Award-Winning Physics
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Award-Winning Physics Tutors

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Anthony
Earning a BS in physics from Yale gave Anthony deep comfort with the subject's core challenge: translating a physical scenario into a mathematical model and then interpreting the result. He breaks down force diagrams, energy conservation, and wave behavior by tying each concept back to the underlyin...
Yale University
Bachelor of Science, Physics
Yale University
Doctor of Philosophy, Economics
Yale University
BS in physics and math

Certified Tutor
6+ years
JF
JF's dual training in mathematics and computer science at Stanford means the calculus and vector algebra that bog down most physics students are second nature — freeing up mental bandwidth to actually think about what's happening physically in a problem. He tackles everything from AP Physics 1 mecha...
Stanford University
Bachelor of Science, Mathematics and Computer Science
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Ian
As a Yale physics major who also teaches thermodynamics, special relativity, and statics and dynamics, Ian has worked through the full arc from introductory mechanics to upper-division theory — so he knows exactly where each concept builds on the last and where students tend to lose the thread. He's...
Yale University
Bachelor of Science, Physics
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Andrew
A PhD in biomedical engineering built on a bachelor's in physics means Andrew has spent years solving problems across mechanics, electromagnetism, and thermodynamics. He teaches physics by emphasizing free-body diagrams, unit analysis, and the habit of translating word problems into mathematical mod...
University of North Texas
Bachelor of Science, Physics
Vanderbilt University
Doctor of Philosophy, Biomedical Engineering
Certified Tutor
14+ years
Kinematics equations and free-body diagrams become far less intimidating once a student learns to read each problem as a physical story rather than a math puzzle. Garrett breaks problems into setup, diagram, and solve phases, teaching students a repeatable framework they can apply from Newton's laws...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
Kathleen
Kathleen's math background at Washington University gives her a natural advantage when teaching physics — she treats kinematics equations, force diagrams, and energy conservation as applied math problems rather than disconnected formulas. She digs into the specific step where a student gets stuck, w...
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor in Arts, Mathematics
Certified Tutor
Dennis
Understanding physics means learning to translate a word problem into a free-body diagram or energy equation — and then trusting the math to get you to the answer. Dennis developed that skill set through years of quantitative research at Vanderbilt, where physical principles underpinned his graduate...
Vanderbilt University
Masters, Chemical and Physical Biology
Grinnell College
Bachelors, Biochemistry
Certified Tutor
Understanding physics means seeing the same core principles — Newton's laws, conservation of energy, wave behavior — show up in wildly different problems. Amber teaches students to identify which principle applies and how to set up the math, drawing on her strong background in both science and mathe...
Dartmouth College
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
4+ years
Three science degrees from Yale — including one in chemistry — mean Zosia has worked through mechanics, thermodynamics, and electromagnetism problems repeatedly across disciplines, building the kind of cross-subject fluency that makes her especially clear on where physics concepts connect to the mat...
Yale University
Bachelor of Science
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jackie
Jackie took AP Physics C — the calculus-based version — and scored a 5 on the exam, which means she's comfortable with everything from Newtonian mechanics to electromagnetic induction. She unpacks free-body diagrams and energy conservation problems by tying the math to real physical situations stude...
Vanderbilt University
Bachelor of Science, Business Communications
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Brian
A Caltech economics and computer science graduate, Brian brings serious quantitative depth to physics — from Newtonian mechanics and energy conservation through electromagnetism and wave behavior. He teaches students to set up problems systematically, identifying which principles apply before touchi...
University of California-Santa Cruz
PHD, Technology & Information Mgmt (Indef. deferred)
California Institute of Technology
Bachelors in Economics and Computer Science
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Ellie
Engineering students see physics differently than most tutors do — every force diagram, energy conservation problem, and wave equation is a tool they actually use. Ellie's biomedical engineering program at Yale means she tackles mechanics, electricity, and thermodynamics regularly in applied context...
Yale University
Master of Arts, Biomedical Engineering
Yale University
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Bryan holds a B.S. in Physics and teaches the subject the way it's actually practiced — starting from a real situation, identifying the relevant principles, and building a solution step by step. Whether the problem involves conservation of momentum or circuit analysis, he emphasizes drawing clear fr...
Duke University
Bachelor of Science
Certified Tutor
7+ years
Michael
Michael holds a PhD in Physics from the University of Michigan and a BS from Rice, and he's spent years teaching everything from basic mechanics to advanced electrodynamics and special relativity. He's particularly effective at connecting abstract principles — like conservation laws or field theory ...
Rice University
Bachelor of Science, Physics
University of Michigan
Doctor of Philosophy, Physics
Rice University
BS in Physics
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Phillip
Most physics struggles come down to one thing: not knowing how to start a problem. Phillip teaches a systematic approach — draw the diagram, identify the forces, pick the right coordinate system — that turns intimidating multi-step problems into a sequence of smaller, solvable ones. He's taken physi...
Brown University
Bachelor of Science, Biomedical Engineering
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Top 20 Science Subjects
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Brian
AP Statistics Tutor • +115 Subjects
A Caltech economics and computer science graduate, Brian brings serious quantitative depth to physics — from Newtonian mechanics and energy conservation through electromagnetism and wave behavior. He teaches students to set up problems systematically, identifying which principles apply before touching a single equation, which is the skill that separates students who understand physics from those who just memorize formulas.
Ellie
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +45 Subjects
Engineering students see physics differently than most tutors do — every force diagram, energy conservation problem, and wave equation is a tool they actually use. Ellie's biomedical engineering program at Yale means she tackles mechanics, electricity, and thermodynamics regularly in applied contexts. She unpacks the math behind each physics concept so students understand the equations instead of just memorizing them.
