Award-Winning GRE Verbal
Tutors
Award-Winning
GRE Verbal
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.
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Scoring 730 on the GRE Verbal section herself, Elizabeth breaks Sentence Equivalence and Reading Comprehension into repeatable strategies that make even the trickiest double-blank questions manageable. Her three years teaching GRE as an adjunct professor at American University means she's seen every pattern ETS uses to disguise correct answers — and she teaches students to spot those patterns quickly.

Tackling GRE Verbal means learning to read like a scientist: precisely, skeptically, and with attention to how authors signal shifts in argument. Thomas unpacks sentence equivalence and text completion questions by teaching students to identify contextual clues and eliminate traps before committing to an answer. His analytical approach is especially effective for STEM students who find the verbal section unfamiliar.
My teaching philosophy is focused on a single objective - that students learn. I have a Ph.D. in Criminology from the University of Pennsylvania and a J.D. from Temple Law School. My GRE score was a 326, and my LSAT score was a 173. I've tutored over 60 students through Varsity Tutors. I'm committed to helping students reach their full potentials.
Text Completion and Sentence Equivalence questions on the GRE Verbal section aren't really vocabulary tests — they're logic puzzles built around context clues and sentence structure. Irina teaches students to read for the structural signals (contrast words, continuation markers, cause-and-effect) that narrow answer choices before vocabulary even comes into play. For Reading Comprehension, she applies the same evidence-based reasoning she used throughout her MPH program at Emory.
I am a graduate of Grinnell College, a private liberal arts college located in Grinnell, Iowa. I have a Bachelor of the Arts in Computer Science from Grinnell's Department of Math and Computer Science. Since graduation I have tutored students of a wide variety of ages and background in a number of subjects. I have tutored middle school students in the Chicago area in Math and science and high school students in advanced Math, chemistry, writing, and helped them prepare for standardized tests for college admittance. I have also tutored adults preparing for academic proficiency tests for their jobs and with GRE prep for those interested in going to graduate school. Additionally I have taught English grammar, reading, and conversational skills to ESL students in Chicago, Ecuador, and Colombia. While I tutor a number of subjects, I particularly enjoy helping students with standardized test strategy and following their scores as they increase towards their goal. When I tutor, I aim to lead students to an answer by example so that they can see the reasoning involved themselves, rather than me just telling them the answer. The more the students can come to their own solutions, the more memorable the lessons will be. In my spare time I enjoy reading, playing skill games like scrabble, bridge, and poker, and outdoor activities like biking, camping, and canoeing when the weather is nice.
Hello, my name is Destiny and I graduated from Howard University. I majored in Psychology with a minor in Biology and Administration of Justice. One of the most important lessons I've learned from school is the value of asking for help. This can be the difference between simply memorizing some facts and truly understanding the material given to you. In many cases, learning in a traditional school setting is not effective and students should feel free to reach out for extra guidance. I strive to be that source of guidance for all students who need it. I believe that everyone learns in their own way and that the key to helping someone else lies in finding their unique style of learning. I take great pleasure in finding those styles and using them to enrich students minds. My main areas of expertise are Psychology and English. Ive been reading at a college level since middle school and scored 5s on both AP English tests. I also scored a 5 on the AP Psychology exam in addition to receiving As in all my psychology classes. I have extensive experience with essay writing, essay editing, and researching. Other subjects I can assist with include Algebra I and II, Geometry, and SAT/ACT prep. Outside of class, I like to stay busy with school activities and hobbies. I spend most of my time playing the trumpet in my schools marching band or studying. But when I have free time, I typically catch up with my shows or read.
Reviews from students: "I loved how you explained math. You were able to explain formulas so they made sense and it was engaging. Thank you for making math interesting." - Ferol Conklin "I have published over 20 articles, and no one has ever edited my articles as thoroughly or as helpfully as you did." - Mark Ragel "The instructor was the best I had at this university." - Spanish student, University of Illinois "Elle was kind, patient, and funny. She seemed to really enjoy teaching." - Spanish student, University of Illinois I have three years professional teaching experience and several years of tutoring experience. I have always been a teacher at heart. I feel my biggest strength as a tutor is looking at material from the perspective of the student. I have also been described as a calm, patient, passionate, and fun tutor. I think lesson plans should be interesting to motivate students to care about the subject and engage in the process of learning. I worked as a Spanish TA at the University of Illinois for two years as as the main instructor for over 200 students. I have also worked as a middle school teacher. I have experience tutoring a variety of subjects, including test prep, reading and writing, and various levels of math. My degrees are in Linguistics, Spanish, and Journalism, with a minor in Math.
I'm not tutoring or buried in my textbooks, you will either find me rock climbing at the Triangle Rock Club, playing Ultimate Frisbee, working on my car, or enjoying the great outdoors (beaches, mountains, forests--you name it, I love it). On rainy weekends I enjoy tinkering with computers and old electronics, playing Pokemon, or picking at my guitar.
I am an interdisciplinary educator with an Ed.M. from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a B.A. from Dartmouth College. My background is primarily in integrated arts learning and museum education and I specialize in visual arts, history and art history, and object-based learning. In all subjects, I take a creative, inquiry-based and learner-centered approach, designing opportunities for each unique individual to meet their learning goals.
I am a recent graduate from a masters program in biostatistics at Columbia University. I received my Bachelor of Arts in biological sciences, with a focus in neurobiology at Northwestern University. In August, I will be starting a doctoral program in biostatistics at NYU. I was a teaching assistant at Columbia University in my department and also have tutored graduate students and undergraduates privately as well. My primary areas of tutoring are math and statistics coursework in addition to math sections on standardized tests such as the GRE and GMAT. I am very passionate about helping students feel more confident and excited about math. In my spare time, I enjoy running, playing piano, and spending time with friends and family.
