Award-Winning GRE Analytical Writing Tutors serving Washington, DC
Award-Winning GRE Analytical Writing Tutors serving Washington, DC
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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Award-Winning GRE Analytical Writing Tutors serving Washington, DC
I am enrolled in the Mechanical Engineering PhD program at Rice University which will begin Fall 2020, and I am hoping to return to academia as a professor after earning my PhD. In the meantime, I am ...
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University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science
Rice University
Doctor of Philosophy, Mechanical Engineering
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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 educ...
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Harvard University
Masters in Education, Education
Dartmouth College
B.A.
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I am eager to help students thrive because I'm still very much a student myself, and will be for the foreseeable future. Though I enjoyed my time as an undergraduate student in Literature, and learned...
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Vanderbilt University
Bachelors in Literature
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I am a graduate of the University of Chicago, with a bachelor's degree in psychology and linguistics. Currently, I am pursuing a master's degree in speech-language pathology at Teachers College, Colum...
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University of Chicago
Bachelor's degree in psychology and linguistics
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I am a firm believer that clear, precise communication between student and tutor makes for a productive and fulfilling learning experience. When I work with students, I strive to listen carefully to f...
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Boston University
PHD, American Studies
Harvard University
Bachelors
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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,...
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Harvard University
PHD, Education
Wesleyan University
Bachelor in Arts, Sociology
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I'm a scientist with experience working in Research and Development in lubricants, greases, paints and other specialty chemicals. I tutor math and science because I really enjoy helping people and sha...
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University of Chicago
PhD in Chemistry
Lafayette College
Bachelors, Chemistry/Phyics
I am a Physician's Assistant student at Rutgers University. I completed my first Master's degree in Human Nutrition at Columbia University. I have tutored all throughout high school and college in var...
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Columbia University
Master's degree in Human Nutrition
Columbia University in the City of New York
Master of Science, Human Nutrition
I'm a graduate student at MIT. I started tutoring from my first year of undergrad because I had such wonderful experiences when I was in high school learning with friends and upperclassmen. I am perso...
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Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
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I am a graduate of Washington University in St Louis, where I received my Bachelor of Arts in History with minors in Humanities and Anthropology. Since graduation, I have worked as a tutor, teacher, a...
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Simmons College
Masters, Special Education: Mild to Moderate Disabilities 5-12
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor of Arts in History (minors in Humanities and Anthropology)
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and preparation intensity, but most students see meaningful gains with focused practice. The Analytical Writing section is scored on a 0-6 scale in half-point increments, and even small improvements require understanding the specific rubric that graders use. Many students who work with a tutor improve by 1-1.5 points within 6-8 weeks by learning to structure arguments more effectively, identify logical fallacies faster, and manage their time across both essays.
The key is targeted practice on the exact question types you'll face—Issue and Argument essays each have distinct challenges, and a tutor can help you master both rather than spending time on generic writing practice.
Many test-takers find Analytical Writing challenging because it requires you to think critically and write clearly under time pressure—skills that are harder to develop than plugging formulas into math problems or recognizing reading patterns. Unlike the multiple-choice sections, there's no single "correct" answer, which makes it feel more subjective and intimidating.
Students often struggle most with the Argument essay, where you must identify logical weaknesses rather than argue your own position. The Issue essay rewards nuance and balanced thinking, not just strong opinions. Understanding what graders actually look for—logical structure, evidence quality, and clear writing—helps demystify the section and makes improvement much faster.
Most students benefit from 4-8 weeks of focused Analytical Writing practice, though this depends on your baseline writing skills and target score. Unlike the quant section, where you might spend weeks learning new concepts, Analytical Writing improvement comes from understanding the rubric, practicing essay structure, and getting feedback on your actual writing.
A typical week might include reviewing one essay type, writing 2-3 practice essays under timed conditions, and analyzing sample high-scoring responses. Working with a tutor can accelerate this timeline by helping you identify exactly which skills need work—whether that's brainstorming arguments faster, catching logical fallacies, or managing your 30-minute time limit more effectively.
The Analytical Writing section gives you 30 minutes per essay, which sounds like plenty until you start writing under pressure. Most students benefit from spending 2-3 minutes planning, 20-22 minutes writing, and 2-3 minutes reviewing for typos and clarity.
The challenge is that spending too much time perfecting your introduction leaves you rushing through evidence and conclusion—but drafting without a clear plan leads to disorganized arguments that lose points. A tutor can show you efficient planning templates that work in 2 minutes, help you draft at a sustainable pace, and teach you which editing mistakes actually matter to graders (grammar errors and typos hurt more than minor word choices). Practice under actual timed conditions reveals your pace quickly.
The Argument essay asks you to critique someone else's reasoning, not defend your own position—and that's where most students go wrong. Rather than agreeing or disagreeing, you must identify logical gaps, questionable assumptions, and weak evidence. Strong responses don't attack every possible flaw; they focus on the biggest logical weaknesses and explain why they matter.
Effective structure typically follows this pattern: introduce the argument's main claim and your critique, analyze 2-3 specific logical weaknesses with examples, and conclude by explaining what additional evidence would strengthen the argument. Many students waste time writing lengthy introductions when graders reward clear analysis of flawed reasoning. Working through practice arguments with a tutor helps you spot patterns in where arguments tend to break down—weak sampling, false causation, and unsupported assumptions appear constantly.
Effective Analytical Writing practice combines quantity and quality feedback. Writing 20 timed essays without feedback teaches bad habits; writing 6-8 essays with detailed critique teaches you what actually matters to graders. The most efficient approach is to focus on one essay type at a time—master the Argument essay first, then move to Issue—because each has distinct skills.
Beyond writing essays, study actual high-scoring sample responses to understand how graders evaluate structure, evidence, and clarity. Many students underestimate how much reading excellent responses helps calibrate their own writing. If you're preparing for students in Washington, DC, connecting with a tutor who grades actual GRE essays (or has extensive test prep experience) ensures your practice time targets real weak spots rather than generic writing skills.
Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who specialize in GRE Analytical Writing and understand exactly what graders look for in Issue and Argument essays. The right tutor will review your practice essays, identify whether you're struggling with argument structure, time management, or identifying logical fallacies, and create a focused plan based on your specific weaknesses.
When choosing a tutor, look for someone with recent GRE test prep experience and ideally someone who has scored well on the section themselves. They should be able to provide sample high-scoring essays, explain the official rubric clearly, and give you actionable feedback on your writing rather than just general comments. Many students see the biggest improvements when they work with a tutor for 4-6 weeks, writing essays and receiving detailed critique every week.
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