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Award-Winning Physiology Tutors

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Malik
As a second-year medical student with a strong foundation in science and a passion for education, I specialize in making tough subjects easier to understand. I excel in math, biology, physics, and other challenging topics that often intimidate students and I genuinely enjoy helping others master th...
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Bachelor's

Certified Tutor
2+ years
Junpei
I'm a current medical student at VCU School of Medicine, and a graduate of Johns Hopkins University. I received my Bachelor of Science in Molecular and Cellular Biology. I've had the pleasure of tutoring a diverse range of students for 5 years; while I tutor a broad set of subjects, I'm most passion...
Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor
Virginia Commonwealth University
Professional (JD, MD, DMD, etc)
Certified Tutor
2+ years
I graduated with a B.A from Cornell University and majored in biology (premed) with a concentration in genetics. I am currently 2nd year medical student at DUCOM and am passionate about biology, biochemistry and English. I understand the struggle of memorising small details and struggling to underst...
Drexel University
Master's/Graduate
Cornell University
Bachelor
Certified Tutor
2+ years
I am currently a fourth year medical student at Thomas Jefferson medical school. I graduated from Brandeis University with a Bachelor of Science in Biology and minors in Chemistry and Studio Art. While at Brandeis, I served as a teaching assistant for the introductory organic chemistry course and ha...
Brandeis University
BS
Certified Tutor
2+ years
Ansh
I have over two years of tutoring and teaching experience at Case Western Reserve University. I served as a Supplemental Instructor for ENGR 145 (Chemistry of Materials), where I created worksheets, led review sessions, and helped students develop strong conceptual foundations. I later worked as a T...
Case Western Reserve University
BS
Certified Tutor
James
Studying physiology in a doctoral physical therapy program at Washington University means James isn't just reading about organ systems — he's applying concepts like cardiac output, muscle fiber recruitment, and respiratory mechanics to clinical cases every week. That applied lens makes him especiall...
SUNY University at Albany
Bachelor of Science, Economics and Japanese
Washington University in St. Louis
Current Grad, Physical Therapy
Certified Tutor
2+ years
I graduated from Saint Louis University with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology. Since then, I took the DAT exam and received a very high score, which allowed me to secure interviews from multiple Dental Schools across the country. I'm ready and willing to share the studying skills I acquired d...
Saint Louis University-Main Campus
BS
Certified Tutor
Jaya
Pre-med students need to understand physiology at the systems level — how cardiac output responds to exercise, how nephrons regulate fluid balance, how neurons propagate action potentials. Jaya's coursework in genetics and cell biology gives her the molecular foundation to explain *why* these system...
University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Bachelors, Genetics & French
Certified Tutor
2+ years
Moving from a mediocre public school to one of the nation's most prestigious and rigorous universities to study biology was a huge challenge for me. I realized that if I wanted to succeed, I needed to drastically change the way I was learning. I stopped memorizing content, and instead forced mys...
University of Chicago
Bachelor's (in progress)
Certified Tutor
Salman
Understanding physiology means tracing cause and effect across organ systems — how a drop in blood pressure triggers the renin-angiotensin pathway, or why decreased ventilation shifts the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve. Salman's master's work in pathology gave him a detailed command of normal ...
University of British Columbia
Master of Science, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Simon Fraser University
Bachelor of Science, Cell and Molecular Biology
Top 20 Science Subjects
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Jhonatan
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +42 Subjects
I am a firm believer in the idea that there is no better feeling than that "aha!" moment.
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.
Alex
Calculus Tutor • +51 Subjects
I am a pre-Occupational Therapy student majoring in psychology with minors in neuroscience and art. I will be graduating with honors from the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities in May, and I will begin Washington University School of Medicine's Doctorate of Occupational Therapy Program this Fall. My academic pursuits have made me confident in my abilities to tutor those pursing degrees in social sciences along with those pursuing careers in health care. Currently my favorite subject is neuroscience. I fell in love with it after I started college and I plan on specializing in neurorehabilitionation as an occupational therapist.
