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Award-Winning Elementary Math Tutors

Certified Tutor
Molly
Place value, regrouping, and early fractions click faster when a tutor knows exactly where young learners tend to get stuck. Molly has spent three years teaching math intervention in 2nd through 4th grade classrooms, so she can pinpoint a gap in number sense and address it before it snowballs. Rated...
Northwestern University
Master of Science in Education
Columbia University in the City of New York
Bachelor in Arts, History

Certified Tutor
Mary
Building number sense early — understanding place value, basic operations, and how to reason through word problems — sets the trajectory for everything that comes after in math. Mary treats elementary math as a chance to make young learners feel confident with numbers rather than anxious about them....
Cornell University
Bachelor's Degree in Biological Engineering
Certified Tutor
Katherine
Building number sense early — understanding place value, regrouping in subtraction, or why multiplication is repeated addition — shapes how a student thinks about math for years. Katherine uses concrete examples and visual strategies to make these ideas stick before layering on procedures. She's pat...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of Arts in Economics and Music
Certified Tutor
Marc
Getting multiplication tables and place value to click for a younger learner takes more than repetition — it takes someone who genuinely enjoys being in the room. Marc's training as an actor gives him an unusual ability to make a lesson on fractions or basic geometry feel like a conversation rather ...
Duke University
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
Neha
Getting multiplication facts and place value right early on shapes how a student handles every math class that follows. Neha has tutored kids as young as kindergarten across Chicago and knows how to make concepts like fractions and basic division click through hands-on, visual strategies rather than...
University of Illinois at Chicago
Masters, Public Health
University of Illinois at Chicago
Bachelors, Biological Sciences
Certified Tutor
Moriah
Getting multiplication facts and place value right in elementary math isn't just about drilling — it's about building number sense so a child can reason through problems they haven't seen before. Moriah, a Cornell-educated educator who manages and teaches at a prep school, brings patience and struct...
Cornell University
Bachelor of Arts in Music
Certified Tutor
Nicole
Building number sense early — understanding place value, basic multiplication facts, and simple fractions — sets up everything that comes later in math. Nicole studied child development as part of her Children's Studies minor at Washington University, so she knows how to match explanations to the wa...
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelors in Psychology (minor in Children's Studies)
Certified Tutor
Gabriel
Multiplication tables, place value, basic fractions — elementary math is deceptively important because every future math concept depends on it. Gabriel's background in human development gives him sharp insight into how younger learners think and build number sense. He keeps sessions interactive and ...
University of Chicago
PHD, Comparative Human Development
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
Getting fractions, long division, and place value right at the elementary level sets the trajectory for everything that comes after in math. Matthew takes a patient, step-by-step approach — showing how a problem works, then giving the student a chance to try similar ones while asking questions along...
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
Brittany
Getting multiplication tables, fractions, and place value right at this stage shapes how a student thinks about math for years. Brittany's experience ranges from tutoring middle schoolers in West Philadelphia to working with college students at Penn, which gives her a clear picture of where early ma...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of the Arts in Psychology
Certified Tutor
Andrew
Getting multiplication tables, place value, and basic fractions right at the elementary level shapes everything that comes after in math. Andrew teaches these foundational skills through step-by-step reasoning, making sure a student understands why borrowing works in subtraction or how division rela...
Boston University
PHD, Law, Management
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelors, Molecular Biology, Literature
Certified Tutor
Allen
Getting multiplication facts, place value, and basic fractions right at this stage matters enormously for everything that comes later in math. Allen keeps younger learners engaged by turning abstract number concepts into concrete, step-by-step reasoning they can follow — and by celebrating the small...
Yale University
B.A. in an interdisciplinary major focused on economics and political science
Certified Tutor
Victoria
Victoria taught first, second, and third graders for three years through Teach for America, building lessons around place value, basic operations, and early problem-solving every single day. That classroom experience — not just tutoring, but full-time teaching — means she knows how young learners de...
Yale University
Master's Degree in Education
Southern Connecticut State University
Master of Science, Education
Yale University
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
15+ years
Fractions, place value, and multi-digit multiplication all click faster when a student understands the reasoning behind each step. Austin breaks these concepts into visual, concrete pieces — using number lines, grouping, and real-world scenarios — so younger learners build genuine number sense inste...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelors
Certified Tutor
Kathleen
Teaching a seven-year-old why borrowing works in subtraction requires a completely different skill set than explaining calculus. Kathleen brings both — she's a math major at Washington University who genuinely enjoys working with younger students on foundational skills like multi-digit operations, b...
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor in Arts, Mathematics
Top 20 Math Subjects
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Andrew
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +106 Subjects
Getting multiplication tables, place value, and basic fractions right at the elementary level shapes everything that comes after in math. Andrew teaches these foundational skills through step-by-step reasoning, making sure a student understands why borrowing works in subtraction or how division relates to multiplication. His patient, clear communication style — rated 4.8 by families — keeps younger learners engaged without overwhelming them.
Allen
College Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects
Getting multiplication facts, place value, and basic fractions right at this stage matters enormously for everything that comes later in math. Allen keeps younger learners engaged by turning abstract number concepts into concrete, step-by-step reasoning they can follow — and by celebrating the small wins that build genuine confidence with numbers.
Victoria
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +43 Subjects
Victoria taught first, second, and third graders for three years through Teach for America, building lessons around place value, basic operations, and early problem-solving every single day. That classroom experience — not just tutoring, but full-time teaching — means she knows how young learners develop number sense and where common misconceptions around regrouping or fractions tend to take root.
