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Award-Winning Geometry Tutors

Carina

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Carina

BS
Carina's other Tutor Subjects
AP Statistics
AP Calculus BC
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra

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...

Education

University of Pennsylvania

BS

Brooke

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Brooke

Bachelor
Brooke's other Tutor Subjects
AP Statistics
AP Calculus BC
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra

Mock Trial at Harvard is essentially proof-writing in disguise — building a case from premises to conclusion, anticipating counterarguments, and knowing exactly which evidence supports each claim. Brooke applies that same structured reasoning to geometric proofs, particularly when students need to c...

Education

Harvard University

Bachelor

Elias

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Elias

Bachelor
Elias's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Trigonometry
Pre-Calculus

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-...

Education

University of Pennsylvania

Bachelor

Miles

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Miles

MS
Miles's other Tutor Subjects
Geometry
Algebra
High School English
Philosophy

Proofs are where most geometry students stall — not because the logic is too hard, but because nobody teaches them how to think in logical steps. Miles holds degrees in both Philosophy and Mathematics from Cornell, plus a master's in Logic from the University of Amsterdam, which means he treats geom...

Education

Cornell University

MS

University of Amsterdam

MS

Joey

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Joey

Master's/Graduate
Joey's other Tutor Subjects
AP Statistics
AP Calculus BC
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra

Proofs are usually the first place geometry students feel lost, because the logic feels completely different from arithmetic. Joey's engineering training at Glasgow and Penn required rigorous spatial reasoning — from analyzing force diagrams to modeling 3D structures — and he uses that intuition to ...

Education

University of Pennsylvania

Master's/Graduate

University of Glasgow

Bachelor

Adeyeni

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Adeyeni

AB
Adeyeni's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Arithmetic
Trigonometry

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...

Education

Cornell University

AB

David

Certified Tutor

2+ years

David

Bachelor
David's other Tutor Subjects
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra
Trigonometry
Pre-Calculus

I have tutored students in the Math portion of the PSAT and SAT as well as the subjects of Algebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, Algebra II, and AP Calculus AB. I am a recent graduate of Cathedral Preparatory High School in Elmhurst, New York and a rising freshman at Tufts University. Currently I am work...

Education

Tufts University

Bachelor

Logan

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Logan

MAT
Logan's other Tutor Subjects
Applied Mathematics
AP Statistics
AP Calculus BC
AP Calculus AB

Proofs are usually where geometry goes from comfortable to confusing — students can spot congruent triangles but freeze when asked to write a logical argument about why. Logan approaches proof-writing as a skill that can be taught step by step, connecting each theorem back to spatial reasoning stude...

Education

Virginia Commonwealth University

MAT

Randy

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Randy

Undergraduate Degree
Randy's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Geometry
Algebra

Proofs are usually the first place geometry students feel lost — the logic feels completely different from anything they've done in math before. Randy walks through each proof step by step, teaching students how to identify given information, spot congruence relationships, and build a logical chain ...

Education

Rice University

Undergraduate Degree

The University of Texas at Austin

Undergraduate Degree

Solomon

Certified Tutor

2+ years

Solomon

AB
Solomon's other Tutor Subjects
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Trigonometry

Proofs are where most Geometry students hit a wall, because suddenly math asks them to argue rather than compute. Solomon's Yale background in both math and philosophy makes him unusually well-suited for this — he treats geometric proofs as logical arguments, teaching students to identify given info...

Education

Yale University

AB

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Zane

AP Calculus AB Tutor • +56 Subjects

Everybody learns, and everybody learns differently. The importance of pedagogy, the practice of teaching, cannot be overstated. It is not enough to share knowledge; knowledge must be communicated. This is the philosophy by which I have tutored and by which I currently tutor. With 4th grade students and with college-age students, with students in America and with students in Japan, I have helped new ideas and information take root and blossom to the satisfaction of student and tutor alike. I love those moments of recognition as someone internalizes knowledge, when an unfamiliar idea becomes familiar, and the creative ability such moments foster. My aim as a tutor is to understand how my students learn, so that they can do so most efficiently.

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Maham

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +71 Subjects

I am currently an undergraduate student at Rice University pursuing a bachelor of science in biochemistry and cell biology on the pre-med track. One of my most memorable experiences in the medical field has been working as a research intern at Texas Children's Hospital and collaborating with genetic specialists to publish a research paper about a rare genetic disease. Medicine is truly one of my greatest passions, and biology has been one of my favorite subjects to tutor through the peer mentorship program at my high school. Through this program, I have also extensively tutored math (from middle school math all the way through IB Mathematics) and find myself drawn by the methodical nature of the subject. Many times, I find that students simply label math as "difficult" because the concepts are brand new and numbers seem like a foreign language. Relating math concepts to simpler everyday ones is one of the many strategies I use when tutoring math, and I have found a lot of success through it. Throughout high school, I have been very active in my school community as the Editor-in-Chief of the school newspaper, president of the Speech and Debate Team, and president and founder of the Random Acts of Kindness Club. Through these roles, I have mentored younger students in areas such as writing, research, and public speaking. Additionally, I am fluent in 4 languages (English, Urdu, Arabic, and Spanish), although my favorite one to teach is Spanish. Attending an international school has emphasized to me the importance of diversity, inclusion, and tolerance, and I believe that learning a new language is one of the best ways to reinforce these ideals. In my spare time, you can find me engrossed in arts and crafts, running my Etsy store, or volunteering my local art museum's kids' crafts classes. I also love listening to music, creating music on my violin, and singing various genres.

