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Award-Winning College Algebra Tutors

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Jessica's path from a Penn history degree through medical school means she's tackled college algebra from both sides — first as a prerequisite she had to master, then as a tool she relied on for pharmacology dosing calculations and statistical reasoning in clinical research. That dual perspective le...
Nova Southeastern University
PHD, Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, History
University of Pennsylvania
undergraduate

Certified Tutor
Kate
Rational expressions, logarithmic equations, and function composition tend to be the spots where college algebra students get stuck — not because the ideas are impossibly hard, but because the notation gets dense fast. Kate unpacks each step methodically, drawing on the same algebraic toolkit she re...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Masters, Environmental Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
Matthew
A bioinformatics concentration at Stanford meant Matthew spent his coursework translating biological systems into mathematical models — the kind of work where manipulating exponential functions, solving systems of equations, and interpreting logarithmic transformations aren't abstract exercises but ...
Stanford University
Bachelors in Human Biology (concentration in Bioinformatics and Stem Cell Science)

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Earnest
Two chemical engineering degrees gave Earnest the kind of algebraic fluency that comes from years of solving material balances, reaction kinetics equations, and thermodynamic models — all of which depend on manipulating rational expressions, exponentials, and systems of equations under pressure. He ...
University of Pennsylvania
Masters, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Samantha
Medical school admissions required Samantha to ace quantitative reasoning long before she started her MD — her perfect 1600 SAT and 36 ACT came from the kind of algebraic fluency that makes polynomial operations, inequalities, and function transformations feel automatic rather than formulaic. Her gl...
Duke University
Bachelors in Global Health Determinants, Behaviors, and Interventions
Harvard Medical School
Current Grad Student, MD

Certified Tutor
3+ years
Samica
Studying finance and business analytics at Wharton, Samica works with algebraic tools like systems of equations, exponential models, and function manipulation in virtually every quantitative course — from financial modeling to econometric analysis. That daily exposure means she can walk through a tr...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of Science, Finance

Certified Tutor
Laura
Economics coursework at the bachelor's level is built on algebraic scaffolding — demand curves are functions, elasticity calculations require logarithmic manipulation, and equilibrium models are systems of equations Laura solved repeatedly throughout her degree. That constant application means she c...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelors, Economics

Certified Tutor
Eric
Eric's ecology and evolutionary biology background means he's spent serious time with the algebraic modeling that underpins population dynamics — exponential and logarithmic functions aren't abstract exercises when you're tracking species growth curves or decay rates in the field. He brings that con...
Princeton University
Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Andrew
Rational expressions, polynomial division, and logarithmic equations tend to be the topics where college algebra students lose their footing. Andrew breaks these down by connecting each algebraic technique to the physics and engineering problems he's solved throughout his PhD, giving students a reas...
University of North Texas
Bachelor of Science, Physics
Vanderbilt University
Doctor of Philosophy, Biomedical Engineering

