Award-Winning GRE Verbal Tutors serving Boston, MA
Award-Winning GRE Verbal Tutors serving Boston, MA
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Award-Winning GRE Verbal Tutors serving Boston, MA
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, mount...
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The University of Texas at Dallas
Bachelors, Mechanical Engineering
Duke University
Current Grad Student, Mechanical Engineering
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I am a graduate of the University of Chicago where I received my undergraduate degree in political science. Right after graduation, I worked as an academic and test prep tutor as well as admissions co...
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University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts in Political Science
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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 not teaching or grading papers, I can usually be found playing some brass instrument or another, umpiring baseball, trying out a new recipe in the kitchen, or spending far too much time on Netfli...
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Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Environmental Science and Public Policy
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I'm a recent PhD graduate in Bioengineering in the Boston area. My thesis involved nanoparticles and bacterial infections, but as a biomedical engineer I've had training in circuits, mechanics, some p...
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University of Iowa
Bachelor of Science, Biomedical Engineering
Northeastern University
Doctor of Philosophy, Biomedical Engineering
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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. I...
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Columbia University
Masters in biostatistics
Northwestern University
Bachelor of Arts in biological sciences (focus in neurobiology)
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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 student in the humanities who is lucky enough to teach, read, and write for a living. I am passionately committed to educational access and helping young people reach their full potent...
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Stanford University
PHD, History
Princeton University
Bachelor in Arts
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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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Practice GRE Verbal
Free practice tests, flashcards, and AI tutoring for GRE Verbal
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement varies based on your starting point and study commitment, but many students see gains of 3-5 points on the 130-170 scale through focused preparation. The Verbal section rewards both strategic test-taking skills and deeper reading comprehension, so improvement often comes from targeted practice on question types where you're weakest—whether that's Text Completion, Sentence Equivalence, or Reading Comprehension.
Working with a tutor helps you identify exactly which skills need work and develop a study plan that targets those areas, rather than spending time on content you've already mastered. Most students benefit from 8-12 weeks of consistent preparation combined with regular practice tests to track progress.
The Verbal section gives you 30 minutes for 20 questions, which means roughly 90 seconds per question on average. However, not all questions take equal time—Text Completion questions typically need less time than longer Reading Comprehension passages, so effective pacing means knowing which questions to tackle first.
Many test-takers benefit from starting with question types they find easier to build confidence and momentum, then tackling harder passages with more time remaining. A tutor can help you develop a personalized pacing strategy based on your strengths and practice test data, plus teach you when it's worth spending extra time on a question versus making an educated guess and moving forward.
GRE Reading Comprehension challenges you to understand main ideas, author intent, and specific details under time pressure—skills that go beyond just reading carefully. The key is learning to read actively, identifying the passage structure and what the author is emphasizing, rather than trying to absorb every detail.
Common trouble spots include inference questions (where you need to go beyond what's explicitly stated), paired passages (which require comparing two different perspectives), and dense academic subjects. Tutors help you develop annotation strategies that work within time limits, practice identifying question patterns, and build the stamina needed for back-to-back passages. Working through official practice materials with feedback accelerates improvement more than reading alone.
These question types test vocabulary in context and logical reasoning—you need to understand how sentences fit together, not just know word definitions. The most effective approach is reading for logic first (what word would make sense based on the sentence structure?) and then checking if that word matches the answer choices, rather than trying every option.
Sentence Equivalence questions are particularly tricky because both correct answers must create nearly identical meanings, which requires precision. A tutor can teach you to identify signal words (but, however, therefore, because) that guide you toward the right answers, help you build a strategic vocabulary list focused on words that actually appear in the test, and give you feedback on your reasoning process—not just whether you got the answer right.
Most students benefit from taking at least one full practice test per week during active GRE preparation, ideally under timed conditions that mimic the real test. This frequency gives you regular data on your progress, helps you identify patterns in which question types trip you up, and builds test-day stamina and confidence.
The GRE includes two official practice tests at no cost, and additional official practice materials are available—using these official resources matters because the real test is more predictable than random prep materials. Between full tests, focused practice on specific question types (15-20 minutes at a time) keeps your skills sharp without burning you out. A tutor can help you interpret your practice test results to pinpoint where to focus your study time most effectively.
Test anxiety on the Verbal section often comes from time pressure, challenging vocabulary, or the feeling that you're unsure of your answers. Building genuine confidence through targeted practice is the foundation—knowing you've successfully solved similar questions before makes the test feel less threatening.
Concrete strategies help too: developing a consistent pre-test routine, practicing the skill of "moving on" when you're uncertain (which the test rewards), and using breathing techniques during the actual exam. Many students also find it helpful to reframe the test as a learning opportunity rather than a pass/fail judgment. A tutor can work with you on test-day strategies, provide honest feedback on your readiness, and help you identify which practice situations most closely replicate real test conditions so you arrive at test day feeling prepared.
Most students preparing for the GRE benefit from 8-12 weeks of focused study, though your timeline depends on your starting point and target score. If you're aiming for a score in the 160+ range, or if reading comprehension and vocabulary are significant challenges, you may want 12+ weeks to build skills thoroughly.
Working with a tutor helps compress your timeline because instead of wasting time on trial-and-error, you get a customized study plan focused on your specific weaknesses from day one. Even starting with a few weeks of tutoring—where you identify your trouble areas and build foundational strategies—can help you study more efficiently on your own afterward, or you can continue with regular sessions for accountability and feedback as test day approaches.
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