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Joy

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +144 Subjects

I am an experienced educator with a strong background in both the sciences and languages. I earned my bachelor's degree from Boston University, double-majoring in Biology (with a focus on ecology and conservation biology) and Hispanic Language and Literatures. I also hold a Master of Arts in Teaching in the Biological Sciences from Miami University. For over a decade, I was an international educator in Guayaquil, Ecuador. I taught English as a second language to students of all ages and led the natural sciences department for a large bilingual elementary school. I now teach middle school science at a private school in the U.S. I tutor a wide range of subjects, and I am passionate about helping students gain confidence in areas where they've struggled. I love seeing students begin to enjoy subjects they once found too difficult or tedious. My goal is to provide patient, personalized support that helps every learner recognize their strengths and build lasting academic skills.

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Rene

Applied Mathematics Tutor • +40 Subjects

PhD Mathematics. Undergrads in Physics and Maths. Duke University and NYU alumni.

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Alex

AP Calculus AB Tutor • +40 Subjects

I am a rising sophomore majoring in Computer Science with a minor in Data Science at Rice University in Houston, TX. Naturally, my favorite subjects to teach are math and computer science, particularly programming languages like Python, Java, and Scratch. I have found great enrichment in these seemingly daunting areas, and I hope to make them more easily accessible for others. As a founding member of the Ready for College Leadership club (RCL), I mentored high school freshmen and sophomores to help them succeed in high school and prepare for college admissions, while also providing academic aid. The best part of working with students is watching them grow not just as a learner, but also as a thinker. I always encourage students to be curious and let their true interests be incorporated into lessons. In my spare time, I love learning languages; I am a heritage Spanish speaker and a self-taught Portuguese speaker. I also enjoy playing guitar and practicing new songs to sing.

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Grishma

Middle School Math Tutor • +69 Subjects

I'm passionate about helping students because I've seen how meaningful support can turn uncertainty into confidence. Having excelled academically myselfI graduated in the top 1% of my high school class and completed a rigorous AP curriculum in subjects like Chemistry, Biology, Physics, Calculus BC, English, Economics, and SpanishI know how transformative good teaching can be. I later earned my undergraduate degree from Northwestern University, where I studied Neuroscience, Anthropology, and Global Health. Those disciplines deepened my appreciation for how people learn, think, and connect across different perspectives. Throughout college and medical school, I've tutored students of varying ages and backgrounds in subjects including biology, chemistry, math, and writing, as well as standardized test preparation. My favorite subjects to tutor are biology and writingbiology because it helps students see the logic and beauty behind how living systems work, and writing because it empowers them to express complex ideas with clarity and confidence. My teaching philosophy centers on patience, adaptability, and curiosity. I approach each session as a collaboration, tailoring lessons to each student's needs and helping them build problem-solving skills rather than rely on rote memorization. Outside of academics, I'm passionate about photography and travelboth of which keep me creative, observant, and open-minded, qualities I bring into every tutoring interaction.

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Olivia

AP Calculus AB Tutor • +37 Subjects

I received my BA in mathematics and economics from Vanderbilt University. Upon graduating, I was employed as a high school math teacher for four years in the states of Tennessee and Florida, while also tutoring in STEM and test prep for a Nashville-based company. I love getting to see students grow in confidence in mathematics, and create relevant scenarios that get them excited about tackling challenges. I believe education is the most important tool that a person can have, and I am currently pursuing my PhD in Economics at UNC Chapel Hill. When not studying furiously myself, I enjoy spending time outside, playing sports, and reading good books.

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Anna

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +33 Subjects

I am a recent graduate from Vanderbilt University with a degree in Economics! I tutor in Math and English and love helping my students achieve their academic best! I have 5 years of professional tutoring experience and have worked with students in grades K-12.

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Eric

AP Calculus BC Tutor • +39 Subjects

I'm a junior undergraduate at Florida State University with over 200 hours of tutoring experience, both online and in person. I've been teaching for more than two years, including students with learning disorders like ADHD, and I mainly specialize in physics, chemistry, calculus, and algebra. Outside of tutoring, I've been a soccer coach for the past four years, which taught me patience, creativity, and how to keep things engaging no matter who I'm working with. I can tutor math through chemistry, physics, and statistics, tying lessons to real-life applications and adjusting my approach to fit each student- because there's never just one "right" way to understand a problem.

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Reed

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects

Hi my name is Reed and I am a graduate from Carleton College with a degree in Economics. I have a passion for helping students learn and achieve their academic and personal goals. At Carleton, I played Varsity Soccer, hosted a radio show, and served as an economics prefect/TA for introductory microeconomics classes. In this role, I both held classroom sessions and tutored students individually. It was rewarding to see the results of my efforts and the impact I could have on other students. I am at an expert level in many math and economics areas. The key to my process is helping you not just 'get the answer' but also understanding the process of how to get there. I want to help students of all ages and make them think and have fun while learning.

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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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