Award-Winning ACT English Tutors
serving Glendale, CA
Award-Winning
ACT English
Tutors in Glendale
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
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Zhenrui earned a perfect 36 ACT composite, which means the English section's trickiest question types — sentence placement, redundancy traps, and transition logic — are territory he's already mapped out cold. His engineering training at Columbia reinforces a rule-first approach: instead of debating what sounds natural, he teaches the specific punctuation and rhetoric patterns the test reuses so students can move through all 75 questions with a clear decision framework.

I'm an affable chemistry-loving person whose joy come from delivering knowledge :D
Scoring a 35 ACT composite while studying Business Communications at Vanderbilt means Jackie lives in the overlap between standardized testing strategy and real editorial skill — she knows the punctuation and rhetoric rules the English section recycles because she applies them daily in her own coursework. She's especially sharp on the passage-level questions about redundancy and paragraph organization, where a trained communicator's instinct for cutting unnecessary words gives students a concrete decision-making framework instead of vague guessing. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am currently attending UCLA School of Dentistry. I have spent a big chunk of my life tutoring. I had 600 hours of volunteer experience tutoring 5th graders in language. I also was the Tutoring Head of the Science National Honor Society in high school and spent every week tutoring high school level biology and chemistry. I spent one summer working at Kumon tutoring children in basic math and reading. In college, I spent two years tutoring adults to pass their GED. I was also an Undergraduate Teaching Assistant (UTA) for a development and physiology biology class, as well as a Peer Tutor for other intro level biology classes. If you chose me as your tutor, I look forward to working with you and helping you be the best student you can be!
Journalism training at NYU means Sarah edits for a living — cutting filler, tightening transitions, and enforcing parallel structure on deadline, which is essentially what the ACT English section asks you to do 75 times in 45 minutes. Her 35 ACT composite backs up an approach rooted in treating each passage as a rough draft that needs a fast, systematic copyedit rather than a grammar quiz. Rated 4.9 by students.
Most ACT English mistakes come from overthinking — students second-guess a correct "NO CHANGE" or add commas where none belong. Michael, who scored a 35 ACT, drills the specific punctuation and sentence structure rules that appear most frequently, then teaches students to trust the simplest, most concise answer choice.
Punctuation rules and rhetorical strategy questions trip up different students for different reasons — some rush through commas and semicolons, while others second-guess every paragraph-organization question. Christina diagnoses which ACT English question types are costing the most points and drills those patterns until the right answer feels obvious. Her own 34 ACT composite means she's been through the timing pressure firsthand.
Scoring a 33 ACT composite means Ben already knows how the English section tries to trip students up — especially on rhetorical skills questions where every answer choice is grammatically correct but only one fits the passage's purpose. His English degree and graduate-level philosophy writing give him an intuitive grasp of sentence structure, transitions, and concision that he can make explicit for students still building those instincts.
I am a recent graduate of Harvard University, where I received my Bachelor of Arts in English Literature with an emphasis on screenwriting. Although I love literature and writing, I am most passionate about tutoring math. I have five years of experience as a math tutor, during which time I helped students ages 3-17 with math ranging from basic arithmetic to pre-calculus. My favorite math topic is algebra, particularly because of its usefulness in solving real-world word problems. In addition to mathematics, I find joy in teaching/elucidating Shakespeare to high-school students. As a classically trained actor, I find it fun to tackle Shakespeare’s dense texts from a performance and character-driven perspective. In my spare time, I enjoy vegan baking and roller-blading.
I am passionate about living life to the fullest and making a difference in the lives of others.
I am a 2018 graduate of University of California Santa Barbara, with a B.S. degree in Biological Sciences through the Honors Program. I consider education to be tremendously important not just during development, but also throughout life. I believe it's critical to establish the right attitude toward learning; a feat that once accomplished can improve a student's long-term output in school. Education is an integral part of my career choice: I aspire to become a physician, a career intertwined with knowledge and education. However, teaching and learning are present in every career, and every part of life for that matter.
