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Award-Winning Reading Tutors

Tom

Certified Tutor

Tom

PHD, American Studies
Tom's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Geometry
Calculus

Strong reading comprehension isn't just about understanding vocabulary — it's about tracking an author's argument, recognizing tone shifts, and distinguishing main ideas from supporting details. Tom, who scored a 1520 on the SAT, applies the same close-reading techniques from his literary training t...

Education

Boston University

PHD, American Studies

Harvard University

Bachelors

Test Scores
SAT
1520
Parag

Certified Tutor

Parag

Current Undergrad, Political Science and International Studies
Parag's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
ACT Writing
ACT English

Political science coursework at Northwestern means Parag spends most of his week pulling apart op-eds, policy briefs, and academic arguments — texts where the real claim is often buried under qualifications and jargon. He teaches students to spot that structure in any passage: where the thesis actua...

Education

Northwestern University

Current Undergrad, Political Science and International Studies

Test Scores
ACT
32

Certified Tutor

Jessica

Masters in Education, Education Policy and Management
Jessica's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Arithmetic
Middle School Math
Calculus

Strong readers don't just decode words — they predict, question, and synthesize as they move through a text. Jessica teaches specific active-reading strategies like annotation, summarization checkpoints, and inference-building that turn passive page-turning into genuine comprehension. Her education ...

Education

Harvard University

Masters in Education, Education Policy and Management

The College of Wooster

Bachelor in Arts, English

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Jeff

Masters, History
Jeff's other Tutor Subjects
10th-11th Grade Writing
Calculus
Algebra
SAT Mathematics

A philosophy degree from Princeton and a history master's from Berkeley means Jeff spent years doing nothing but reading — dense primary sources, competing scholarly arguments, texts where a single paragraph can shift an entire interpretation. He taught undergraduates at Berkeley how to pull apart t...

Education

University of California-Berkeley

Masters, History

Princeton University

B.A. in philosophy

Test Scores
SAT
1550

Certified Tutor

Jacob

Master of Arts, German
Jacob's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
SAT Subject Test in Literature
SAT Subject Test in German with Listening

Close reading is second nature when your degrees are in Comparative Literature and German — Jacob spent years at Columbia and UC Berkeley dissecting texts across languages and literary traditions. He teaches students to identify rhetorical strategies, track thematic development, and annotate with pu...

Education

University of California-Berkeley

Master of Arts, German

Columbia University

B.A. in Comparative Literature

Columbia University in the City of New York

Bachelor in Arts, Comparative Literature

Test Scores
SAT
1550

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Sugi

Bachelor's degree in Cognitive Science and Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Sugi's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Middle School Math
Geometry

A background in cognitive science means Sugi understands how the brain processes text — why some students lose track of an author's argument mid-paragraph, and what strategies actually improve comprehension and retention. She teaches concrete techniques like annotation mapping and active questioning...

Education

Rice University

Bachelor's degree in Cognitive Science and Biochemistry & Cell Biology

Baylor College of Medicine

Doctor of Medicine, Ophthalmic Technology

Test Scores
Perfect Score
ACT
36

Certified Tutor

Diana

Masters, Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages State Certified Teacher
Diana's other Tutor Subjects
Middle School Math
Elementary Math
Calculus
Algebra

For students who struggle with reading comprehension, the problem often isn't effort — it's that no one has explicitly taught them how to monitor their own understanding as they read. Diana's TESOL background trained her in exactly this: making strategies like predicting, questioning, and summarizin...

Education

Boston University

Masters, Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages State Certified Teacher

Stanford University

Bachelor in Arts, Linguistics

Test Scores
SAT
1560

Certified Tutor

Meghan

Bachelor of Arts in English (Minor in Music)
Meghan's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
PSAT Writing Skills
SAT Subject Test in Literature

Struggling readers often aren't lacking intelligence — they're missing a strategy for pulling meaning from dense or unfamiliar texts. Meghan teaches active reading techniques like annotation, context-clue vocabulary building, and identifying an author's argument before getting lost in details. Her P...

Education

Cornell University

Bachelor of Arts in English (Minor in Music)

Test Scores
ACT
32

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Vivian

Bachelor in Arts
Vivian's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
PSAT Writing Skills
SAT Mathematics

Trained as a historian, Vivian reads critically by habit — identifying an author's argument, weighing evidence, and spotting assumptions. She teaches those same active-reading strategies to students, whether they're working through a dense nonfiction passage or a novel chapter, so they move from sur...

Education

Yale University

Bachelor in Arts

Test Scores
Perfect Score
SAT
1530
ACT
36

Certified Tutor

Camille

Master of Science, Narrative Medicine
Camille's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Geometry
Calculus
Algebra

Narrative Medicine — Camille's graduate focus at Columbia — is essentially the study of how reading shapes understanding, training clinicians to pick up on structure, voice, and meaning in everything from patient histories to literary essays. That interdisciplinary lens, layered on top of an African...