I am a graduate of Wesleyan University, where I received my Bachelor of Arts in Sociology with High Honors. With eight years of experience working in education, I've tutored students in math, science, history, and English, as well as helped students prepare for standardized tests. I've guided adults towards passing the US Citizenship Exam and taught English in India, where I lived for six months. Whenever I work with a student I personalize the lessons to fit their particular learning style, since I know every student is unique and having the right fit can make all the difference in making learning fun and effective. My strengths are tutoring the social sciences and humanities, as well as making math and standardized tests approachable to students that normally don't like those subjects. In my spare time I like traveling, spending time in the outdoors (climbing & backpacking), meditation, and playing soccer. Next fall I will be beginning my PhD in Education at Harvard University.
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.
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Frequently Asked Questions
GRE Verbal students most frequently struggle with Reading Comprehension passages—especially identifying the main idea versus supporting details, and handling dense academic texts on unfamiliar topics. Text Completion questions trip up many test-takers because they require both vocabulary knowledge and understanding context clues to select the right word. Sentence Equivalence is another pain point, as students must find two words that create sentences with the same meaning, which demands precision and nuanced vocabulary understanding. A tutor can pinpoint which question type is costing you the most points and develop targeted strategies to improve accuracy and speed in those specific areas.
GRE Verbal timing is tricky because the three question types require different approaches—Text Completion typically takes 45-60 seconds per question, Sentence Equivalence around 60-90 seconds, and Reading Comprehension varies based on passage length and question difficulty. Many students waste time re-reading passages multiple times or overthinking word choices instead of using process-of-elimination strategically. A tutor can teach you how to identify high-confidence questions to tackle first, recognize when to make an educated guess and move on, and develop a sustainable pace that maximizes your score within the 30-minute section time limit. Practice under timed conditions is essential—tutors often use this to help you build speed without sacrificing accuracy.
While GRE-level vocabulary matters, raw memorization of word lists is often an inefficient approach—the test prioritizes your ability to use context clues to infer word meaning and understand how words function within sentences. Strong GRE Verbal performance relies more on recognizing word relationships, understanding tone and nuance, and applying logic to eliminate wrong answers than on knowing obscure definitions. A tutor can teach you to identify contextual clues in Text Completion and Sentence Equivalence questions, which often reveal the intended meaning without needing to know the word beforehand. That said, building a working vocabulary of 300-500 high-frequency GRE words is still valuable and accelerates your ability to recognize answer choices quickly.
GRE Reading Comprehension passages are deliberately dense and abstract—often covering science, history, or philosophy topics designed to challenge your ability to extract key information quickly. Effective strategies include active reading (annotating the main idea and supporting arguments as you read), understanding the passage structure before diving into questions, and recognizing that some questions test detail recall while others test inference or author's tone. Many students spend too much time reading the passage perfectly; instead, a strategic approach involves skimming for structure, then returning to specific lines when questions demand it. Tutors often teach students to categorize questions by type (main idea, inference, detail, tone) and apply the appropriate strategy for each, which significantly improves both accuracy and speed.
Score improvement depends heavily on your starting point and effort level. Students scoring in the 140-150 range (below 50th percentile) often see 5-10 point gains relatively quickly because they're typically making fundamental errors in strategy or question approach that tutoring can address directly. Students already at 155+ (above 80th percentile) may see 2-4 point gains, as improvement requires mastering nuanced reasoning and eliminating careless mistakes under pressure. The timeline typically ranges from 4-12 weeks of consistent practice, with 2-3 tutoring sessions per week being common for students aiming for significant improvement. A tutor can assess your baseline, identify your specific bottlenecks, and give you a realistic projection based on the gaps between your current performance and your target score.
Test anxiety on GRE Verbal often stems from uncertainty about question formats, fear of unfamiliar vocabulary, or time pressure—all of which tutoring directly addresses. When you practice with a tutor under realistic timed conditions repeatedly, the questions become familiar and less threatening, which naturally reduces anxiety. Tutors also teach you confidence-building strategies like identifying your strongest question types to tackle first, recognizing when a question is unsolvable in the time remaining so you can guess strategically without panic, and developing a mental checklist to stay focused. Additionally, understanding that you don't need to get every question right to achieve a strong score (the GRE is adaptive, so harder questions appear as you perform well) helps many students approach the section with less pressure and better decision-making.
Practice tests serve two distinct purposes: diagnostic tests early in preparation (to identify weak areas and establish a baseline) and full-length timed tests later (to simulate test conditions and build stamina). Many students make the mistake of taking practice tests without reviewing them thoroughly—the real learning happens in the review phase, where a tutor can explain why you missed questions, identify patterns in your errors, and connect those patterns to specific skills you need to strengthen. The official ETS GRE practice tests are most valuable since they reflect actual test difficulty and question design; tutors typically recommend taking 3-5 full-length practice tests spaced throughout your preparation timeline. Between full tests, targeted practice on specific question types (using official materials or tutor-created drills) is more efficient than random problem-solving.
An effective GRE Verbal tutor should have a strong command of English language mechanics, reading comprehension, and test-specific strategy—ideally demonstrated by a high GRE Verbal score (160+) and proven experience teaching the test. Beyond content knowledge, they should understand the specific challenges GRE Verbal presents: how to teach strategic reading for dense passages, how to build vocabulary efficiently, and how to help students think through logic-based questions rather than relying on guessing. Experience with adaptive testing formats and familiarity with common student mistakes across different skill levels is valuable, as is the ability to diagnose exactly why you're missing questions rather than just telling you the right answer. Look for tutors who use official ETS materials, tailor their approach to your target score and timeline, and can explain test strategy in clear, practical terms.
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