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Award-Winning College Political Science Tutors

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Kevin is in the middle of Penn's Philosophy, Politics, and Economics program, which means he's actively engaging with the theorists and frameworks that define college political science — from Rawls and rational choice theory to comparative institutional analysis. He approaches each tutoring session ...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Noah earned his BA in Political Science and Government from the University of Pennsylvania, where the rigorous seminar culture means he's spent years constructing the kind of theory-grounded, evidence-driven arguments that college poli-sci professors grade on. Whether it's a comparative politics pap...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Kit
Studying political science at Vanderbilt on a pre-law track means Kit is immersed daily in the theories, case law, and institutional analysis that define college-level poli-sci coursework. He's especially sharp on American political institutions and constitutional interpretation — the areas where st...
Vanderbilt University
Current Undergrad Student, Political Science and Government
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Liam
I am highly proficient in other areas in economics, high school mathematics, calculus I and European history.
New York University
Master of Science, Public Policy Analysis
Certified Tutor
9+ years
A Penn political science degree gave Yasmeen deep grounding in democratic theory, institutional design, and comparative governance — the exact frameworks that college-level poli sci courses build on. She breaks down dense readings from thinkers like Dahl, Putnam, and Schattschneider so students can ...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
7+ years
Sanoja
Sanoja studied Political Science at Yale, where she dug into comparative government, constitutional law, and policy analysis through seminar-style debate and research papers. That training means she can walk college students through everything from Tocqueville's democratic theory to quantitative met...
Yale University
Bachelor in Arts, Political Science and Government
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Morgan
At the college level, political science stops being about memorizing branches of government and starts demanding engagement with theorists like Locke, Rawls, and Huntington. Morgan's international and area studies coursework at WashU pairs naturally with the close-reading discipline of an English li...
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor in Arts, English
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Devan
As a research assistant studying violence against women while finishing a political science degree at Penn, Devan is actively working at the intersection of policy analysis and real-world governance questions — the exact kind of applied thinking college poli-sci professors want to see in student pap...
University of Pennsylvania
Current Undergrad, Political Science and Government
Certified Tutor
7+ years
Justin
A history and religious studies background from Duke and Yale might not scream political science, but Justin's training in ancient political structures, institutional power, and ideological systems maps directly onto coursework in political theory and comparative government. He's especially sharp at...
Yale University
Master of Arts in Religious Studies (focus on ancient history)
Duke University
Bachelor of Arts in History and Religious Studies (minor in Economics)
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Comparative institutions, democratic theory, policy analysis — college political science courses move fast and expect students to engage with dense academic literature from day one. David brings both a social science research background and undergraduate teaching experience to the table, breaking do...
Columbia University in the City of New York
Masters, Sociology
The University of Texas at Austin
Bachelors, History, Computer science
Columbia University
Graduate degree
University of Chicago
Graduate degree
Top 20 Social Sciences Subjects
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Jenna
Calculus Tutor • +39 Subjects
I am a recent Emory law school graduate. I am passionate about building students' confidence in all subjects, but I am most fulfilled when students can express themselves in new ways through language and writing.
Alisha
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +41 Subjects
I am a senior at Virginia Commonwealth University. I am working towards a BFA in Dance and Choreography with minors in Political Science and Psychology. I have served as a TA for a freshman honors writing course at VCU since Fall 2018. I have also assisted and taught children's dance classes. I enjoy babysitting and helping my younger sister with her homework. While I tutor a broad range of subjects, I am most passionate about Math, Science, and Psychology. I am also happy to help students prepare for Standardized Tests, particularly with the math portions of the exams. I have always felt respect and admiration towards my teachers in both smaller and more grand situations who have shaped me into the lifelong learner that I am. As a tutor, my goal is to make good on this foundation and show students the same courtesy my teachers have shown me.
Mackenzie
Calculus Tutor • +30 Subjects
I am a recent graduate of Northwestern University, where I received my BA in Philosophy and Political Science. As a former editor-in-chief of a high school newspaper and a peer writing coach, I enjoy tutoring in reading and English; however my passions truly lie in the realm of civics and government (ask me about my current position working in a governor's office!). I love talking through big ideas and unique perspectives. I am a word nerd who loves reading and is driven by the chance to learn new things!
Tesa
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +36 Subjects
I am currently a doctoral student in Public and Social Policy at Saint Louis University and I am finishing my dissertation from Wichita. I hold a Masters Degree in Social Work and a Paralegal Certificate from San Francisco State University. Additionally, I hold a Bachelors degree in Political Science in Philosophy from Washington University in St. Louis. I went through a gifted curriculum prior to college and excelled in math and the sciences, ultimately being published nationally in the subject of neurosurgery. Part way through college, I decided to focus more of my energy on the social sciences which I have done ever since. When I was not attending school, I have worked as a Social Worker with vulnerable populations in many different positions. I plan to finish my Ph.D. in the upcoming year, and become a professor; in part because of the passion that I have for learning. I look forward to working with students of all ages, including adult learners and I hope to be able to work with you to achieve your learning goals. Hobbies: reading, music, writing, art, books
Rae
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +58 Subjects
I am an excellent resource for students of all ages!