Austin
Elementary Math Tutor • +34 Subjects
Fractions, place value, and multi-digit multiplication all click faster when a student understands the reasoning behind each step. Austin breaks these concepts into visual, concrete pieces — using number lines, grouping, and real-world scenarios — so younger learners build genuine number sense instead of just memorizing procedures.
Kathleen
College Algebra Tutor • +27 Subjects
Teaching a seven-year-old why borrowing works in subtraction requires a completely different skill set than explaining calculus. Kathleen brings both — she's a math major at Washington University who genuinely enjoys working with younger students on foundational skills like multi-digit operations, basic fractions, and number sense. She figures out how each kid thinks and adapts her explanations to match.
Asta
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +73 Subjects
Building number sense early — understanding place value, basic fractions, and the logic behind multiplication — shapes how a student thinks about math for years. Asta's experience working with younger learners across different educational systems in both Hong Kong and the U.S. gives her a practical sense of where kids get stuck and how to unstick them.
Amber
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +53 Subjects
Early math confidence matters more than early math speed, and Amber structures her sessions around making sure a student genuinely understands place value, basic operations, or simple fractions before racing ahead. She uses hands-on strategies and real-world examples — counting money, measuring ingredients — to make abstract numbers tangible. Rated 5.0 by families she's worked with.
Kirstie
Arithmetic Tutor • +35 Subjects
Building number sense early changes everything about how a student experiences math later on. Kirstie breaks down concepts like place value, basic multiplication strategies, and simple fractions using visual and hands-on approaches shaped by her Master's in Education. She keeps sessions upbeat and low-pressure so young learners stay curious rather than anxious.
Diana
Middle School Math Tutor • +32 Subjects
Early math concepts like place value, regrouping, and basic multiplication set the trajectory for everything that comes later. As a certified elementary teacher, Diana builds number sense through hands-on strategies — skip counting patterns, visual models, and mental math shortcuts — that make operations feel intuitive rather than mechanical.
Rachel
Middle School Math Tutor • +43 Subjects
Getting multiplication facts, place value, and basic fractions right early on shapes how a child feels about math for years. Rachel teaches these foundational concepts through structured practice that builds genuine number sense, not just rote memorization. Her experience across elementary subjects means she knows how to keep younger learners engaged and confident.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Procedural understanding means knowing the steps to solve a problem (like the algorithm for long division), while conceptual understanding means knowing *why* those steps work. Many elementary students can follow steps but struggle when problems look different or when they need to apply skills in new situations. A tutor helps bridge this gap by using visual models, manipulatives, and real-world examples to show students the reasoning behind the math—so they can tackle unfamiliar problems with confidence rather than just memorizing rules.
Word problems require students to translate language into mathematical operations, identify what information matters, and decide which strategy to use—multiple layers of thinking at once. Many students focus on finding numbers and plugging them into operations without understanding the problem's structure. Tutors help by teaching students to break problems into manageable steps: reading carefully, visualizing the situation (with drawings or diagrams), identifying the question being asked, and then choosing an appropriate strategy. This systematic approach builds confidence and helps students see word problems as solvable puzzles rather than confusing text.
Showing work isn't just about getting credit on tests—it's a thinking tool that helps students catch their own mistakes and explains their reasoning to others. Many elementary students rush through problems or rely on mental math without recording steps, which makes it hard to find errors or learn from them. Tutors model how to write out work clearly, explain why each step matters, and use "showing work" as a problem-solving strategy rather than a chore. When students see that organized work actually helps them solve harder problems, they're more motivated to develop this habit.
Math anxiety—the worry or fear that builds around math—can actually interfere with memory and problem-solving ability, creating a cycle where anxious students perform worse and become more anxious. This often starts when students feel rushed, don't understand concepts, or internalize the belief that they're "not a math person." Tutors create low-pressure environments where mistakes are learning opportunities, celebrate effort and progress, and help students experience success with manageable challenges. Over time, this rebuilds confidence and helps students see themselves as capable mathematicians.
Elementary math can feel like disconnected topics—addition, fractions, measurement, geometry—when students only learn procedures in isolation. Strong tutors help students recognize that multiplication is repeated addition, that fractions are parts of a whole (just like division), and that area and multiplication are connected. By drawing these connections explicitly and using consistent visual models across topics, tutors help students build a coherent understanding of math rather than a collection of separate tricks. This deeper web of connections makes new topics easier to learn and helps students retain skills longer.
Elementary math programs vary significantly—some emphasize traditional algorithms, others use "new math" or Singapore Math approaches, and schools may use different textbooks with different visual models and terminology. A good tutor learns how your child's school teaches math and reinforces those same methods and language, so there's consistency between tutoring and classroom instruction. This alignment prevents confusion and helps students feel confident using what they've learned in tutoring when they return to class. Tutors can also bridge gaps if a student missed key concepts or struggled with their school's particular approach.
Yes—tutors personalize instruction to meet students where they are. For struggling students, tutors slow down, use concrete models and manipulatives to build foundational understanding, and break skills into smaller steps. For advanced students, tutors introduce deeper problem-solving, challenge them with multi-step or open-ended problems, and explore enrichment topics that extend beyond grade-level curriculum. In both cases, the goal is helping students develop mathematical thinking and confidence, not just moving through material faster or slower.
Multi-step problems require students to plan a sequence of operations, keep track of intermediate results, and stay organized—skills that don't develop automatically. Tutors teach explicit strategies like underlining important information, drawing diagrams to visualize the problem, breaking it into smaller questions ("What do I need to find first?"), and checking each step before moving forward. They also help students choose appropriate tools—mental math for simple steps, written calculations for complex ones—so students feel in control rather than lost in a maze of numbers.
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