Certified Tutor
Asta
Political science at the University of Chicago is deceptively quantitative — game theory models, statistical analysis of polling data, and policy cost projections all run on the same algebraic machinery that college algebra courses formalize. Asta brings that background to topics like systems of equ...
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts in Political Science
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Johari
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +20 Subjects
I am an actor/composer/lyricist who loves to write new showtunes. Musical theatre is something I have grown to love, and the love, surprisingly, stems from my own devotion to cartoons and video games. But, make no mistake, while I can often be found watching an episode of Justice League, playing Smash, or giving the City of Angels score another listen, I will always put you first. Hobbies: art, reading, writing, books, music
Katie
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +33 Subjects
I am happy to help students prepare for these exams. I enjoy students of all ages and am excited to tutor a wide range of subjects, although my first loves are math and English (especially grammar). I truly believe my sincere energy and enthusiasm can help make students excited about learning. I welcome questions and value honesty while tutoring. My personal interests include international education, traveling, hiking, camping, and Notre Dame football.
Mark
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +25 Subjects
I am a recent Yale graduate with a B.S in chemical engineering. I have over 5 years of experience tutoring a wide range of subjects, and I am very passionate about math and science. My favorite part of tutoring is instilling confidence into students and making them feel that they can understand and enjoy a subject. Hobbies: books, writing, reading, music, art
Matthew
College Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects
I'm particularly fond of math and science, I can provide assistance in almost any subject (from Latin to world geography to art history), and can also help in preparing students for standardized tests such as the SAT, GRE, and MCAT. Hobbies: books, writing, reading, music, art
Ethan
AP Statistics Tutor • +66 Subjects
I am not teaching or grading papers, I can usually be found playing some brass instrument or another, umpiring baseball, trying out a new recipe in the kitchen, or spending far too much time on Netflix.
Timothy
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects
I am one of many Varsity Tutors. I attended Jesuit High School in Carmichael, CA where I graduated with a 4.3 GPA taking multiple AP and honors courses (AP Bio, Chem, Physics B, Gov, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, English Lit, and English Lang). I also participated in several tutoring organizations throughout high school.
Jason
College Algebra Tutor • +50 Subjects
I'm a fourth year medical student at the University of Pennsylvania who is applying to pediatrics residency programs. I graduated in 2006 from Yale University with a bachelors degree in History. I subsequently completed a post-baccalaureate program at Bryn Mawr College to complete the premedical course work and matriculated into Penn's medical school. I took a year off from medical school between my third and fourth year to get a masters degree in education focusing on medical education but also learning a tremendous amount about K-12 education as well. Hobbies: art, outdoors, books, writing, reading, music
Samuel
12th Grade math Tutor • +36 Subjects
I'm just not very good at it." People tend to not be very excited about topics that they don't understand. Teachers and grades have been making them feel bad whenever they come to class, and there is nothing more frustrating than studying for hours and still not getting any concept. These sorts of things can make someone feel defeated or unintelligent. To that end, the simplest way to get a student to become excited about learning is to counteract these negative effects with healthier, positive learning strategies. When students seriously get something, don't move on immediately to the next topic, but instead dwell on what they get for a while, solidifying it and making them feel intelligent and like future concepts are within their grasp. Build pride in each student for the progress and work they complete so that they are eager to master each concept. In addition, to get students more engaged in topics, I try to emphasize the real-world applications of anything I teach. As an applied mathematics major, I can appreciate more than most how the subjects people study can affect the real world. So when students groan "When am I ever going to have to use this?" I can actually give a satisfying answer that will make them realize how powerful what they learn really is. This tends to make students less dismissive and care a lot more about the concepts at hand. While I can't promise that these methods will make a student love their school subjects as much as sports or video games, they tend to make them appreciate and care about the material as well as feel validated by it. In turn, this leads to a much more serious and sustained effort and enjoyment of the subject.
Jean
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +57 Subjects
I am a fourth year student at Harvard Medical School, and will start working as a pediatrician in July of 2016. However, if I had not decided to become a physician, I would have strongly considered becoming a teacher. Teaching is one of the most enjoyable activities I do, and I have taught in some capacity every year for the past ten years. I have taught subjects ranging from English to algebra, from physics to dance, and have taught students ranging in age from toddlers to adults. I have also provided advice on application essays, resumes, and interview strategies for Harvard College students applying to highly competitive scholarships. Each of these experiences has taught me how to communicate concepts in clear and engaging ways. For instance, while tutoring adolescents enrolled in the Boston-based Artists for Humanity program, I would often teach students whom I had never worked with before, and thus became adept at quickly discovering and implementing the strategies that worked best for a particular student (e.g., visual/tactile examples, analogies, and breaking down complex problems into smaller parts). While tutoring a janitorial staff member in preparation for the mathematics portion of her GED high school equivalency exam, I learned how to quickly identify the highest yield topics for a standardized exam and focus our efforts on those. Each of these experiences has been incredibly rewarding, and has inspired me to teach in some capacity throughout my career as a doctor.