Alissa
Calculus Tutor • +44 Subjects
I am passionate about the importance of education and hope to be able to help my students attain their goes. I am particularly passionate about and experienced with helping in all levels of reading, writing, editing, English, public speaking, and political science. Additionally, as a law school graduate and someone that was successful on the LSAT, I am experienced with helping students effectively prepare for the LSAT.
reid
Calculus Tutor • +23 Subjects
I'm a recent graduate from Hobart College where I double majored in political science and philosophy.
Matthew
Calculus Tutor • +21 Subjects
I am a third year undergraduate pursuing a degree in political science at the University of Georgia. I know that meeting with a tutor can be a stressful experience, so I'm happy to get the opportunity to alleviate some of my students' worries and share the passion I have for the subjects I tutor! I love political science and the government as well as keeping myself well rounded with study of the more concrete subjects like mathematics. I enjoy meeting new students and helping them grow, so feel free to reach out!
Asha
Calculus Tutor • +30 Subjects
I am committed to meeting students at their unique starting points and collaboratively exploring innovative solutions that cater to their individual learning styles.
Varun
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +112 Subjects
I am enthusiastic about helping others reach their educational goals. Whatever the task, no matter how long it takes, I will make sure you get the most out of your sessions and will tailor my personal approach to whatever you need.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
College Political Science requires more than recalling theorists like Weber, Foucault, or Rawls—you need to use their frameworks to analyze real political phenomena. A tutor can help you practice applying theories to contemporary cases (e.g., using institutional theory to explain legislative gridlock, or applying social contract theory to debates about state legitimacy). The key is learning to ask: "Which theory best explains this situation, and why?" rather than just listing what each theorist believed. Regular practice with case studies and policy scenarios builds this analytical muscle.
In political science, correlation (two variables moving together) is often mistaken for causation (one variable causing the other), leading to flawed conclusions. For example, countries with higher education spending might have better governance outcomes, but that doesn't prove spending caused better governance—both might result from stronger institutions. Tutoring helps you understand research design concepts like randomized controlled trials, natural experiments, and control variables that help establish causation. You'll learn to critically read empirical studies and spot when researchers are overstating their findings based on correlational data alone.
Strong college political science writing requires grounding arguments in data, primary sources, and peer-reviewed research—not assumptions. A tutor can guide you through the process of constructing evidence-based arguments: identifying your claim, finding credible sources (academic journals, government data, survey results), and explaining how that evidence supports your position. You'll also learn to acknowledge counterarguments and limitations in your evidence, which shows sophisticated thinking. Practice with policy analysis papers and argumentative essays helps you develop the habit of asking "What evidence supports this claim?" before you write.
Many college political science courses require reading empirical studies with experimental designs and statistical results, which can feel overwhelming without guidance. A tutor can break down how researchers use control groups, treatment groups, and statistical significance to test hypotheses about political behavior. You'll learn to interpret concepts like p-values, confidence intervals, and effect sizes, and understand why a statistically significant result might have limited practical importance. Working through real examples—like studies on voter behavior, campaign effects, or policy outcomes—makes these methods concrete and helps you evaluate research critically.
Political science demands awareness that institutions, policies, and even research itself can reflect hidden biases—whether structural (how electoral systems advantage certain groups), ideological (researcher assumptions), or methodological (who gets studied and who doesn't). A tutor helps you develop a critical lens for spotting these biases in case studies and academic papers, and for acknowledging potential biases in your own arguments. This might involve examining how power dynamics shape outcomes, questioning whose perspectives are represented in data, or recognizing how framing affects interpretation. This critical thinking is essential for sophisticated political analysis at the college level.
College political science often requires reading peer-reviewed research with complex methodology sections, statistical tables, and theoretical frameworks that can be intimidating. A tutor can teach you a strategic reading approach: start with the abstract and conclusion to grasp the main argument, skim the methodology to understand how the study was designed, focus on results and discussion to see what evidence actually supports the claims, and then return to theory sections with context. You'll learn which sections matter most for different purposes (writing a literature review vs. critically evaluating a study's validity). With practice, dense papers become navigable and you develop confidence extracting key insights.
The challenge in college political science is bridging the gap between theoretical concepts (legitimacy, representation, power distribution) and messy real-world politics. A tutor can help you practice translating between theory and practice—for instance, using principal-agent theory to analyze why bureaucrats sometimes ignore legislative intent, or applying theories of state capacity to explain why some countries struggle with tax collection. This involves asking: "What does this theory predict about this situation?" and "What does this current event reveal about how this theory works (or fails)?" Regular practice with current events analysis and policy case studies builds this crucial skill.
College political science research papers demand a clear thesis, systematic evidence, and engagement with existing scholarship—not just summary. Students often struggle with three things: developing a specific, arguable thesis (not just a topic), integrating sources meaningfully rather than stringing quotes together, and maintaining analytical distance (analyzing why something happens rather than advocating for a position). A tutor can help you structure papers around an argument, teach you how to synthesize multiple sources to build evidence, and guide you through revision to strengthen logic and clarity. Strong papers show you understand the literature, can apply concepts to evidence, and can anticipate counterarguments.
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