Award-Winning ACT Tutors
serving Baltimore, MD
Award-Winning
ACT
Tutors in Baltimore
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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A 35 ACT composite paired with a background in writing and literary analysis means Jamie can coach every section of this exam — from the grammar rules buried in the English passages to the argument structure the Reading section rewards. She treats the Science section as a data-literacy exercise, teaching students to read figures before they read the questions, which cuts down on time pressure significantly.

Scoring well on the ACT means juggling five sections that each demand a different skill set — from the Science section's graph interpretation to English's comma rules to the optional essay's argument analysis. Yoonseo teaches students to treat each section as its own game with its own strategy, particularly emphasizing time management on the Math and Reading sections where pacing trips up even strong students. Her background spans both the quantitative and verbal sides of the test, which makes her especially effective for students who need to raise scores across the board.
Memory sports training — the kind where you memorize thousands of digits under time pressure — gave Christopher an unusually practical understanding of how the brain encodes and retrieves information, and he applies those techniques directly to ACT prep, from retaining grammar rules for the English section to quickly processing unfamiliar data in Science passages. His 32 composite and cellular biology coursework at Johns Hopkins mean the content behind all four sections is genuinely familiar, not just coached from a prep book.
Scoring a 35 composite on the ACT means Weilong performed at an elite level across every section — Math, English, Reading, and Science — and he breaks down each one with the same clarity he uses to explain complex genetics to patients at Northwestern's Feinberg School of Medicine. His approach treats the Science section as a data-interpretation exercise and the English section as a pattern-recognition game, giving students concrete strategies instead of vague advice. Rated 5.0 by students.
Georgia Tech's Industrial and Systems Engineering program sits at the crossroads of math, data analysis, and logical reasoning — which means Ilesh trained daily in exactly the quantitative and analytical thinking the ACT tests across Math, Science, and even the evidence-based Reading questions. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that full-score perspective to show students not just what the right answers look like, but why the wrong ones are designed to be tempting. Rated 5.0 by students.
An English and drama background might not scream ACT prep, but John's 36 composite — a perfect score — means he's mastered every section of the test, and his theater training makes him unusually good at close reading the rhetorical and narrative passages that stall most students on Reading and English. He also tutors calculus, physics, and chemistry, so the Math and Science sections aren't secondary skills he's faking his way through. Rated 4.9 by students.
Northwestern's Honors Program in Medical Education compressed Anna's premed and MD training into a single accelerated track — meaning she learned early how to master large volumes of material under tight time constraints, which is essentially what the ACT demands across all four sections. She scored a perfect 36 composite and uses that experience to teach students how to allocate their attention strategically, particularly on the Reading and Science sections where running out of time costs more points than content gaps. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 33 on the ACT while juggling a dual PhD/MD track gave Chelain a firsthand appreciation for efficient test strategy — knowing when to skip, when to guess, and how to manage the clock across all four sections. As a radiation oncology resident at Northwestern, she brings the same analytical precision to breaking down Science and Math passages that she uses in clinical problem-solving. Rated 5.0 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.
Elliot's neuroscience PhD means he's spent years designing experiments, interpreting data, and writing precisely — the exact skill set the ACT tests across all four sections, from Science passage analysis to the grammar logic underlying English questions. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that full-score perspective to show students where the test rewards careful reading over rushing, especially on the Reading and Science sections where most timing mistakes happen. Rated 5.0 by students.
Medical school admissions committees at both Rice and Baylor trusted Sugi to evaluate candidates — that same ability to spot exactly where someone's reasoning breaks down is what she brings to ACT prep, section by section. Her 36 composite and dual background in cognitive science and biochemistry mean there's no weak link across Math, Science, English, or Reading; she knows the content cold and teaches the decision-making layer on top of it. Rated 5.0 by students.
Double-majoring in molecular biology and French at Yale gave Emily something most ACT tutors lack — genuine fluency in both the STEM and humanities sides of the exam, so she's not faking comfort in any section. She earned a perfect 36 composite and uses her epidemiology training to teach the Science section as a data-literacy exercise, then pivots to the grammar and rhetorical questions on English with the same precision. Rated 5.0 by students.
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Frequently Asked Questions
For University of Maryland College Park, the middle 50% of admitted students typically score between 32-35 on the ACT, placing them in the top 5% nationally. UMBC is slightly less competitive, with middle 50% scores around 28-32. To be competitive for these flagship Maryland schools, aiming for 30+ gives you a strong foundation, though 32+ significantly improves your chances at UMD College Park. Keep in mind that test scores are just one part of admissions—GPA, essays, and extracurriculars matter too.
The ACT Science section (35 minutes, 40 questions) isn't really about science knowledge—it's about interpreting data, graphs, tables, and scientific reasoning. You'll see passages with experiments, conflicting viewpoints, and research data that you need to analyze quickly. Students struggle because it requires rapid reading and data extraction under tight time pressure, not memorized science facts. Many Baltimore students find this section uniquely challenging compared to the SAT, which is why targeted practice with data interpretation strategies makes a real difference.
The ACT and SAT test similar content but with different formats—the ACT is faster-paced with more straightforward questions, while the SAT has trickier wording and more complex reading passages. Neither is objectively "easier." In Maryland, both tests are equally accepted by colleges, so the choice depends on your strengths: if you work quickly and prefer direct questions, the ACT might suit you; if you're a careful reader who needs time to think, the SAT might be better. Many students benefit from taking a practice test of each to see which aligns with their skills.
Most students benefit from 3-4 months of consistent ACT prep, studying 5-10 hours per week. Ideally, Baltimore juniors should start prep in the fall or early spring to take the test by April or June, giving them time to retake if needed before senior year applications. If you're starting from a lower baseline score, 5-6 months of prep allows for deeper skill-building and practice test cycles. Starting early also reduces stress and gives you flexibility around school commitments and other activities.
With focused tutoring and consistent practice, most students improve 2-4 composite points over 2-3 months, with some seeing larger gains depending on their starting score and effort level. Students starting around 20-22 often see more dramatic improvements (4-6 points) because there's more room for foundational skill-building, while students already scoring 30+ typically see smaller gains (1-3 points) since they're refining advanced skills. The key is identifying your specific weak sections—whether that's pacing on Science, grammar patterns on English, or trig concepts on Math—and targeting those areas with personalized instruction.
ACT pacing is tight—you have roughly 1 minute per question, which is faster than the SAT. For Science specifically, many students waste time reading dense passages carefully; instead, skim for structure, then dive into questions and reference the data as needed. On Math, skip hard problems initially and return to them, since easier questions are worth the same points. Practicing full-length timed tests is essential to build pacing instincts; tutors can help you identify which sections drain your time and teach strategies like question-type prioritization and efficient data scanning.
Most colleges don't require the ACT Writing section anymore, even highly selective schools, so it's optional for most students. However, some competitive programs (engineering, honors colleges) may still value it, so check your target schools' requirements before deciding. If you're a strong writer and want to showcase that skill, including Writing adds 40 minutes to your test day. For most Baltimore students aiming at state schools or competitive national universities, skipping Writing saves time and stress without hurting your chances—focus your energy on maximizing your composite score instead.
Yes, the ACT Math section covers trigonometry (roughly 5-10% of the test), including sine, cosine, tangent, and basic trig identities—topics the SAT doesn't test. If you haven't taken trigonometry or it's been a while, targeted review is important. However, ACT trig questions are usually straightforward applications rather than complex proofs, so focused practice with a tutor on trig fundamentals and common question types can quickly boost your confidence. Many Baltimore students underestimate trig prep and lose points unnecessarily; addressing it early in your study plan prevents this.
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