Award-Winning Special Education Tutors serving St. Louis, MO

America's #1 Tutoring Platform

Who needs tutoring?

FOXNBCCBSUS NewsTIMEUSA Today

TUTORS FROM

  • YaleUniversity
  • PrincetonUniversity
  • StanfordUniversity
  • CornellUniversity

Award-Winning Special Education Tutors serving St. Louis, MO

Liz

Certified Tutor

Liz

Masters, Special Education: Mild to Moderate Disabilities 5-12
Liz's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra

Liz holds a master's in Special Education (Mild to Moderate Disabilities, grades 5–12) from Simmons College and has worked extensively with students who have learning disabilities, ADHD, dyslexia, and emotional impairments. That clinical training, paired with her hands-on experience teaching and dir...

Education

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)

Test Scores
ACT
34
Jessica

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Jessica

Current Undergrad, Economics, Cancer Biology
Jessica's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Calculus
Algebra
Microbiology

Every learner processes information differently, and Jessica adapts her teaching style accordingly — breaking concepts into smaller steps, using visual organizers, or finding alternative explanations when the standard one doesn't click. Her science and economics training means she can support studen...

Education

University of Chicago

Current Undergrad, Economics, Cancer Biology

Test Scores
Perfect Score
SAT
1590
ACT
36

Certified Tutor

Molly

Master of Science in Education
Molly's other Tutor Subjects
1st-8th Grade math
1st-8th Grade Writing
1st-8th Grade Reading
Pre-Algebra

During her years teaching second through fourth grade, Molly worked daily with students who had a wide range of learning needs, from reading intervention to modified math instruction. She pulls from multiple curricula and adapts materials on the fly — adjusting pacing, breaking tasks into smaller st...

Education

Northwestern University

Master of Science in Education

Columbia University in the City of New York

Bachelor in Arts, History

Test Scores
SAT
1480

Certified Tutor

Victoria

Master's Degree in Education
Victoria's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Arithmetic
Trigonometry

Victoria spent three years as a certified classroom teacher through Teach for America, working with first through third graders who had a wide range of learning needs, including IEP-supported students. She adapts lessons to different processing styles and paces, breaking academic content into struct...

Education

Yale University

Master's Degree in Education

Southern Connecticut State University

Master of Science, Education

Yale University

Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Yan

Master of Arts, Curriculum and Instruction
Yan's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra

Every learner processes information differently, and Yan's entire educational philosophy centers on adapting how material is presented until it connects. Her master's in Curriculum and Instruction trained her to design differentiated lessons, and her years in Boston elementary and middle school clas...

Education

Boston College

Master of Arts, Curriculum and Instruction

Boston College

Bachelor in Arts, Elementary School Teaching

Test Scores
SAT
1500

Certified Tutor

Harry

Bachelor in Arts, Theater
Harry's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Arithmetic
Middle School Math
Calculus

Every learner processes information differently — some through auditory explanation, some through visual mapping, others through hands-on activity — and Harry builds each session around identifying what actually works for that student. His background in theater and education at Northwestern trained ...

Education

Northwestern University

Bachelor in Arts, Theater

Northwestern University

BA (School of Communications)

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Heather

Bachelor in Arts, Psychology
Heather's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Geometry
Calculus

Heather's psychology background gives her real insight into how different learners process information — whether a student needs material broken into smaller chunks, presented visually, or reinforced through repetition. She's especially effective with kids who get frustrated easily, building their c...

Education

Cornell University

Bachelor in Arts, Psychology

Test Scores
SAT
1550

Certified Tutor

9+ years

Mati

Bachelor in Arts, Creative Writing
Mati's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
SAT Reading
PSAT Critical Reading

Mati brings both professional and personal insight to special education — her doctoral work centered on learning disabilities, and as a mother of two children with dyslexia, she's navigated IEP meetings, accommodation plans, and reading interventions from every side of the table. She teaches strateg...

Education

New York University

Bachelor in Arts, Creative Writing

Certified Tutor

9+ years

Elliot

Doctor of Philosophy, Neuroscience
Elliot's other Tutor Subjects
Statistics Graduate Level
Pre-Algebra
Statistics
Middle School Math

A PhD in neuroscience means Elliot understands learning differences at the biological level — how attention, working memory, and processing speed vary across brains and what that means for instruction. He explicitly welcomes learners on the spectrum and tailors pacing, scaffolding, and sensory consi...