Bryan
Calculus Tutor • +18 Subjects
Bryan holds a B.S. in Physics and teaches the subject the way it's actually practiced — starting from a real situation, identifying the relevant principles, and building a solution step by step. Whether the problem involves conservation of momentum or circuit analysis, he emphasizes drawing clear free-body diagrams and checking units before touching a calculator.
Michael
Calculus Tutor • +21 Subjects
Michael holds a PhD in Physics from the University of Michigan and a BS from Rice, and he's spent years teaching everything from basic mechanics to advanced electrodynamics and special relativity. He's particularly effective at connecting abstract principles — like conservation laws or field theory — to real-world phenomena students can actually visualize. Rated 4.7 by students, he brings both deep subject knowledge and genuine teaching experience to every session.
Phillip
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects
Most physics struggles come down to one thing: not knowing how to start a problem. Phillip teaches a systematic approach — draw the diagram, identify the forces, pick the right coordinate system — that turns intimidating multi-step problems into a sequence of smaller, solvable ones. He's taken physics through the college level as part of his biomedical engineering degree at Brown and knows exactly where conceptual gaps tend to hide.
Aaron
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +22 Subjects
Mechanical engineering grad school is essentially applied physics on repeat — Aaron solves statics, dynamics, thermodynamics, and fluid mechanics problems daily, so the concepts in introductory and AP-level courses are second nature rather than something he has to dust off. He's especially sharp at breaking down free-body diagrams and energy conservation setups, connecting the physical picture to the math so students see why an equation applies instead of guessing which one to use. Rated 5.0 by students.
Christopher
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +51 Subjects
Studying mechanical engineering at Harvard means Christopher doesn't just remember physics — he's actively building on it every semester, from Newtonian mechanics and thermodynamics to electromagnetism and wave behavior. He breaks down complex problems by teaching students to draw clean free-body diagrams, identify which conservation law applies, and translate word problems into solvable equations. That systematic approach turns intimidating multi-step problems into manageable sequences.
Charles
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +25 Subjects
Engineering is applied physics, which means Charles doesn't just remember the formulas for kinematics, energy conservation, or rotational dynamics — he uses them to solve design problems at Yale every week. That practical fluency lets him explain not just how to set up a free-body diagram but why each force matters and what happens when you change a variable. Rated across math and science subjects, he's especially sharp on real-world application problems.
Justin
AP Calculus BC Tutor • +48 Subjects
Three years of tutoring introductory physics at Washington University gave Justin a sharp sense of where students get stuck — usually at the gap between understanding a concept verbally and translating it into a free-body diagram or equation. His dual bachelor's degrees in physics and math, plus doctoral training in computational methods, let him attack problems from both the physical intuition side and the mathematical machinery side. Rated 5.0 by students.
Akarsh
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +25 Subjects
Akarsh's cellular and molecular biology training — both bachelor's and master's — required grinding through the same mechanics, thermodynamics, and electromagnetism that physics students face, particularly in biophysics coursework where forces, pressure gradients, and energy transfer aren't optional. He tackles problem sets by first isolating which physical law is actually at work, then mapping the math onto it step by step, so students stop guessing at formulas and start reasoning through solutions.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Students often struggle with abstract concepts like forces, energy, and electromagnetism because they're difficult to visualize. Common trouble spots include Newton's laws, circular motion, thermodynamics, and wave mechanics. Personalized tutoring helps by breaking down these concepts into concrete, visual explanations—using diagrams, real-world examples, and step-by-step problem-solving to build genuine understanding rather than memorization. A tutor can also identify exactly where your reasoning breaks down and fill those specific gaps.
Problem-solving is essential in Physics—it's where understanding actually solidifies. Research on learning shows that practice testing and retrieval practice are among the most effective study techniques. During personalized instruction, a tutor guides you through problems of increasing difficulty, teaching you to identify which concepts apply, set up equations correctly, and check your work. This builds both confidence and the problem-solving instincts you need for exams and AP/IB assessments.
Memorizing formulas gets you nowhere in Physics—you'll forget them, and you won't know when to use them. Real understanding means knowing why F=ma matters, what it tells you about motion, and how it connects to energy and momentum. Tutoring focuses on building conceptual foundations so you can derive or reason through problems even if you forget a formula. This approach transforms Physics from a collection of equations into a coherent framework for understanding how the world works.
Unit conversions and dimensional analysis trip up many Physics students, but they're learnable skills. Tutors teach you to treat units as part of your calculation—not an afterthought—so you can catch errors and verify that your answer makes sense. They also show you how dimensional analysis works as a problem-solving tool, not just a checking mechanism. Once you internalize this approach, it becomes automatic and removes a major source of mistakes.
Absolutely. Physics is everywhere—from how a car's brakes work to why the sky is blue. Tutors connect abstract concepts to real-world scenarios, which makes them stick better in memory and helps you actually care about what you're learning. This approach also strengthens your scientific reasoning skills by showing you how to ask questions, test ideas, and apply Physics principles to novel situations—skills that extend far beyond the classroom.
The best Physics tutors have deep subject knowledge and the ability to explain concepts clearly at your level—whether you're in high school, AP Physics, or college-level courses. They should be strong problem-solvers who can show you multiple approaches and help you develop intuition, not just plug-and-chug solutions. Look for someone who asks good questions to pinpoint your confusion and adapts explanations based on what works for you. Varsity Tutors connects you with tutors who understand these principles and match your learning style.
With consistent personalized instruction, students typically see improvements in both grades and confidence within a few weeks. You'll develop stronger problem-solving skills, a clearer grasp of core concepts, and the ability to tackle unfamiliar problems. For AP or honors Physics, many students move from struggling to earning A's or 4-5 scores on exams. The real win is developing a working understanding of Physics that lasts—not cramming facts for a test.
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