Award-Winning AP Calculus
Tutors
Award-Winning
AP Calculus
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
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I am currently a senior at Harvard College where I study chemistry, and I'll be attending Columbia Medical School next year. I have years of experience tutoring college students in math (mostly calculus) and chemistry including both general and organic chemistry. In addition, I am very familiar with all sections of the SAT and ACT having prepared several high school students for these tests. I believe that every student is capable of boosting his or her baseline score on these tests, so long as he or she works hard to get to know the format of the tests and the most popular types of questions. I tutor because I love seeing students develop a genuine passion for the subjects they once disliked (such as math and science), once they understand the power of these subjects and their applications to the real world.

I am an undergraduate of the Johns Hopkins University, majoring in Biomedical Engineering and Computer Science. I have years of experience tutoring and teaching math and various sciences from an elementary to a college level. I primarily tutor college level courses such as physics and biochemistry, but also have extensive experience in social sciences, biology, and higher mathematics such as Calculus and Differential Equations. I believe that demonstrating the various real-world applications of a given concept is the best method to increase a student's understanding.
I am flexible and adaptive to different learning styles. I welcome students and/or parents to set their own goals/expectations, and I tailor the curriculum to suit those goals.
I'm available to tutor biology, chemistry, physics, math from Algebra up through AP Calculus, SAT test prep, and French. I've been tutoring students in science and math for 7 years. I also spent 8 months working and studying in France, and have tutored high school and adult students in French. When I'm not working or studying, I love playing volleyball (indoors or on the beach!) and spending time outside, canoeing or hiking with my dog. I look forward to meeting and working with you!
I am a rising sophomore at Harvard College and am about to declare as a Mechanical Engineering concentrator, working towards a Bachelor of Science degree. I've always enjoyed sharing my knowledge with my peers and those around me and have done so in both formal and informal settings. I've been a tutor for both Math and Spanish programs in high school and enjoyed the strides I made with students. I am willing to tutor any subject I have a background in, but am strong in mathematics, the sciences, Spanish, history, writing, and ACT prep. I enjoy teaching mathematics most due to the joy I can see in children once they master a topic and can answer even pointed questions meant to stump them, and maybe even put their knowledge to real world use. As a tutor, I like to give a strong foundation to orient my student, and then gradually grant them more freedom and independence until they can feel themselves grasp the concept, pointing out pitfalls or common errors along the way; teachers who used these methods on me always left the most lasting impressions. Outside of my studies, I really enjoy listening to music, both old favorites and new interests, reading classics, and gaming/playing basketball with my friends.
I'm Dennis. I study physics, math, and computer science. I have done research about cosmic ray acceleration at supernova shock fronts in the Princeton University Department of Astrophysics, simulating how the turbulent plasmas push protons and ions. I have also worked at the Norfolk State University Department of Engineering, designing, simulating, optimizing, and building light filters for wavelength-division optical-electronic multiplexers. Another field I study is the mathematics of quasicrystals and aperiodic tilings, such as the Penrose tiling of rhombuses.
I am a current sophomore at Cornell University pursuing a B.S. in Biomedical Engineering. I have done extensive coursework in biology, physics, chemistry, math, and lab sciences. I love applying engineering problem-solving skills to the biological sciences. For the past year, I have been a teaching assistant for introductory biology classes. In my free time, I participate in cancer immunotherapy research which focuses on melanoma.
I am also available to tutor for the SAT and ACT. I love passing on the little tips and tricks I have learned through the years, not only for the math sections but also the reading and writing portions. As an avid reader in my downtime and having done a lot of critical reading for my scientific career, I have mastered various strategies for analytical reading that I love passing on.
Integration techniques — substitution, parts, partial fractions — are the make-or-break content in AP Calculus, and Steve approaches each one as a pattern-recognition skill that can be trained. His engineering training at the undergraduate level means he's worked through hundreds of integrals in applied settings, giving him a deep sense of which shortcuts actually hold up on the AP exam. He holds a 5.0 client rating.
I am currently a student at Stanford University studying math and political science. I am passionate about sharing my knowledge and experience with younger students. I have helped students of different ages and from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds, and so I am very conscious of the needs and prior knowledge my students and tailor my tutoring method and style individually.