Education

Hampshire College

Bachelor in Arts, Cognitive Science

Vanderbilt University

Doctor of Philosophy, Neuroscience

Test Scores
Perfect Score
SAT
1540
ACT
36

Certified Tutor

Alex

Masters, Occupational Therapy Doctorate Program
Alex's other Tutor Subjects
3rd-8th Grade Science
10th-12th Grade Writing
10th-12th Grade Reading
Calculus

Occupational therapy is fundamentally about adapting tasks so people can succeed despite neurological, developmental, or learning differences — and that's the perspective Alex brings to tutoring. Currently in Washington University's OT Doctorate program with a neuroscience background, Alex understan...

Education

Washington University in St. Louis

Masters, Occupational Therapy Doctorate Program

University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

Bachelors, Psychology

Frequently Asked Questions

Special education tutoring is personalized instruction designed for students with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs), 504 plans, or specific learning differences. Unlike classroom instruction, which must serve diverse learners at one pace, special education tutoring focuses on your child's unique learning style, strengths, and challenges—whether that's dyslexia, ADHD, autism spectrum disorder, or other learning differences. Tutors work directly with your child's IEP goals and adapt teaching methods to remove barriers to learning.

Yes. Varsity Tutors connects you with tutors who understand IEP frameworks and can reinforce the specific goals outlined in your child's plan. Before starting, share your child's IEP with the tutor so they can align instruction with priority areas—whether that's reading fluency, math computation, social-emotional skills, or executive functioning. This targeted approach helps students make measurable progress on the exact skills their school team has identified.

Students often struggle with foundational skills like phonics and decoding (especially with dyslexia), math fact fluency and problem-solving, attention and task completion, and building confidence after repeated academic struggles. Personalized tutoring breaks skills into smaller steps, uses multi-sensory teaching methods, provides frequent feedback, and celebrates progress—all proven approaches that help students with learning differences build both skills and self-esteem. The 1-on-1 setting also removes distractions and allows tutors to adjust pacing in real time.

The first session is typically a get-to-know-you meeting where the tutor learns about your child's learning style, strengths, challenges, and goals. You'll share relevant information like your child's IEP, any diagnoses, what's worked well in the past, and specific areas you want to focus on. The tutor may do some informal assessment to understand where your child is starting from, then create a personalized plan that builds from there. This foundation helps ensure every future session is as effective as possible.

Look for tutors with background in special education, experience with specific learning differences your child has, knowledge of evidence-based interventions (like structured literacy for dyslexia or Orton-Gillingham methods), and familiarity with IEPs and accommodations. Many tutors hold special education certifications, have worked in special education classrooms, or specialize in particular areas like reading intervention or math. When you connect with a tutor through Varsity Tutors, you can discuss their experience and approach to make sure they're a good fit for your child.

Progress shows up in multiple ways: improved scores on reading or math assessments, increased fluency or accuracy in targeted skills, better ability to complete assignments independently, and growing confidence in academic situations. Work with your tutor to track specific, measurable goals—like reading 10 more words per minute, solving multi-step problems with fewer errors, or staying focused for longer periods. Many families also see progress reflected in updated IEP assessments and report cards, especially when tutoring aligns with school goals.

St. Louis's 9 school districts each have special education departments and coordinators who can answer questions about IEPs, evaluations, and services. The Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education also offers resources and advocacy information. While tutoring complements school services, it's designed to fill gaps and accelerate progress on specific skills your child is working on. Many families find that combining school support with personalized tutoring creates the strongest foundation for success.

Frequency depends on your child's needs, goals, and current skill gaps. Some students benefit from weekly sessions to build foundational skills, while others do well with bi-weekly sessions once they've made progress. Most students see meaningful results with consistent, ongoing tutoring over several months. Your tutor can recommend a schedule based on your child's learning pace and the specific skills you're targeting, and you can adjust as needed based on progress.

Connect with Special Education Tutors in St. Louis

Get matched with local expert tutors