Award-Winning Organic Chemistry
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Award-Winning Organic Chemistry Tutors

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Jeremy
Having taught General Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, and GOB courses for health professions repeatedly at the college level, Jeremy approaches reaction mechanisms as skills to be practiced — not facts to be memorized. His PhD in Chemistry from Yale means he can trace arrow-pushing, stereochemical ana...
Ripon College
Bachelor of Science, Chemistry
Yale University
Doctor of Philosophy, Chemistry

Certified Tutor
Max
Studying physics with a concentration in chemical principles at Penn means Max encounters organic chemistry from the physical side first — thermodynamics of reaction pathways, orbital interactions driving nucleophilic attacks, and the energy landscapes that determine whether a substitution or elimin...
University of Pennsylvania
Current Undergrad, Physics with Concentration in Chemical Principles
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Aidan
Reaction mechanisms in organic chemistry are less about memorizing hundreds of arrows and more about recognizing a handful of recurring patterns — nucleophilic attacks, leaving group stability, and electron density shifts. Aidan studied organic chemistry as part of Notre Dame's premed track and teac...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science in Science-Computing
Certified Tutor
4+ years
Abrahim
Reaction mechanisms are the language of organic chemistry, and most students struggle because they try to memorize arrows instead of understanding electron flow. Abrahim unpacks each mechanism — SN1 vs. SN2, E1 vs. E2, electrophilic aromatic substitution — by starting with nucleophilicity, sterics, ...
University of California Los Angeles
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
Medical College of Wisconsin
Doctor of Medicine, Premedicine
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Amelia
I am a freshman at Vanderbilt University studying biochemistry and involved in analytical chemistry research. Despite my studies being very science oriented, I also enjoy studying English and the humanities. I'd be happy to tutor you in any of these areas!
Vanderbilt University
Bachelor of Science, Biochemistry
Certified Tutor
Brittany
Penn's pre-health track put Brittany through rigorous chemistry coursework alongside her psychology degree, and she spent her undergraduate years tutoring General Chemistry I and II at the university's Tutoring Center — building the kind of fluency with reaction fundamentals that carries directly in...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of the Arts in Psychology
Certified Tutor
Reaction mechanisms are the language of organic chemistry, and Jon spent his Master's work at Princeton immersed in that language daily. He unpacks arrow-pushing, stereochemistry, and functional group reactivity by tying each mechanism back to the electron behavior driving it, so students build intu...
Princeton University
Master's in Chemistry
Northwestern University
B.A. in Chemistry
Certified Tutor
14+ years
Malcolm
Reaction mechanisms are the heart of organic chemistry, and they only make sense when a student can track electron movement and predict how functional groups behave. Malcolm is studying biochemistry and cell biology at Rice, where organic chemistry is foundational — he knows which arrow-pushing patt...
Rice University
Bachelor in Arts, Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Certified Tutor
James
Studying chemistry at Harvard while preparing for Columbia Medical School means James has worked through organic chemistry from both the academic and pre-med sides — understanding mechanisms deeply enough to satisfy a chemistry major, and efficiently enough to apply them in biochemistry and pharmaco...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Chemistry
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Reaction mechanisms are the backbone of organic chemistry, and learning to predict products means recognizing electron-density patterns, not memorizing hundreds of individual reactions. Alec's approach — honed through years of TA work in Cornell's chemistry department — emphasizes arrow-pushing logi...
Cornell University
Bachelor of Science
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Raj
Studying biochemistry and molecular biology means Raj encountered organic chemistry not as a single course but as the language underlying everything from enzyme kinetics to metabolic pathways — so he teaches functional group reactivity and stereochemistry with that bigger picture always in view. His...
Rice University
Bachelor of Science
Certified Tutor
Natasha
Reaction mechanisms are the backbone of organic chemistry, and Natasha teaches them the way she learned them in her biomolecular engineering program — by tracing electron movement step by step until the logic feels inevitable rather than arbitrary. She digs into arrow-pushing, stereochemistry, and f...
Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Certified Tutor
13+ years
Daniel
Reaction mechanisms are the language of organic chemistry, and Daniel learned to speak it fluently through his microbiology and dental science training. He walks through arrow-pushing, stereochemistry, and functional group reactivity by emphasizing the "why" behind each electron movement — so studen...
Arizona State University
Bachelor of Science, Microbiology
University of California Los Angeles
Doctor of Dental Science, Dentistry
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Austin
As an MD/PhD student at Northwestern doing doctoral research in organic synthesis, Austin lives in the world of reaction design — figuring out which bonds to form, which protecting groups to use, and why one retrosynthetic route beats another. That daily immersion means he teaches mechanisms and ste...
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Bachelor of Science, Chemistry
Certified Tutor
Rebecca
Reaction mechanisms are the backbone of organic chemistry, and most students struggle not because the material is impossibly hard but because they try to memorize hundreds of reactions instead of learning the handful of electron-pushing patterns that explain almost all of them. Rebecca's science tra...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts, Biology, General
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Raj
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +37 Subjects
Studying biochemistry and molecular biology means Raj encountered organic chemistry not as a single course but as the language underlying everything from enzyme kinetics to metabolic pathways — so he teaches functional group reactivity and stereochemistry with that bigger picture always in view. His 5.0 rating and a perfect 36 ACT reflect someone who thinks systematically, which translates directly into how he walks students through multi-step synthesis problems: identify the transformation, trace the electron flow, then confirm the regiochemistry.
Natasha
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +50 Subjects
Reaction mechanisms are the backbone of organic chemistry, and Natasha teaches them the way she learned them in her biomolecular engineering program — by tracing electron movement step by step until the logic feels inevitable rather than arbitrary. She digs into arrow-pushing, stereochemistry, and functional group reactivity by asking students to predict products before revealing answers, building real intuition for how molecules behave.
Daniel
Middle School Math Tutor • +30 Subjects
Reaction mechanisms are the language of organic chemistry, and Daniel learned to speak it fluently through his microbiology and dental science training. He walks through arrow-pushing, stereochemistry, and functional group reactivity by emphasizing the "why" behind each electron movement — so students can predict products on exam day instead of relying on memorized templates.
Austin
Calculus Tutor • +15 Subjects
As an MD/PhD student at Northwestern doing doctoral research in organic synthesis, Austin lives in the world of reaction design — figuring out which bonds to form, which protecting groups to use, and why one retrosynthetic route beats another. That daily immersion means he teaches mechanisms and stereochemistry with the fluency of someone who actually builds molecules, not just someone who once passed the course.
Rebecca
Calculus Tutor • +35 Subjects
Reaction mechanisms are the backbone of organic chemistry, and most students struggle not because the material is impossibly hard but because they try to memorize hundreds of reactions instead of learning the handful of electron-pushing patterns that explain almost all of them. Rebecca's science training means she teaches students to read a mechanism the way you'd read a sentence — subject, verb, object — so new reactions become predictable rather than surprising.
Zosia
Middle School Math Tutor • +46 Subjects
Having earned a chemistry degree from Yale, Zosia spent years immersed in the subject well past the introductory orgo sequence — which means she can contextualize tricky topics like electrophilic aromatic substitution and acyl chemistry within the broader landscape of how molecules actually behave. She walks students through spectral analysis and multi-step synthesis by building from first principles of electronegativity and sterics, so each new reaction type feels like an extension of what they already know rather than a fresh page to memorize. Rated 4.9 by students.
Josef
Calculus Tutor • +25 Subjects
Reaction mechanisms are the language of organic chemistry, and Josef teaches students to read them — arrow pushing, stereochemistry, and functional group reactivity — rather than memorize hundreds of individual reactions. His biochemistry focus at Cornell means he can connect orgo concepts like nucleophilic substitution and carbonyl chemistry directly to biological molecules students will encounter later.
Garrett
Calculus Tutor • +30 Subjects
Most organic chemistry frustration comes from trying to memorize hundreds of reactions instead of recognizing the handful of electronic patterns — nucleophilic attack, leaving group ability, steric effects — that drive all of them. Garrett teaches students to read arrow-pushing mechanisms as stories about electron movement, which makes predicting products and regiochemistry intuitive. His approach turns reaction maps from overwhelming charts into logical flowcharts.