Education

Columbia University in the City of New York

Master of Science, Narrative Medicine

Duke University

Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor

Meghan

Masters, Journalism
Meghan's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
PSAT Writing Skills
SAT Reading and Writing

A semester at Madrid's top-ranked university, reading upper-level history and literature alongside native Spanish speakers, forced Meghan to become the kind of reader who squeezes meaning from every sentence — a habit that stuck long after she came back to Northwestern. Her daily work as a trade jou...

Education

Northwestern University

Masters, Journalism

Northwestern University

Bachelors, Journalism

Northwestern University

Undergraduate degree in journalism (major) with a Spanish minor

Test Scores
SAT
1520

Certified Tutor

Michelle

Bachelor in Arts
Michelle's other Tutor Subjects
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra
PSAT Writing Skills

Strong reading comprehension isn't about speed — it's about knowing how to identify a passage's main claim, track how evidence supports it, and distinguish between what the author says and what the author implies. Michelle teaches these active-reading strategies explicitly, building the kind of anno...

Education

Yale University

Bachelor in Arts

Test Scores
ACT
35

Certified Tutor

15+ years

Christopher

Master in Public Health, Public Health, Sociomedical Sciences
Christopher's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
SAT Mathematics
SAT Reading and Writing

A Yale history of science degree means Christopher spent four years reading primary sources where every word choice carries weight — 18th-century medical treatises, dense scientific correspondence, arguments built in language that doesn't hand you its meaning easily. That training in careful, delibe...

Education

Columbia University in the City of New York

Master in Public Health, Public Health, Sociomedical Sciences

Yale University

B.A. in History of Science & Medicine

Test Scores
SAT
1550

Certified Tutor

Reid

PHD, Education
Reid's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra

Strong readers don't just decode words — they identify an author's argument, evaluate evidence, and make inferences across paragraphs. Reid approaches reading comprehension as a teachable skill set, breaking down strategies for annotating, summarizing, and distinguishing main ideas from supporting d...

Education

Harvard University

PHD, Education

Wesleyan University

Bachelor in Arts, Sociology

Test Scores
ACT
32

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Vansh

Bachelor of Science, Finance
Vansh's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Trigonometry
Pre-Calculus
Middle School Math

Strong readers don't just decode words — they track how an author's argument or narrative develops across paragraphs and chapters. Vansh teaches active reading strategies like annotation, summarization checkpoints, and inference-building that turn passive page-turning into genuine comprehension. The...

Education

Washington University in St. Louis

Bachelor of Science, Finance

Test Scores
SAT
1550
ACT
35

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Connect with highly-rated educators ready to help you succeed.

Meghan

Calculus Tutor • +32 Subjects

A semester at Madrid's top-ranked university, reading upper-level history and literature alongside native Spanish speakers, forced Meghan to become the kind of reader who squeezes meaning from every sentence — a habit that stuck long after she came back to Northwestern. Her daily work as a trade journalist means she's still doing it professionally: scanning dense source material, pulling out what matters, and cutting through jargon. She brings that same precision to teaching students how to actively track what a passage is saying and why.

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Michelle

Middle School Math Tutor • +41 Subjects

Strong reading comprehension isn't about speed — it's about knowing how to identify a passage's main claim, track how evidence supports it, and distinguish between what the author says and what the author implies. Michelle teaches these active-reading strategies explicitly, building the kind of annotation habits that transfer to standardized tests, textbooks, and independent reading alike.

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Christopher

Calculus Tutor • +26 Subjects

A Yale history of science degree means Christopher spent four years reading primary sources where every word choice carries weight — 18th-century medical treatises, dense scientific correspondence, arguments built in language that doesn't hand you its meaning easily. That training in careful, deliberate reading now shapes how he teaches comprehension: breaking a passage into its moving parts, identifying what the author is actually claiming, and building the habit of re-reading with a specific question in mind rather than scanning for surface-level answers.

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Reid

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +35 Subjects

Strong readers don't just decode words — they identify an author's argument, evaluate evidence, and make inferences across paragraphs. Reid approaches reading comprehension as a teachable skill set, breaking down strategies for annotating, summarizing, and distinguishing main ideas from supporting details. His experience spans middle school through college-level texts.

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Vansh

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +32 Subjects

Strong readers don't just decode words — they track how an author's argument or narrative develops across paragraphs and chapters. Vansh teaches active reading strategies like annotation, summarization checkpoints, and inference-building that turn passive page-turning into genuine comprehension. These same skills carried him to a 1550 SAT, where reading speed and accuracy matter enormously.