I am currently a Junior at UCSB working towards a degree in Bio-psychology, following the Pre-Medical route! I have tutored both formally during high school and informally during my college years. I am comfortable teaching all ages and those who are eager to learn. I love tutoring in a more conversational matter and talking through problems rather than lecture and repeat. Each student has a different way they like to learn, so I adapt those ways and use it to the student's advantage. I love having the student be able to teach me the information we covered at the end of each session - if you can teach it, you have learned it! I am currently tutoring Middle school math, Algebra, Pre-Calculus, Biology, Chemistry, ACT Science, and writing college essays/editing papers. Although I love teaching the logistics of the sciences, especially in ACT format, I find passion in helping students perfect their writing skills and develop strong, academic papers. Outside of school, I love playing sports such as volleyball, track, basketball, and baseball as well as going on hiking trips and adventures. I am a huge traveler, love reading new books, and love meeting new people. Besides helping students learn, I want the student to have fun, enjoy the tutoring session, and actually find a love for the subject they are studying. I used to hate reading and now it is one of my favorite things to do! Let's learn!
I am a current undergraduate student at Occidental College, where I am majoring in Chemistry. I have a passion for teaching and engaging students with their education. There is little that is more rewarding than aiding a struggling student successfully. In high school, I was a member of the National Honors Society and relished the opportunities that organization provided me to tutor others. I love learning, and I love sharing that with others. What better way to engage others learning than tutoring?I enjoy video games and other computer related tasks, baseball, basketball, and I love to read.
I'm particularly passionate about chemistry, and am excited to share my enthusiasm for science with others. With the life sciences, I emphasize overall understanding in place of rote memorization. With math, I stress practice to best develop critical thinking and problem solving techniques. These are general strategies that can be adapted to meet the unique learning style of each student.
I am confident that by tailoring personalized learning sessions to individual student needs and giving students the resources and skills they need to succeed, any student can ace their next exam, get the best grade, or get into the college of their dreams.
Scoring a 33 ACT composite, Ashley knows the pacing and logic behind the English section's 75 questions in 45 minutes. Her master's in linguistics gives her a framework for teaching rhetorical skills and grammar conventions — particularly tricky areas like parallel structure, modifier placement, and transitions — as interconnected systems rather than isolated rules.
Theatre training at SMU meant Nina spent years analyzing scripts for structure, tone, and precise language choices — skills that translate surprisingly well to the ACT English section, where every question about transitions, redundancy, and sentence placement is really asking 'does this move the passage forward?' Her 33 ACT composite backs up that instinct, and she teaches the punctuation and grammar conventions as a short list of recurring patterns rather than an overwhelming rulebook.
Comma splices, misplaced modifiers, redundancy — the ACT English section tests the same handful of grammar and rhetorical skills over and over, and Nicholas has mapped out exactly which ones appear most frequently. He teaches students to spot the patterns quickly so they can move through all 75 questions without rushing. With a 33 ACT composite, he knows firsthand how pacing and rule recognition drive scores up.
The ACT English section is essentially a grammar and rhetoric puzzle — every question tests whether you can spot the clearest, most concise version of a sentence. Katrina, who earned a 32 ACT composite and spent four years writing intensively at Yale, unpacks the recurring patterns in punctuation, sentence structure, and rhetorical strategy questions so students stop second-guessing themselves.
Every ACT English question tests one of roughly fifteen grammar and rhetorical strategy rules, and Gabriel drills students on identifying which rule is in play before they even look at the answer choices. This pattern-recognition approach — knowing instantly whether a question targets punctuation, verb tense, or paragraph organization — turns a 75-question sprint into a manageable, almost mechanical process. He scored a 34 ACT composite and holds a 5.0 rating.
