure out anything with a little help!
William
AP Calculus BC Tutor • +6 Subjects
From my experience teaching math to a range of students, from middle school through college, I know that it does not come easily to everyone. However, I firmly believe that everyone has the capability for mathematical reasoning. Everyone has their own strengths and challenges, and my job as a tutor begins with identifying these. I like to have students work through problems while I guide them and make suggestions, so that I can get a sense of what they understand and what they don't. Then we can build on their knowledge and break down the challenging parts of the problem into smaller, more manageable chunks. I hold a bachelor's degree from UChicago and a doctorate from MIT, both in mathematics. I am available to tutor Latin, physics, and all levels of math. Outside of academics, I am an avid tournament chess player, and I enjoy running and cycling.
Ravi
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +25 Subjects
I am passionate about the broad implications and applications of the Science, Math, and Engineering in our daily lives - and enjoy teaching them to my own kids. Towards this end, I also want to leverage my 20+ years in graduate and post-doctoral science/engineering research, past undergraduate level teaching/tutoring experience in physics, math, geophysics, and scientific computation, along with 10+ years of scientific programming & system administration experience towards STEM tutoring/mentoring at school to college level.
Harleen
AP Statistics Tutor • +22 Subjects
I am a Molecular Engineering major at the University of Chicago, I am currently taking time off to focus on other aspects of my career but I don't want to stop tutoring outside college campus!. I am a child of immigrants and have spent my life tutoring my siblings and younger students, and I loved working with them! See y'all in class!
Ulrich
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +9 Subjects
I have a strong background in science and engineering from RPI, MIT and CMU and attained the degrees of BS, MS and PhD from these universities respectively. I used my education as a engineer for designing nuclear reactors and after retirement I taught engineering subjects at various universities. I enjoy explaining scientific principles and instilling curiosity about the physical world.
Sahibzada
Linear Algebra Tutor • +4 Subjects
I've been working with students for over seven years, from middle school all the way through college, across subjects like math, calculus, statistics, linear algebra, chemistry, and physics, with a lot of SAT and ACT prep mixed in. My background is perhaps a little unconventional. I have two bachelor's degrees, one in Engineering and one in Communication Studies, plus a Master's in Design. That combination means I can guide you through challenging technical material and communicate it in a way that is easy to grasp. What I care most about is helping students get to a place where they don't need me anymore. I know that sounds like a strange thing for a tutor to say, but I think it's the right goal. I'm not here to walk you through steps to copy down. I want you to understand why something works, because that's what holds up under pressure, on a test you haven't seen before. If you're ready to ace that test or prove that theorem that's been bugging you, reach out and let's work together
Joey
Pre-Calculus Tutor • +9 Subjects
Howdy! My name's Joey, I love all things music and tech as well as hitting the gym. I hold degrees in mechanical and aerosapce engineering as well as scientific computing from the University of Glasgow and University of Pennsylvania. I've been an instructor and TA at both institutions and I greatly enjoy sharing knowledge!
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Students often find limits and continuity challenging because they require thinking about behavior rather than just computation. The transition from algebra to derivatives—understanding that a derivative represents an instantaneous rate of change—trips up many learners who've only worked with average rates. Integration is another major hurdle, especially recognizing when to use substitution, integration by parts, or other techniques. Word problems involving related rates and optimization also cause difficulty because they require translating real-world scenarios into mathematical models before solving.
A tutor helps you see why the power rule works, not just how to apply it—for example, understanding that the derivative measures the slope of the tangent line at any point on a curve. Through guided exploration, you'll connect the geometric meaning of derivatives to their algebraic representation, and see how integration reverses differentiation. Tutors also help you recognize patterns: understanding that all optimization problems follow a similar structure, or that related rates problems use the chain rule in a specific way. This conceptual foundation makes it easier to tackle unfamiliar problems because you understand the underlying principles.
In Calculus, the process matters as much as the answer because it reveals whether you understand the concept or just got lucky. A tutor helps you organize multi-step problems—like finding critical points, testing intervals, and justifying conclusions in an optimization problem—so your reasoning is clear and logical. They also teach you to communicate mathematically: explaining why you chose a particular integration technique, or how you set up a limit problem. This skill is essential for exams, free-response sections, and building genuine understanding rather than relying on pattern-matching.
Tutors teach a systematic approach: first identify what's changing (variables), what's constant, and what you're asked to find. For related rates problems, they help you write the relationship between variables, then differentiate with respect to time. For optimization, you'll learn to define the quantity to maximize or minimize, express it in terms of one variable using constraints, then apply Calculus to find extrema. The key is breaking the problem into stages rather than jumping to formulas—tutors help you see that every word problem follows a logical structure once you know what to look for.
Tutors use visual and numerical approaches alongside algebraic ones. You might explore how a function behaves as you zoom in on a point, or calculate slopes of secant lines with smaller and smaller intervals to see them approach the derivative. This hands-on exploration helps you internalize that a limit describes what a function approaches, and a derivative is the limit of a rate of change. Many tutors also use graphing to show you the connection between a function and its derivative—like how positive derivatives correspond to increasing sections of the graph. Once you see these relationships visually, the algebra makes much more sense.
Rather than memorizing a flowchart, tutors help you recognize patterns in the integrand itself. For example, if you see a composite function where the derivative of the inner function appears in the integral, substitution is likely the right choice. Integration by parts works well when you have a product of functions where one becomes simpler when differentiated. A tutor teaches you to ask diagnostic questions about the structure of the problem, then match it to a technique—this pattern recognition is much more reliable than memorization. They'll also show you how to verify your answer by differentiating, which builds confidence and catches errors.
Tutoring provides a judgment-free space to ask questions and work through confusion without pressure. A tutor can identify specific gaps—maybe you need to strengthen your algebra or trig skills, which are foundational to Calculus success—and address those directly rather than having you feel lost in a large class. Breaking Calculus into smaller, manageable concepts and celebrating progress on each one builds confidence. Many students discover that Calculus is logical and learnable once they understand the big ideas, rather than an overwhelming collection of rules. Regular tutoring also reduces test anxiety because you've practiced problems thoroughly and understand the reasoning behind your solutions.
Look for tutors with deep knowledge of Calculus concepts and how they connect—someone who can explain not just how to solve a problem, but why that method works. Strong Calculus tutors understand common misconceptions (like thinking a derivative is always the slope of a line, rather than the instantaneous rate of change) and can address them directly. They should be skilled at multiple representations: algebraic, graphical, numerical, and verbal. Experience with different textbooks and curricula is valuable since Calculus is taught with varying emphasis on rigor versus applications. Most importantly, they should be able to adapt their explanations to your learning style and help you build genuine understanding rather than procedural fluency alone.
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