Award-Winning SSAT
Tutors
Award-Winning
SSAT
Tutors
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
UniversitiesSchools & Universities
DeliveredHours Delivered
ProficiencyGrowth in Proficiency
Who needs tutoring?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.

I am currently a junior at the University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire, pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, complemented by minors in Pre-Professional Health Sciences and Spanish for the Health Professions. With five years of tutoring experience, I specialize in high school chemistry, math, and writing, however I am willing to tutor in a wide variety of subjects. My approach to tutoring is centered on fostering confidence and understanding in my students. I believe in creating a supportive environment where students feel comfortable expressing their struggles, as I guide them through concepts using tailored questions and varied explanations. This method allows me to identify their needs and adapt my teaching accordingly. My background in the International Baccalaureate Diploma Program, where I excelled in subjects such as HL Chemistry and HL Language and Literature, fuels my passion for the subject, and I enjoy helping students navigate challenging topics.

I am a new graduate of Pomona College, in Claremont, CA, where I studied Religion and Philosophy. While there, I wrote many papers of a wide variety, working on strong arguments, organization, and phrasing. I peer edited as well as volunteering with groups that mentored high school students, focusing on college admissions work, continuing and expanding my experiences from high school of tutoring for standardized testing. Additionally, I taught beginning violin to younger children.
I'm a huge Red Sox fan and love watching detective shows when I have free time.
I've been working with students for over seven years, from middle school all the way through college, across subjects like math, calculus, statistics, linear algebra, chemistry, and physics, with a lot of SAT and ACT prep mixed in. My background is perhaps a little unconventional. I have two bachelor's degrees, one in Engineering and one in Communication Studies, plus a Master's in Design. That combination means I can guide you through challenging technical material and communicate it in a way that is easy to grasp. What I care most about is helping students get to a place where they don't need me anymore. I know that sounds like a strange thing for a tutor to say, but I think it's the right goal. I'm not here to walk you through steps to copy down. I want you to understand why something works, because that's what holds up under pressure, on a test you haven't seen before. If you're ready to ace that test or prove that theorem that's been bugging you, reach out and let's work together
I am an incoming medical student at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. I graduated from Rice University in 2025 with a Bachelor of Science in Biology with minors in Medical Humanities and Business.
I am a first year medical student at the Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University. I have been a private tutor in the past in subjects such as math, biology, chemistry, and the SATs and every single one of my more than twenty students have shown significant improvement. Most importantly, I have a passion for teaching, and your needs and preferences as the learner will always be paramount. I hope to help every one of my students reach every bit of their potential, and along the way, to utterly shatter any self-induced limitations that have been placed upon what they can accomplish.
Preparing for the SSAT means building skills across verbal reasoning, quantitative math, and reading comprehension simultaneously — which can overwhelm students without a clear plan. Yoonseo creates a structured study schedule that rotates between analogy practice, arithmetic and algebra drills, and timed passage work so no section falls behind. Her years teaching both math and English at Kumon make her unusually comfortable covering every part of the exam.
I am a graduate from Georgetown University, where I received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mathematics with a minor in Music. I'm currently pursuing a Master's of Science in Business Analytics at Carnegie Mellon University. I've been tutoring since I started high school, focusing on mathematics and writing. Throughout my college career I was employed both privately and by Georgetown University to tutor peers and high school students in the Washington, D.C. area. I worked with students taking classes in all levels of mathematics falling under Algebra, Calculus, Combinatorics, and Problem Solving.
I'm eager to teach students how to make connections and understand any part of the world they need!
I am a graduate of Columbia University with a degree in Drama and Theatre Arts. I taught math and essay writing to my peers in high school and college, and have tutored a close friend in her mathematics courses since junior year of high school. I am most comfortable and passionate about tutoring SAT prep, particularly the Math section and subject tests. I believe in supporting and encouraging my students and making material as accessible as possible, breaking down what may be difficult subject matter into terms and concepts that they already understand. I firmly believe in the potential of every student to grasp material that they may think is out of reach, and aim to reduce the stress factor of studying as much as possible. Outside of tutoring, I am a professional actor and playwright, and in my free time (a rare, mystical thing these days) I enjoy playing guitar and mandolin, practicing yoga, and my PS4.
I am currently attending New York University where I am pursuing a degree in Finance and Statistics. I have previous experience tutoring individuals in math, a subject I have always excelled at academically. My knowledge and interest in mathematics, makes it easy for me to frame and deconstruct seemingly complicated concepts and theories in ways students will be able to understand and remember. Outside of academia I enjoy playing tennis, going to movies, and spending time with friends and family.
I am proud to be a part of Varsity Tutors! I am originally from San Antonio, TX; I completed my undergraduate education at Rice University in Houston where I received a bachelor's degree in Biochemistry and Cell Biology. Currently, I am in my second year of medical school at Baylor College of Medicine.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and study timeline, but most students see meaningful gains with focused preparation. Students who work with tutors for 8-12 weeks typically improve by 50-150 points, with some seeing larger jumps if they're addressing specific skill gaps. The key is identifying exactly where you're losing points—whether that's pacing on the quantitative section, inference questions in reading, or sentence completion problems—and targeting those areas strategically.
Reading comprehension and the upper-level verbal section challenge most students because they require both fast reading and deep understanding of nuanced questions. The quantitative section often trips up students on pacing—they get bogged down on hard problems and run out of time for easier ones later. A tutor can help you develop a strategy for each section: learning to predict answer choices in verbal, spotting trap answers in math, and managing your time so you're not rushing through questions you could get right.
Timing strategy is crucial—the SSAT isn't just about knowing the material, it's about getting the most points in the time you have. Many students waste valuable minutes on difficult problems early on and then rush through easier questions at the end. Tutors help you learn when to move on from a hard problem, how to allocate time across sections, and specific techniques like skimming vs. close reading for different passage types. With the right pacing plan, most students gain 10-30 points just from better time management.
Test anxiety often comes from feeling unprepared or not trusting your skills under pressure. Working with a tutor builds confidence through repetition and success—you'll take dozens of practice questions and full-length tests, so the real test feels familiar rather than scary. Tutors also teach you concrete strategies for the test day itself: breathing techniques, how to manage time so you're not panicking, and how to recover if you hit a hard section. When you've practiced the timing, know your weak spots are addressed, and have tested yourself many times, anxiety naturally decreases.
Taking 4-6 full-length practice tests under timed conditions is ideal, with spacing between them so you have time to learn from each one. The first practice test helps you establish a baseline and identify weak areas. Middle tests let you practice new strategies and see if they're working. Your final tests should feel like dress rehearsals—same timing, same setting, same pressure. A tutor will help you review each practice test strategically, focusing on the patterns in your mistakes rather than just going over the answers.
The writing sample is your chance to show schools how you think and express yourself—it's less about perfection and more about clarity and organization. You'll have 25 minutes to write one essay on a prompt, so practice is essential. Tutors help you develop a quick planning process, learn how to write a clear thesis with supporting examples, and practice writing under time pressure. The goal isn't to write like a novelist; it's to write a coherent, well-organized essay with specific examples. Most students improve significantly by practicing 8-10 timed essays with feedback.
A typical preparation timeline is 8-12 weeks, with 5-8 hours per week of focused study. This gives you time to learn the question formats, build skills, and practice under timed conditions. If you're starting from a lower baseline or aiming for a very high score, 12-16 weeks may be better. Starting earlier also reduces stress and prevents last-minute cramming. A tutor can create a personalized study plan based on your goal score, current skills, and test date, then adjust it as you progress.
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