Scoring a 32 ACT composite gave Valerie a clear picture of what the English section actually tests: punctuation logic, sentence structure, and rhetorical effectiveness under tight time pressure. She walks students through the patterns behind comma rules, pronoun agreement, and passage organization so they can answer confidently rather than second-guessing. Her approach turns the English section into a system, not a guessing game.
I am able to tutor in multiple science subjects, standardized tests (SAT, ACT) and social sciences (public health, political science). I would be happy to help with any age. I help students by getting to know their background and understanding of the subject and helping them build upon that knowledge base through the sessions.
Ten years of teaching college courses — from Art History to Web Design — means Luke has spent thousands of hours reading and editing student writing, building the exact editorial reflex the ACT English section demands in 45 minutes. His 32 ACT composite and art background give him an unusual angle on the rhetoric and organization questions, where he teaches students to evaluate how a passage is constructed the way you'd critique a composition: every element needs to earn its place or get cut. Rated 4.9 by students.
An MFA in Creative Writing means Patrick has spent years revising prose at the sentence level — cutting redundancy, tightening transitions, and fixing the exact punctuation errors the ACT English section recycles in nearly every passage. His 32 ACT composite and 5.0 rating confirm he applies that editorial instinct under timed, standardized conditions, not just in workshop drafts. He's especially sharp on the rhetorical strategy questions where students need to judge whether a sentence belongs, since that's a judgment call creative writers make constantly.
Scoring a 36 ACT composite means John knows exactly how the English section tries to trip students up — from comma splice traps to rhetorical strategy questions buried in transition sentences. His English and Drama background gives him a natural ear for the grammar and style conventions the test rewards, and he teaches students to spot the patterns that make 75 questions in 45 minutes manageable.
Scoring a perfect 36 ACT composite while studying Industrial Engineering at Georgia Tech means Ilesh learned to treat every problem — including grammar — as a system with rules you can map and apply. He zeroes in on the English section's punctuation and sentence structure questions by teaching the handful of patterns the test actually recycles, so students stop second-guessing what "sounds right" and start recognizing what's structurally correct. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 36 ACT composite while juggling a chemical engineering curriculum at Washington and Lee means Alex learned to read and edit fast — a skill that pays off on the English section's 75 questions in 45 minutes, where hesitation on any single punctuation or rhetoric question eats into the clock. His medical school training at Arizona adds another layer: writing and revising under pressure is now second nature, and he teaches the section's recurring patterns (verb-tense shifts, pronoun agreement, passage-level organization) as a systematic checklist rather than a feel-it-out exercise.
Scoring a perfect 36 ACT composite means Sugi knows exactly how the English section tests grammar — from comma splices and apostrophe rules to rhetorical strategy questions about paragraph organization. She breaks each question type into a decision tree so students can identify what's being tested before they even look at the answer choices. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am currently a resident physician at Northwestern Hospital.
Running through the Honors Program in Medical Education at Northwestern meant Anna was writing and editing scientific prose from her first undergraduate year — tightening arguments, cutting redundancy, and enforcing precise punctuation under deadline, which is essentially the ACT English section at higher speed. She scored a 36 ACT composite and teaches the rhetorical strategy questions (paragraph placement, writer's-goal prompts, transition logic) as structured decision trees rather than subjective judgment calls. Rated 5.0 by students.
Elliot earned a 36 ACT composite, and his approach to the English section zeroes in on the handful of grammar rules — comma splices, modifier placement, parallelism, pronoun agreement — that appear on nearly every test form. Beyond mechanics, he also tackles the rhetorical strategy questions, teaching students how to evaluate whether a sentence should be added, deleted, or repositioned within a passage.
I am a Neuroscience and Behavior major at Columbia University. Although my major is centered in the STEM field, I am also passionate about human rights work, global engagement, and local outreach. While my future plans are subject to change, I see myself continuing in academia, going to medical school, and becoming a physician.
