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Award-Winning Geometry Tutors

Certified Tutor
2+ years
My academic credentials include a Bachelor of Mathematics degree from the University of Texas at Arlington and a Master of Aeronautical Engineering from Stanford University. I am retired from 40+ years of engineering. The last thirty years was working in the flight simulation industry. I had re...
Stanford University
MS
The University of Texas at Arlington
MS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
I was accepted to Sidney Kimmel Medical School (class of 2025) on 10/15/20 at Thomas Jefferson University after obtaining my undergraduate degree in Biology at the University of Notre Dame in May 2016. With that said, I will dedicate the same quality of care to my students as I would to my future pa...
Thomas Jefferson University
MD
University of Notre Dame
MD

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Proofs are usually the first time a math student has to explain *why* something is true, not just solve for x — and that shift is where most geometry frustration lives. Elias walks through proof logic step by step, teaching students to identify congruence criteria, angle relationships, and parallel-...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor

Certified Tutor
2+ years
I am an entrepreneurial travel-loving media professional living in New Orleans. I have a Master in Business Administration from Tulane University and I love teaching all sorts of subjects, especially math. In terms of hobbies, you can find me long-distance running, studying data science, exploring ...
Tulane University of Louisiana
MS
Northwestern University
MS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
A 4.0 GPA in Business Economics at Wharton means Carina spent years working through quantitative models where geometric intuition — understanding slopes, areas, and spatial relationships — was baked into the coursework. She teaches geometry by connecting the visual logic of shapes and diagrams to th...
University of Pennsylvania
BS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Math has been my passion ever since high school - from earning 1st place nationally in Calculus and Linear Algebra, to competing on the AMC 10, AMC 12, and AIME exams. At Princeton, I tutored peers in Multivariable Calculus, and since then I've worked with middle school through college students in G...
Princeton University
BS

Certified Tutor
2+ years
During City Year, Adeyeni designed geometry and math curricula for at-risk ninth graders — students who often came in convinced they couldn't do math — and learned that the fastest way to unlock geometric reasoning is breaking a complex figure into pieces a student already knows how to handle. His C...
Cornell University
AB

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
I'm Lorenzo! I'm a rising senior at the University of Pennsylvania studying engineering and education. Teaching has been a lifelong passion and in school I am a part of multiple tutoring organizations in the Philadelphia area. I am passionate about math and science (especially computer science), as ...
University of Pennsylvania
BOE