Rachel
College Algebra Tutor • +35 Subjects
I'm tutoring to ask clarifying questions . I really enjoy taking seemingly difficult topics and explaining them in a logical fashion while emphasizing the basics every step of the way. I find that students' frustration with a concept generally stems from uncertainty regarding how to organize many intersecting ideas. Nothing makes me more proud then watching a student master a formerly daunting topic. Hobbies: books, music, dancing, art, reading, cooking, writing
Ken
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +34 Subjects
I am a Wake Forest University graduate with a degree in Psychology, and I am currently pursuing a career as a physical therapist.
Maryem
Elementary School Science Tutor • +3 Subjects
I am a current osteopathic medical student with a strong passion for teaching science in a way that feels approachable and understandable. Throughout my academic journey, I have developed a deep understanding of subjects including biology, biochemistry, anatomy, physiology, immunology, and neuroscience, and I enjoy helping students build both confidence and mastery in these areas. I scored in the 99th percentile on the MCAT Biology section and have experience breaking down complex concepts into simple, memorable explanations tailored to each student's learning style. In addition to tutoring, I have worked in educational settings including academic mentoring and tutoring, where I learned the importance of patience, encouragement, and individualized teaching strategies. My approach focuses on helping students truly understand material rather than memorize facts. I work to create a supportive learning environment where students feel comfortable asking questions, developing critical thinking skills, and gaining confidence in their abilities. Whether a student needs help preparing for exams, strengthening foundational concepts, or improving study strategies, I aim to make learning engaging and less overwhelming. Beyond academics, I have also contributed to scientific research, including publication work involving peripheral peptides and neuroscience-related topics. My background in medicine and research allows me to connect scientific concepts to real-world applications and clinical relevance. I enjoy working with students at many levels, including middle school, high school, college, and pre-medical students, and I am especially passionate about helping students succeed in the sciences and achieve their long-term goals.
Denver
Anatomy & Physiology Tutor
I am an avid cell molecular biologist, anatomist and neuroscientist with a passion for educating young minds to reach their fullest potential. I have more than a decade of experience in teaching and research at College/University level. Having lived and taught on 2 different continents has enabled me to become more attentive to student's needs and do my best to set them up for future success. My philosophy is that reading and teaching can stimulate the mind but thinking will plant and grow ideas. The approach I use is inspired from my own experiences in learning biological sciences where there seemed to be always an absurd amount of material to be read and understood. By centering on the core principles, I believe it significantly reduces the need to 'cram' concepts but to apply content that they have learnt. My job is to lead students to learn more about themselves as it relates to the subject, that way the knowledge acquired results in permanent change of behavior.
Ryan
Physics Tutor • +9 Subjects
I am a graduate of James Madison University having earned my Bachelors of Science in Kinesiology concentrated in Exercise Science and Pre-Physical Therapy studies. I have been admitted and plan to earn my Doctor of Physical Therapy degree starting in August 2026. I am excited to tutor students that seek assistance in Biomechanics, Physics, and Anatomy. Through clinical experience, athletic coaching, and tutoring I have learned how to best approach difficult topics and attack weaknesses head on to instill confidence and drive personal growth, resulting in success.
Jason
Microbiology Tutor • +4 Subjects
I am a fourth-year medical student at a U.S. MD program with plans to pursue a career in cardiology. I am passionate about working with learners and helping them reach their academic goals. My strengths include standardized test preparation for the ACT, MCAT, and USMLE Step 1 and Step 2, as well as core subjects such as medicine, anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, biology, chemistry, biochemistry, physics, psychology, etc. In addition, I have extensive experience helping students craft compelling essays for college and medical school applications. I look forward to supporting you in achieving your next academic milestone!
Christian
Pathophysiology Tutor
Hello! I graduated medical school at Temple University's Lewis Katz School of Medicine am pursuing a career as a physician specializing in radiation oncology! I also graduated summa cum laude from Clarion University of Pennsylvania with a degree in Molecular Biology and Biotechnology with a minor in Chemistry. I have also earned an MBA at Temple University. Additionally, I am earning a Masters of Education degree through Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine. I have worked as a tutor at the high school and college level tutoring biology, biochemistry, and math. I have served as a tutor for my medical school for the last 4 years as well focusing on Step 1 and Step 2 CK tutoring. This has meant I have tutored in subjects ranging from: physiology, pathophysiology, pharmacology, and far more! I love mentoring and teaching and am excited to find out how I can help you! I always try to meet students where they are and work toward their goals with them.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Memorizing isolated facts—like listing the cranial nerves or naming muscle attachments—can get you through a test, but understanding physiology means grasping why systems work the way they do and how components interact. For example, understanding kidney function goes beyond memorizing the nephron structure; it's understanding osmotic gradients, active transport, and how these mechanisms create concentration differences that drive filtration and reabsorption.