Laura
College Algebra Tutor • +37 Subjects
I am a graduate of Princeton University, class of 2014. I received my Bachelor of Arts in History with a focus on recent American economic history. I was a pre-med, molecular biology major for my first two years at Princeton, and while I ended up deciding not to pursue a career in the sciences, I took many science classes in high school (AP) and in college, and still enjoy these subjects. Since graduating from Princeton, I have moved to Manhattan where I have started a job as an analyst at a private equity firm. I tutored professionally in Princeton for three years, and am excited to continue working with students as a Varsity Tutors tutor. I have experience tutoring elementary school math, Algebra, Algebra II/Pre-calc, English literature, writing (esp. essay editing), Biology (including AP), Chemistry (including accelerated and AP), SAT, and French (through French III). My own educational experience has had a formative impact on my style as a tutor. I attended a Montessori school from pre-school through 8th grade, and was heavily influenced by the focus on independent learning, discovery, and exploration as a way to develop a more thorough and better understanding of academic subjects. I am passionate about making sure that students enjoy what they are learning, and I try to individualize tutor sessions to match the specific needs of each student. Both my parents are teachers (one a violin teacher and another a professor), which has also influenced my ability and desire to help students learn.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Students typically find rational expressions, polynomial operations, and systems of equations most challenging because they require fluency with multiple procedural steps combined with conceptual understanding. Word problems involving exponential or logarithmic functions are another major pain point—students can solve the math but struggle to translate real-world scenarios into equations. Additionally, graphing transformations (shifts, reflections, stretches) and understanding function behavior across different function families often trip up students who memorized procedures without seeing the underlying patterns.
Tutors help students recognize patterns across function families—seeing why a parabola's vertex form reveals key information, or how logarithms undo exponentials—rather than treating each topic as isolated rules. Through guided problem-solving, students learn to ask "Why does this step work?" and "What would happen if I changed this parameter?" This conceptual foundation makes complex topics like composition of functions and inverse functions click, because students understand the reasoning rather than following a formula blindly.
Showing work reveals your reasoning process and makes it easier to catch errors—a small algebra mistake early can invalidate an entire multi-step solution. Tutors help students develop clear, organized work habits by modeling how to annotate steps (like "multiply both sides by 2" or "apply the quadratic formula"), which also helps you review and learn from mistakes. This skill is essential for College Algebra because partial credit often depends on demonstrated understanding, and clear work helps both you and your tutor identify exactly where confusion occurs.
Tutors teach a systematic approach: identify variables, extract key relationships (like "revenue equals price times quantity"), and recognize which function family fits the scenario (linear, quadratic, exponential, etc.). Rather than jumping to equations, effective tutoring involves talking through the problem aloud, sketching diagrams, and testing your equation with concrete numbers to verify it makes sense. This strategy transforms word problems from intimidating puzzles into structured problems where you're confident about what the math should represent.
Instead of memorizing rules like "negative flips the graph," tutors help students visualize transformations by exploring how changing parameters actually affects the graph—using technology or sketching by hand to see that adding 3 to f(x) shifts it up, or multiplying by 2 stretches it vertically. Understanding the parent function (like y = x², y = |x|, or y = 2^x) as your anchor point makes every transformation predictable. This conceptual approach means you can handle unfamiliar functions confidently because you understand the underlying principles, not just memorized shift rules.
Personalized tutoring rebuilds confidence by breaking College Algebra into manageable pieces, celebrating small wins, and addressing specific gaps without judgment. A tutor can help you see that struggling with rational expressions doesn't mean you're "bad at math"—it means you need a different explanation or more practice with a particular skill. Working through problems at your own pace, asking questions freely, and experiencing success on topics that previously seemed impossible creates momentum that extends beyond tutoring sessions into your independent work and classroom performance.
A strong College Algebra tutor understands not just how to solve problems, but why certain approaches work—they can explain the connection between algebraic manipulation and graphical representation, and recognize when a student's error reflects a conceptual misunderstanding versus a careless mistake. Look for tutors who can adapt their explanations to your learning style, ask probing questions to check understanding, and help you develop problem-solving strategies rather than just providing answers. Experience teaching or tutoring College Algebra specifically (rather than just high school algebra) is valuable because College Algebra demands deeper conceptual understanding and more complex multi-step reasoning.
Core College Algebra concepts—solving equations, working with functions, graphing, exponentials and logarithms—are consistent across textbooks, so a tutor can absolutely help regardless of your specific book. However, some curricula emphasize different approaches (like transformation-focused graphing versus traditional point-plotting), and your tutor can align their explanations with how your instructor presents material. If you bring your textbook, homework, or exams to tutoring sessions, your tutor can ensure explanations match your course's language and methods, making it easier to apply tutoring insights directly to your classwork.
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