Studying communication and ministry meant Logan spent years dissecting how language persuades — sermon structure, rhetorical clarity, concise phrasing — which maps surprisingly well onto the ACT English section's rhetoric and organization questions. He pairs that background with a 36 ACT composite and teaches the punctuation rules the test loves to recycle (comma usage, apostrophes, semicolons) as quick pattern-recognition decisions rather than gut calls. Rated 5.0 by students.
Most ACT English mistakes come down to a handful of grammar rules applied inconsistently — comma splices, pronoun-antecedent disagreement, redundancy. Christopher scored a 35 composite and drills these patterns until students spot errors almost reflexively, then tackles the trickier rhetorical strategy questions that separate good scores from great ones.
Medical school trains you to read dense passages fast and extract exactly what matters — Jiatian applies that same triage instinct to the ACT English section, where 75 questions in 45 minutes rewards quick, decisive editing over deliberation. As a Rice AB graduate now finishing med school, she treats each underlined portion as a rule-based decision point, drilling students on the specific punctuation and rhetorical patterns the test repeats until choosing the right fix becomes automatic.
The ACT English section rewards students who can spot rhetorical strategy questions hiding among grammar items — knowing when the test is asking about sentence placement versus subject-verb agreement changes everything. Austin scored a 33 ACT composite and brings a Classics background that makes parsing sentence structure second nature. He teaches students to distinguish between questions testing conventions and those testing rhetoric, which cuts down on careless errors.
Comma rules, subject-verb agreement across long clauses, and rhetorical ordering questions make up the bulk of ACT English — and each one has a learnable pattern. Edward scored a 36 composite and approaches this section by drilling the specific grammar conventions that appear most frequently, then layering in the passage-level strategy questions that many students overlook. His background as a writer means he can explain why a rule exists, not just that it does.
I am available to tutor a range of middle school and high school subjects, but I am most excited about tutoring test prep. I remember how stressful preparing for college can be and I am eager to do my part in helping students fulfill their college goals. I believe that learning is a collaborative process and I am committed to being as actively involved in the student's learning as I can. In my spare time, I enjoy reading, going to the movies (I try to see each Oscar nominee before the ceremony every year.), and am a huge Michigan sports fan.
I am a Yale graduate with over 8 years experience tutoring students from a variety of backgrounds. I recently graduated from the Yale School of Public Health with a MPH concentrating in Epidemiology and Global Health. I also received my B.S. from Yale with a double major in Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology and French. I have experience both leading group classes and working with students one on one. I will respond to a student's strengths, weaknesses, and learning style in order to help them succeed and make the most of our time together. I earned a perfect score of 36 on the ACT, 2280 on the SAT, and qualified as a National Merit Scholar on the PSAT. I look forward to working with you!
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Varsity Tutors matches Glendale students with expert ACT English tutors for 1-on-1 instruction. We pair each student with a tutor based on their specific needs, learning style, and goals.
Whether you need homework help, exam prep, or want to get ahead, our ACT English tutors are ready to help.
Common challenges include gaps from earlier material, difficulty with specific concepts, and trouble applying learning to new problems. These issues can snowball quickly in ACT English.
A tutor identifies where you're stuck, fills in gaps, and provides targeted practice. The 1-on-1 format means you get help exactly where you need it.
Tutors work with your student's actual coursework—homework assignments, class notes, and upcoming tests. This keeps tutoring directly relevant to what's happening in the classroom.
When you share information about your student's school and curriculum, we can match you with a tutor who has relevant experience.
All tutors complete background checks, credential verification, and teaching evaluation. Many of our ACT English tutors hold advanced degrees or have years of teaching experience.
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Many students see improved grades within a few weeks, along with better understanding of ACT English concepts and more confidence tackling challenging material.
Tutors track progress and adjust their approach to ensure continued improvement.
Most students benefit from 1-2 sessions per week. More frequent sessions help if your student is significantly behind or has an important exam coming up.
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