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Liz

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +40 Subjects

Struggling readers often need something more targeted than "read more" — they need someone who can pinpoint whether the breakdown is in decoding, fluency, vocabulary, or comprehension and then address that specific gap. Liz's Master's in Special Education gave her diagnostic tools and intervention strategies for students with learning disabilities, dyslexia, and ADHD, and she's applied them across a wide range of learners in Boston classrooms. She builds reading stamina and comprehension simultaneously, using texts matched to each student's level and interests.

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Elena

Calculus Tutor • +31 Subjects

Developing culturally literate curricula for middle and high schoolers — the kind where students actually want to read the assigned material — taught Elena that engagement isn't a bonus, it's the mechanism through which comprehension improves. Her McGill and Edinburgh training in religious studies means she's spent years pulling meaning from texts that are ancient, dense, and deliberately ambiguous, which translates into a knack for showing students how to wrestle with unfamiliar language and extract an author's argument even when the writing resists easy summary.

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Sabira

Middle School Math Tutor • +35 Subjects

Strong readers don't just decode words — they predict, question, and connect ideas across paragraphs in real time. Sabira teaches these active-reading strategies explicitly, whether a student is working through a challenging novel or tackling standardized-test passages, building the kind of comprehension habits that transfer across every subject.

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Emily

Calculus Tutor • +18 Subjects

Years of parsing statutes, case law, and dense philosophical texts gave Emily a toolkit for breaking down any reading passage into its core claims and supporting evidence. She applies that same analytical approach to teach students how to identify main ideas, track an author's reasoning, and distinguish fact from inference — skills that transfer across every subject.

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Valerie

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +37 Subjects

Twenty writing prizes before age eighteen doesn't happen without being a relentless, close reader first — Valerie built her reading skills by pulling apart texts from Greek tragedy to contemporary fiction at the University of Chicago. She teaches students to identify tone, track arguments, and make inferences by actually engaging with what's on the page rather than skimming for keywords.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Reading comprehension challenges often stem from a few key areas: decoding fluency, vocabulary gaps, or difficulty with inference and critical thinking. Personalized tutoring targets the specific barrier your student faces. A tutor can break down complex texts, teach active reading strategies like annotation and questioning, and build foundational skills through scaffolded practice. With 1-on-1 instruction, your student gets immediate feedback and can work at their own pace—something that's harder in a classroom setting.

Strong literary analysis requires both close reading skills and clear writing. Tutors teach students how to identify themes, analyze character development, and support interpretations with textual evidence. They then help organize these ideas into well-structured essays with strong thesis statements and coherent arguments. Since tutoring is personalized, students receive direct feedback on their writing, revision suggestions, and guidance on how to strengthen their analytical voice—skills that transfer across all subjects.

Vocabulary grows fastest when students encounter words in context and use them repeatedly. Rather than drilling word lists, effective tutoring embeds vocabulary instruction into authentic reading experiences. Tutors help students learn word roots, use context clues, and apply new words in their own writing and speech. Research on spaced repetition shows that revisiting words across multiple sessions and contexts leads to stronger retention than one-time memorization.

Yes. Varsity Tutors connects students with tutors who have experience supporting readers at all levels, including those with reading gaps, dyslexia, or English as a second language. These tutors use research-backed strategies like multisensory approaches, decoding instruction, and high-interest texts to build confidence and fluency. They also understand how to adapt pacing and materials to match a student's needs, which is critical for readers who have fallen behind.

Absolutely. Reading sections on tests like the SAT, ACT, and standardized state assessments require specific strategies beyond general comprehension—like time management, identifying question types, and navigating dense passages under pressure. Tutors teach test-specific techniques while building the underlying reading skills that matter most. They can also provide targeted practice with past test passages and help students understand why they miss questions, rather than just providing correct answers.

Look for tutors with strong backgrounds in English, education, or a related field, as well as demonstrated experience teaching reading across grade levels. It's helpful if they understand reading science—phonics, fluency, comprehension strategies—and can explain why they're using certain approaches. Beyond credentials, the best tutors are skilled listeners who can identify what's actually holding a student back (is it decoding? vocabulary? comprehension? engagement?) and adjust accordingly. They should also be encouraging and patient, especially with struggling readers.

Progress depends on the starting point and frequency of tutoring. Many students notice better comprehension and confidence within 4-6 weeks of consistent 1-on-1 instruction, especially when tutoring is paired with practice at home. For deeper gains—like improved fluency or stronger analytical skills—expect 2-3 months of regular sessions. The key is consistency; weekly tutoring with targeted skill-building and feedback typically yields faster results than sporadic sessions. Your tutor can set specific, measurable goals early on and track progress along the way.

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