Award-Winning ACT Tutors
serving Mesa, AZ
Award-Winning
ACT
Tutors in Mesa
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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Lindsay's biology and math double background means she doesn't have to fake her way through the ACT's Science data passages or the back half of the Math section — she actually knows the underlying content, which changes how she teaches the shortcuts. She earned a 35 composite and uses her test-prep specialization to build section-by-section timing plans, zeroing in on the specific question types where each student's score is stalling. Rated 4.9 by students.

Medical school at the University of Arizona sharpened Alex's science and reading comprehension chops, but it's the chemical engineering degree from Washington and Lee that keeps his ACT Math strategies rigorous — and tutoring since 2010 means he's seen every version of the test's recurring traps across all four sections. His 36 composite isn't just a number; it translates into section-by-section blueprints that show students exactly where their time is leaking and which question types to attack first. Rated 4.8 by students.
Ajay's electrical engineering degree means the ACT Math and Science sections play to his daily strengths, but his equally deep roster of writing, literature, and essay editing tutoring keeps the English and Reading sides covered without a drop-off. He earned a 1590 SAT and 34 ACT composite — the kind of cross-test fluency that comes from genuinely understanding how standardized exams frame questions across every section.
Theater training sharpens something most ACT tutors lack — the ability to read a passage for subtext, intent, and rhetorical structure, which is exactly what the Reading and English sections reward. Jacob pairs that skill with a 35 composite and a psychology background that lets him diagnose why a student keeps missing the same question types, then build targeted drills around those gaps. Rated 5.0 by students.
Mehek's computer science training shows up most clearly in how she approaches ACT prep — she treats each section like a debugging exercise, isolating exactly which question types are costing points and building targeted fixes instead of broad review. Her 35 composite means she's proven across all four sections, and her range from calculus and physics to literature and essay editing gives her genuine fluency with both the STEM and humanities halves of the test. Rated 4.7 by students.
Yale's cellular and molecular biology program sharpens exactly the analytical reading that the ACT Science section demands, but Alice's equal fluency in literature and essay editing means she covers English and Reading with the same depth — no weak sections. She earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that across-the-board command to diagnose where each student's score is actually stuck, whether it's pacing on Science passages or grammar patterns on English.
Sam's dual background in physics and mathematics means the ACT's quantitative sections are second nature, but his 33 composite shows he delivers on the English and Reading sides too — where his writing and literature tutoring experience translates into concrete strategies for passage analysis and grammar questions. He approaches Science the way a physicist would: ignore the jargon, zero in on what the data actually says, and move on. Rated 5.0 by students.
The ACT Science section trips up strong science students because it's really a data-interpretation test disguised as biology and chemistry. Gordon — an ASU biological sciences graduate who has tutored ACT prep extensively — teaches students to read graphs, compare experimental setups, and extract answers without getting lost in scientific jargon. He applies that same stripped-down, strategy-first approach across Math, English, and Reading as well.
Philosophy trained Galen to do one thing relentlessly — pick apart how an argument is constructed — and that skill turns out to be exactly what the ACT's Reading and English sections reward. His 34 composite reflects genuine comfort across all four sections, but it's on the verbal side where his instinct for rhetorical structure and precise language gives students the clearest advantage. Rated 5.0 by students.
Brodie scored a 34 ACT composite and has been tutoring test prep concepts since 2016, so he knows both the content and the pacing strategies that move scores. His biomedical engineering background makes him especially sharp on the Math and Science sections — breaking down data interpretation passages and tackling the trigonometry and algebra questions that trip up most students. Rated 5.0 by students, he builds section-specific game plans rather than generic study schedules.
A 34 ACT composite means Ally scored in the 99th percentile, but what makes her effective as a prep tutor is how she breaks the test into manageable patterns — particularly the English and Reading sections, where her background in literature and writing gives her a natural edge. She teaches pacing strategies and question-type recognition so students stop second-guessing themselves and start moving through passages with confidence. Rated 5.0 by students.
Chemical engineering majors don't just study math and science — they learn to work methodically under pressure, which is exactly what the ACT rewards across all four sections. Adrian earned a 34 composite and uses his cross-subject teaching background (everything from calculus to essay editing) to pinpoint where each student's composite is being dragged down, then build targeted strategies for that specific section. He's especially sharp on the Math and Science sides, where his engineering instincts kick in for the graph-heavy, time-crunched questions.
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Frequently Asked Questions
ASU's middle 50% of admitted students typically score between 24-30 on the ACT, with an average around 27. However, competitive programs like engineering or business often see higher averages (28-32). Since Mesa is in the Phoenix metro area, many local students apply to ASU—connecting with a tutor can help you target a score that matches your specific program of interest and stands out in the applicant pool.
The ACT Science section (35 minutes, 40 questions) isn't about memorizing science facts—it's about interpreting data, reading graphs, and understanding scientific reasoning. You'll analyze charts, tables, and experimental setups across biology, chemistry, physics, and earth science. Many students find this section challenging because the pacing is tight and you need to extract information quickly from unfamiliar passages. Targeted practice with a tutor can teach you efficient strategies to work through these problems without needing deep subject-matter expertise.
Most students benefit from 3-4 months of consistent prep to see meaningful improvement (50-100 points). If you're aiming for a larger jump (150+ points), 5-6 months of focused study with personalized instruction tends to be more realistic. The timeline depends on your starting score and target—a student at 22 aiming for 28 needs different prep than someone at 26 targeting 32. Varsity Tutors connects you with tutors who can create a customized study plan based on your specific goals and timeline.
Students working with personalized 1-on-1 instruction typically improve 2-4 points on the composite score over 3-4 months, with some seeing 5+ point gains depending on their starting score and effort level. The biggest improvements often come from targeting weak sections (like Science or Math) where strategic practice and pacing techniques make the biggest difference. Your actual improvement depends on your baseline score, how much you practice between sessions, and which sections need the most work.
The ACT is faster-paced than the SAT—you get roughly 1 minute per question in most sections, with the Science section being the tightest. The key is knowing which questions to tackle first, which to skip strategically, and how to pace yourself so you don't run out of time on easier questions. A tutor can teach you section-specific timing strategies, like how to quickly scan Science passages or which Reading questions to answer first based on difficulty. Practice with timed drills is essential to build this speed without sacrificing accuracy.
Both tests are equally accepted by colleges nationwide, including Arizona schools. However, the ACT tends to be slightly more popular in Arizona and the Midwest, while the SAT is more common on the coasts. The better choice depends on your strengths: if you're strong in science reasoning and prefer a faster pace, the ACT may suit you; if you prefer more time per question and stronger reading comprehension focus, the SAT might be better. Many students benefit from taking a practice test in each format to see which aligns better with their skills.
A score of 28+ puts you in the top 10% nationally and is competitive for many solid four-year universities. For highly selective schools (like top-tier programs at ASU or out-of-state universities), you'll typically want 32+ (top 1%). Most Arizona public universities are competitive with scores in the 24-28 range, though specific programs vary. Understanding your target schools' middle 50% score ranges helps you set a realistic goal—a tutor can help you create a study plan to reach that specific target.
Most colleges no longer require or recommend the ACT Writing section, so it's optional for most students. Check the specific requirements of schools you're interested in—most Arizona universities don't require it. If you're applying to highly selective schools or specific programs that do require writing samples, it may be worth taking. Since Writing adds 40 minutes and an extra fee, skip it unless your target schools specifically ask for it or you want to demonstrate strong writing skills.
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