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 them. My approach combines patience, clarity, and high-level understanding to break down complex ideas into manageable, confidence-boosting lessons. Whether it's reviewing homework or prepping for exams, I'm here to support and motivate students at any level below mine to reach their full academic potential. My interests include: Weightlifting and fitness training (especially strength and hypertrophy programs) Morning cardio and physical conditioning Studying medicine with a focus on anatomy, physiology, and clinical problem-solving Teaching and tutoring tough academic subjects like math, biology, and physics Watching anime as a way to relax and recharge (especially after a long day) Cooking (with a focus on high-protein, keto/carnivore meals)
I'm starting my junior year at Northwestern University in Evanston, IL. I'm currently getting my degree in biology with a concentration in health and human disease, global health, and a minor in French. I love reading, traveling, learning and helping others learn! I have experience tutoring high school and elementary school students in math, science, and English and I love tutoring in each subject equally. Eventually, I see myself going to medical school and researching topics related to viral diseases which I've been interested in since a very young age. I'm very passionate about the subjects I teach and hope to pass my passion on to the individuals I tutor!
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Frequently Asked Questions
Students typically find limits and continuity conceptually difficult at the start, especially understanding why a function can approach a value without reaching it. Later, the chain rule and related rates problems trip up many students because they require visualizing how multiple variables change together. Integration techniques—particularly u-substitution and integration by parts—demand significant practice, and many students struggle with recognizing which method applies to which integral. Finally, applications like optimization and differential equations require students to translate real-world scenarios into mathematical models, which is a skill that takes deliberate practice to develop.
This is a common gap—knowing the power rule is different from recognizing when to use it in a related rates or optimization problem. Tutors work by having you practice translating English into equations, identifying which variable is changing and which you're solving for, and then selecting the right differentiation technique. They'll often have you work through several similar problems with decreasing guidance, so you start recognizing patterns independently. Building this translation skill requires targeted practice with feedback, which is exactly what personalized instruction provides.
The AP Calculus exam has two sections: multiple choice (60 minutes for 45 questions) and free response (90 minutes for 6 questions). On multiple choice, aim to spend about 1.3 minutes per question, flagging harder ones to return to if time allows. On free response, read all six questions first and tackle the ones you feel most confident about—this builds momentum and ensures you earn partial credit where you can. Leave 10-15 minutes at the end to review your work and catch arithmetic errors. A tutor can help you practice this pacing with full-length practice tests under timed conditions, so it becomes automatic on test day.
AP Calculus AB covers limits, derivatives, and basic integration. BC covers everything in AB plus additional integration techniques (by parts, partial fractions), series and sequences, and parametric/polar curves. BC is roughly 1.5x the content of AB. If you're taking AB, tutoring focuses on mastering core concepts deeply; if you're taking BC, tutors help you manage the additional topics while reinforcing AB foundations. Many students take AB first, then BC the following year—tutors can help you decide which path fits your goals and pace you accordingly.
Free response questions reward showing your work—you can earn partial credit even if your final answer is wrong, as long as your method is sound. Start by clearly stating what you're finding (e.g., 'I'm using the chain rule to find dy/dx'). Show each algebraic step, especially when simplifying. If you get stuck on one part, move on and use a placeholder for that value in later parts—graders will often give you credit for correct reasoning downstream. Tutors help you practice this by reviewing your solutions with a grader's eye, pointing out where you lose points for skipped steps or unclear notation, so you build the habit of communicating your thinking clearly.
This requires pattern recognition built through practice. U-substitution works when you spot a function and its derivative (or close to it) in the integrand. Integration by parts applies when you have a product of functions where one differentiates to something simpler. Partial fractions handle rational functions. Trigonometric substitution appears with expressions like √(a²-x²). The key is practicing enough problems that you start seeing these patterns automatically—most students need 30-50 varied integration problems to develop real fluency. Tutors accelerate this by showing you how to classify problems quickly and by having you explain your reasoning out loud, which deepens pattern recognition.
Limits are abstract—you're learning that a function can behave a certain way 'near' a point without actually reaching it, which contradicts intuition. Many students memorize limit rules without understanding why they work. Tutors help by using graphs and numerical tables to show you what limits actually mean before diving into algebra. They'll have you evaluate a function at values approaching a point (like 1.9, 1.99, 1.999) to see the pattern, then connect that to the algebraic definition. Once you see limits as 'what value does the function approach' rather than 'what value does it reach,' the rules and applications click into place much faster.
Test anxiety in calculus often stems from feeling unprepared for the variety of problem types or worrying you'll forget a formula. Combat this by taking full-length practice tests under timed conditions weeks before the exam—this builds confidence and reveals which topics still need work. During the test itself, if you feel panicked on a hard question, skip it immediately and move to one you can solve; momentum and early points calm your nervous system. Tutors help by creating a structured study schedule so you know exactly what you're prepared for, and by reviewing your practice test errors so you see patterns rather than feeling overwhelmed by isolated mistakes.
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