Jonathan
Geometry Tutor • +29 Subjects
Jonathan's human biology degree and pre-med track at Cornell meant organic chemistry wasn't just a prerequisite — it was the course that connected molecular structure to everything he'd later study in physiology and biochemistry. He tackles synthesis problems and spectroscopy interpretation by linking functional group behavior back to biological relevance, which gives students a reason to care about each mechanism. Rated 4.9 by students.
Kade
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +17 Subjects
Being on the pre-med track at Northwestern while studying both biology and chemistry means Kade is taking organic chemistry alongside the same students he tutors — he knows which professors emphasize what, which problem sets are brutal, and where the common mistakes hide in topics like stereochemistry and acyl substitution. That proximity to the material gives him a practical, recently-tested understanding of how to break down multi-step synthesis problems into manageable pieces.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Organic Chemistry is challenging because it requires visualizing molecules in 3D space and understanding reaction mechanisms that aren't immediately intuitive. Many students struggle with memorization overload, trying to learn hundreds of reactions without grasping the underlying principles of how and why they occur.
Personalized tutoring addresses this by helping you move beyond rote memorization to understand the core concepts—like electron behavior, molecular interactions, and reaction patterns. Once you see the logic behind reactions, the material becomes far more manageable and retention improves dramatically.
Organic Chemistry is fundamentally about spatial reasoning—understanding how atoms are positioned in 3D and how they move during reactions. Expert tutors use multiple visualization strategies, including drawing mechanisms step-by-step on whiteboards, using molecular models, and working through resonance structures until the concepts click.
Rather than passively reading structures in a textbook, you'll actively construct and manipulate them with guidance, which builds the mental visualization skills that are essential for success on exams and in the lab.
Memorizing reactions is a dead end—there are far too many to memorize, and exams test your ability to predict new reactions you haven't seen before. Understanding mechanisms means learning why a reaction happens: how nucleophiles attack, how carbocations form and rearrange, and how different functional groups behave.
Tutors focus on teaching you to think like an organic chemist, recognizing patterns and predicting outcomes based on fundamental principles. This approach not only works better for exams but also prepares you for advanced chemistry, biochemistry, and laboratory work where applying concepts matters far more than recall.
Organic Chemistry underpins pharmaceuticals, materials science, polymers, food chemistry, and countless other fields. Making these connections helps motivation and retention—it's much easier to remember a concept when you understand why it matters.
Great tutors weave real-world context into lessons, explaining how reaction mechanisms apply to drug design, how stereochemistry affects drug efficacy, or how polymers are synthesized. These connections transform abstract concepts into tangible knowledge and help you see why you're learning this material.
The best Organic Chemistry tutors have strong chemistry backgrounds and, ideally, lab experience. More importantly, they can explain complex mechanisms clearly, ask probing questions to identify gaps in your understanding, and teach you how to approach problems systematically rather than memorize solutions.
You want someone who emphasizes conceptual understanding over memorization, uses multiple explanation methods (drawing, models, analogies), and can adjust their teaching style to match how you learn. Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who specialize in meeting students where they are and building genuine mastery.
Organic Chemistry exams test conceptual reasoning and problem-solving, not just recall. Personalized tutoring focuses on your specific weak points—whether that's stereochemistry, synthesis planning, or reaction prediction—rather than generic review.
Tutors work with you on practice problems similar to exam questions, teach you strategies for tackling unfamiliar reactions, and help you develop the systematic approach that leads to consistent answers. This targeted preparation typically leads to significant score improvements and genuine confidence going into exams.
Yes. The lecture component focuses on theory and mechanisms, while the lab component tests your ability to apply those concepts in practice—carrying out reactions, analyzing results, and troubleshooting when things don't go as planned. Both require understanding, not just following procedures.
Expert tutors help strengthen your conceptual foundation so lab work makes sense, teach you how to think through experimental design and error analysis, and help you see connections between the reactions you study in lecture and what you observe in the lab. This integrated approach leads to stronger performance across both components.
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