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Lukas
Certified Teacher. Hi! My name is Lukas Brazdeikis and I have a strong background in computer science, physics, math, and designing course material. I will help your student learn as effectively as I can while also showing them the practical value of the knowledge they learn. I recently graduated f...
Duke University
Master's/Graduate
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Susan Caroline
Trigonometry Tutor • +13 Subjects
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' moment that comes from when a tutoring session has been successful.
Nina
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +18 Subjects
Recent Princeton graduate and very successful tutor with nearly 10 years of teaching experience! If you need help with anything from Calculus to essay writing, I can help! I have lots of experience with test prep - particularly the SAT!
Sruti
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +17 Subjects
I am a PhD student at Carnegie Mellon University in the field of Electrical and Computer Engineering. I recently completed my bachelors also at Carnegie Mellon University in Electrical and Computer Engineering as well as Human Computer Interaction. Over the last several years, I have experience teaching a wide variety of students ranging from elementary school math, introduction to programming for children, as well as college level classes. While I tutor a broad range of subjects, I am most passionate about Math, Physics, and Computer Science. I really enjoy teaching programming, especially in fun and engaging ways. I like to relate what I teach to things my students are passionate about, or teach them through fun activities and games, so that they are easier to understand. I also help students prepare for standardized tests and have several strategies that I can share, especially for the math section of the tests. In my spare time, I enjoy dancing, music, hiking and anything outdoors!
Joey
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +13 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!
Eric
Middle School Math Tutor • +6 Subjects
I am a graduate of Duke University( undergrad) where I majored in Philosophy and minored in Theater Studies. During my summers in college, I worked with EducationUSA Nairobi, an advising center for Kenyan students who wish to pursue higher education in the US. When I worked for them, I tutored high school graduates on SAT stuff and also helped them write better personal statements. After graduating from Duke last year, I started tutoring high school students in my neighborhood. I mainly taught math subjects such as Pre-Algebra, Algebra, Pre-Calculus, Calculus, Trigonometry, Geometry, Basic Math and Problem Solving but I'm well versed in Reading and Writing subjects as well. I'm vastly experienced and very patient with all my students. In my free time I enjoy outdoor activities such as hiking, kayaking etc.
William
AP Statistics Tutor • +33 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.
Kevin
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +14 Subjects
I am a graduate from the University of Pennsylvania where I received a Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry. I started peer tutoring in high school, staying after school to help fellow students with AP Chemistry content before major exams and quizzes. I currently tutor in math (up to AP Calculus BC/Calculus II), chemistry, physics, biology and offer test prep for the SAT and several SAT Subject tests. However my favorite subjects to tutor involve chemistry, due to the various real world examples that make the subject more comprehensive and ultimately enjoyable for students. My hobbies and interests include dancing, solving crossword puzzles, binging Netflix TV shows and hiking.
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!
Harshit
AP Calculus BC Tutor • +12 Subjects
Hello! I'm a passionate educator with a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and a love for making learning both effective and enjoyable. Over the years, I've taught a wide range of subjects, always with the goal of making even the most complex topics simple and approachable. My teaching style focuses on breaking down challenging concepts into clear, manageable steps, working through problems together, and showing how lessons connect to real-world situations. I believe that a supportive, comfortable learning environment encourages curiosity and confidence, so students feel free to ask questions and explore ideas. Whether your child is building foundational skills or tackling advanced material, I'm committed to guiding them at their own pace, celebrating progress, and equipping them with tools that last far beyond our sessions. My mission is not only to help students succeed academically but also to help them enjoy the journey of learning
Zach
Pre-Calculus Tutor • +25 Subjects
I am a Yale University Berkeley College graduate of the Yale Class of 2012 with an Intensive B.S. in Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology. Eager for tutoring opportunities, I welcome any of you who wishes to undergo SAT/PSAT or ACT Test Preparation that will get you the scores you need for admission to the college of your choice. As for my experience, I have tutoring experience in both one-to-one settings, going as far back as high school, and group/classroom settings, especially from my 4 years of tutoring with Yale MATHCOUNTS. As a likely future graduate student myself, it is my general goal in life to continue the tradition of passing forth knowledge. Not surprisingly, I have always considered tutoring and education among the most noble of professions where both parties, student and teacher, benefit and learn. What makes me an excellent tutor? Over the course of my life I have had the good fortune of cultivating a variety and number of skill sets, some of which are academic and social in nature. While I certainly consider academic prowess important for the success of any instructor, I would say the most important skill set I have developed is that of adaptability. If a tutor can adapt him/herself to the mode and manner of thinking of another, the tutor, as well as the tutor's audience, will have especially effective and enriching transactions.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Proofs require a fundamental shift from the procedural math students learned before—instead of following steps to get an answer, students must construct logical arguments using definitions, postulates, and theorems. Many students struggle because they don't see the "why" behind each step or don't know which properties to apply. A tutor can break down proof-writing into manageable strategies: identifying what you're given versus what you need to prove, working backward from the conclusion, and building a library of common proof patterns (like proving triangles congruent before using corresponding parts). This transforms proofs from mysterious puzzles into systematic problem-solving.
Spatial reasoning—picturing how shapes move, rotate, and relate in space—doesn't come naturally to all learners, yet it's essential for topics like rotations, reflections, cross-sections of solids, and coordinate geometry. Tutors use concrete strategies like having students sketch from multiple perspectives, manipulate physical models or digital tools, and translate between 2D diagrams and 3D objects. By practicing these visualization techniques repeatedly and connecting them to specific problems, students build mental models that make concepts like volume formulas and perspective drawings click. This hands-on approach helps students move from confusion to confidence when tackling spatial problems.
Geometry word problems often require students to translate written descriptions into accurate diagrams first—a step that algebra word problems don't emphasize as heavily. Students must identify which geometric properties (like angle relationships, triangle congruence, or circle theorems) apply to the situation before they can even set up equations. Tutors teach a structured approach: carefully read and annotate the problem, sketch and label a diagram accurately, identify the relevant geometric relationships, then solve. Many students skip the diagram step and get lost; tutoring emphasizes that the diagram is your roadmap. This methodical process turns confusing word problems into solvable challenges.
Students often confuse angle relationships—complementary vs. supplementary, corresponding vs. alternate interior angles, or angles formed by tangent and chord—because there are many similar-sounding rules to remember. Rather than memorizing in isolation, tutors help students see the underlying patterns: why alternate interior angles are equal (parallel lines create symmetry), how inscribed angles relate to central angles (both measure the same arc), or why exterior angles of a triangle equal the sum of remote interior angles. By connecting these relationships to visual patterns and proofs, students understand them deeply enough to apply them in unfamiliar contexts, rather than just pattern-matching on tests.
Many students treat Coordinate Geometry as a separate topic rather than seeing it as algebra applied to shapes—they can find slopes and write equations of lines, but don't connect these tools to proving properties of quadrilaterals or finding distances. Tutors explicitly bridge this gap by showing how the distance formula comes from the Pythagorean theorem, how slope determines parallel and perpendicular lines, and how equations of lines define the sides of geometric figures. When students see that they're using familiar algebra to verify geometric properties (like proving a quadrilateral is a rectangle by checking that opposite sides are parallel), Coordinate Geometry becomes a powerful tool rather than a confusing new section.
In Geometry, getting the right numerical answer means little without explaining *why* it's correct—teachers and tests emphasize reasoning and justification more heavily than in algebra. Students must cite theorems, postulates, or previously proven statements for every claim, which feels tedious until they understand it's the entire point of the subject. Tutors teach students to think like mathematicians: state what you know, explain what property or theorem applies, and show how it leads to your conclusion. By modeling this reasoning process on simple problems and gradually increasing complexity, students internalize that Geometry is about building logical arguments, not just calculating. This shift in mindset makes grading rubrics make sense and helps students write clearer, more convincing proofs.
Students often confuse congruence (same shape and size) and similarity (same shape, different size) because both involve matching angles and proportional sides—the vocabulary sounds abstract. Tutors use visual comparisons and real-world examples: congruent triangles are identical copies you could overlay perfectly, while similar triangles are enlargements or reductions of each other. More importantly, tutors teach students to recognize *when* each concept applies: use congruence to prove that segments or angles are equal (via SSS, SAS, ASA), and use similarity to find unknown lengths or prove angle relationships in figures with parallel lines. By connecting these tools to specific problem types, students stop treating them as isolated definitions and start seeing them as strategies for solving different geometric challenges.
The circle unit introduces a flood of theorems—inscribed angles, tangent-chord angles, power of a point, secant-secant angles—that can feel overwhelming because each one looks different and has its own rule. Rather than memorizing each theorem separately, tutors help students see the unifying principle: all these angle measures relate to arcs of the circle. By focusing on how different configurations (inscribed, tangent, secant) create different angle-to-arc relationships, students build intuition rather than relying on memorization. Tutors also teach students to draw and label diagrams carefully, identify which angle and arc they're dealing with, and apply the appropriate relationship—this systematic approach makes the unit feel manageable and helps students retain concepts long-term.
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