Personalized 1-on-1 instruction helps bridge this gap by connecting concepts to real mechanisms. A tutor can walk you through cause-and-effect relationships, use visualizations to show what's happening at the cellular level, and ask questions that push you to explain why rather than just recall what. This deeper understanding makes physiology stick and transfers to clinical reasoning or advanced coursework.
Physiology involves processes happening at scales and speeds that are hard to visualize—ion channels opening and closing in milliseconds, or oxygen diffusing across the alveolar membrane. Many students struggle precisely because these mechanisms are invisible to the naked eye.
Tutors use multiple strategies to make abstractions concrete: breaking down complex sequences into manageable steps, drawing and annotating diagrams in real time, using analogies to familiar systems, and having you sketch mechanisms yourself. When you actively engage with visualizations—rather than passively viewing them—your brain creates stronger mental models. A tutor can also recommend animations and interactive tools, then work with you to make sure you understand what you're seeing rather than just watching it happen.
An expert physiology tutor should have strong subject knowledge and the ability to explain complex systems clearly, but equally important is their skill at diagnosis—identifying whether you're struggling with a concept itself, with the language used to describe it, or with how to apply it. They should ask probing questions to understand your thinking, not just correct wrong answers.
Look for tutors who connect theory to clinical or real-world examples, who encourage you to explain concepts in your own words, and who help you build problem-solving strategies (like analyzing a case by tracing through a physiological pathway step-by-step). The best fit depends on your goals—whether you're preparing for an exam, a professional program interview, or building mastery for future courses.
Lab courses add a practical dimension to physiology: you're collecting data, running experiments, and troubleshooting when results don't match expectations. This is where tutoring becomes particularly valuable. A tutor can help you understand the why behind the experimental design—what variable you're measuring and why it matters—which deepens both your lab performance and your conceptual understanding.
Tutors also help with scientific reasoning and interpretation: understanding what your data actually shows, why unexpected results might have occurred, and how to connect lab findings back to physiological principles. This transforms labs from 'follow the protocol' exercises into genuine learning experiences where you see physiology in action.
Improvement depends on your starting point and the time invested, but personalized instruction typically produces noticeable gains within 4-6 weeks of consistent work—often showing up as better understanding of connections between topics, improved exam performance, and increased confidence in class discussions or lab work.
More significantly, students who work with tutors often report a shift from feeling overwhelmed by information overload to feeling like physiology 'makes sense.' This comes from developing a coherent mental model of body systems rather than viewing physiology as isolated facts. Whether you're aiming for a grade boost, preparation for medical school exams, or genuine mastery for future clinical work, a tutor can tailor the pace and focus to match your goals.
Clinical reasoning requires more than physiology knowledge—it requires the ability to think through a patient scenario by tracing physiological pathways, predicting how changes in one system affect others, and connecting normal physiology to pathophysiology. Tutors help develop this thinking by presenting scenarios and walking you through the logical steps: 'Here's a symptom—which system is affected? What's the normal physiology? What happens when that system malfunctions?'
This case-based, systems-thinking approach is exactly what medical school interviews and health professions exams assess. Tutoring builds both the knowledge foundation and the reasoning skills, so you're prepared not just to pass an exam but to think like a clinician.
Yes—many physiology courses include quantitative work: calculating heart rate variability, interpreting blood gas values, working with concentrations and osmolarity, or analyzing renal clearance. Students often struggle not with math itself but with understanding what the calculation means physiologically.
A tutor can help in two ways: walking you through the mechanics of the calculation itself (ensuring you understand the formula and unit conversions), and more importantly, connecting the numbers back to physiology (explaining what a high osmolarity value tells you about kidney function or what a low PaCO2 indicates about ventilation). This dual approach—technical competence plus conceptual understanding—makes calculations feel purposeful rather than arbitrary.
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