Award-Winning ACT Reading Tutors
serving Bronx, NY
Award-Winning
ACT Reading
Tutors in Bronx
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.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
UniversitiesSchools & Universities
DeliveredHours Delivered
ProficiencyGrowth in Proficiency
Who needs tutoring?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.

I am currently a fourth year medical student at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and graduated Suma Cum Laude from Yeshiva College with a BA in Biology and Music. As a Writing Center tutor, I worked with undergraduate and graduate students looking to improve their writing, and have also tutored Regents-level biology and chemistry. Most recently, I tutored for Kaplan, teaching an MCAT preparatory course and working one-on-one with students. When not studying, I like to ride my bike, train Taekwondo, play blues guitar (or bass, or piano, or saxophone, or drums), and read a good book.

I am currently a 3rd year doctoral candidate at the University of Oxford. I previously attended the Yale School of Public Health and earned a Master of Public Health in Health Policy with a concentration in Global Health. I also hold two Bachelors degrees - a B.A. in political science and a B.A. in biology - from Vassar College. I have been a tutor for twelve years and enjoy teaching very much. I have taught both graduate and undergraduate level courses at Yale as well as multiple courses at Oxford. Some of my favorite activities include traveling, dancing (classical ballet, pointe), and playing baseball.
I'm a rising junior at Harvard College. I study African American Studies with a secondary in Women's Studies and I am pursuing a language citation in Spanish. I aspire to one day go to business school. When I am not doing work, I can typically be found reading, writing, or dancing.
I am a Neuroscience and Behavior major at Columbia University. Although my major is centered in the STEM field, I am also passionate about human rights work, global engagement, and local outreach. While my future plans are subject to change, I see myself continuing in academia, going to medical school, and becoming a physician.
I am an aspiring applied mathematician, with particular interest in image processing and climate science. I graduated in May 2017 from Washington University in St. Louis with a bachelor's in physics and mathematics, and am beginning a PhD program in September 2017 at the University of Chicago in Computational and Applied Mathematics. I've tutored introductory physics students for three years and enjoyed it thoroughly, as a chance to help other students while revisiting fundamental concepts to enhance my own knowledge. I'm eager to continue reaching out and helping students of math and physics to succeed and, furthermore, to appreciate the beauty and power of these subjects.
The ACT Reading section rewards students who can quickly identify an author's purpose, trace argument structure, and distinguish between what a passage states and what it implies. Liz scored a 34 ACT composite and draws on her history and humanities training at Washington University in St. Louis to teach the kind of close reading that makes 40-minute, four-passage sets manageable. Her background in special education also means she's skilled at adapting pacing and comprehension strategies to fit each student's processing style.
A government major at Harvard, Richard spent his coursework doing exactly what the ACT Reading section rewards: rapidly digesting competing political arguments, identifying an author's central claim, and distinguishing stated evidence from implied conclusions — skills that map directly onto the social science and humanities passages. His perfect 36 ACT composite means he's navigated every passage type under real testing pressure and knows which time-management habits actually hold up when the clock is running.
Most ACT Reading mistakes come from running out of time, not from a lack of comprehension. Sharan, who earned a 36 composite, teaches a passage-attack strategy that prioritizes locating evidence over re-reading entire paragraphs. She walks through each question type — main idea, inference, vocabulary in context — so students know exactly what the test is asking before they even look at the answer choices.
I'm not tutoring, I love walking through New York for design inspiration and taking carpentry, metalworking, and illustration classes.
Reading four dense passages in 35 minutes requires a method, not just strong reading skills. Dana's policy studies trained her to extract arguments and evidence from complex texts fast — exactly the skill the ACT Reading section rewards, especially on the social science and humanities passages. Her 36 ACT composite came from treating each passage like a briefing document: identify the claim, locate the support, move on.
Scoring a 36 ACT composite means Vivian didn't just read the passages — she learned to dismantle them, distinguishing between what the author states explicitly and what's merely implied. Her approach to the Reading section zeroes in on how to handle the dual-passage comparisons and inference questions that trip up even strong readers. Rated 4.9 by students.
I am currently interviewing for medical school for matriculation in August 2017.
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Frequently Asked Questions
ACT Reading tests comprehension speed and accuracy under time pressure—students have just 8-9 minutes per passage. Common struggles include managing the pace, distinguishing between what the passage states directly versus what's implied, and handling unfamiliar topics (science, history, literature). Many students also struggle with question types that require inference or identifying an author's tone, which demand deeper understanding beyond surface-level reading.
Score improvement depends on your starting point and effort level, but most students see meaningful gains—typically 2-4 points—within 8-12 weeks of focused work. Students who identify specific weak areas (like inference questions or time management) and practice consistently often see faster improvement. The key is combining targeted strategy instruction with plenty of practice on real ACT passages to build both speed and accuracy.
Timing struggles usually stem from either reading too slowly or spending too long on difficult questions. Effective strategies include previewing questions before reading (so you know what to look for), skimming rather than reading every word, and setting a time limit per passage (around 8-9 minutes). Expert tutors can help you find the right balance for your reading style and teach you which questions to tackle first versus skip and return to.
Your first session focuses on understanding your baseline skills and identifying patterns in your mistakes. You'll typically take a diagnostic test or work through sample passages while your tutor observes your approach, timing, and reasoning. This helps pinpoint whether you struggle with comprehension, question interpretation, pacing, or specific passage types—so your personalized study plan targets exactly what you need.
Practice tests are essential—they build test-like stamina, reveal patterns in your mistakes, and help you refine timing strategies under realistic conditions. Most students benefit from taking full practice tests every 1-2 weeks, then reviewing errors with a tutor to understand why you missed questions and how to avoid similar mistakes. This cycle of practice, feedback, and targeted skill-building is how students achieve real score improvement.
ACT Reading focuses on five main question types: main idea, detail/fact, inference, vocabulary-in-context, and author's tone/purpose. Each type requires a different approach—detail questions reward careful rereading, while inference questions demand critical thinking about what's implied. Tutors help you recognize each type quickly, develop a specific strategy for answering it, and practice until the approach becomes automatic.
Most students find certain genres tougher—science passages confuse some, while literary excerpts challenge others. The solution is targeted practice: work through multiple passages of your weak type, analyze what makes them difficult (unfamiliar vocabulary, complex structure, abstract concepts), and develop strategies specific to that genre. Your tutor can also help you build background knowledge in challenging areas, making unfamiliar content less intimidating.
Test anxiety often stems from feeling unprepared or unsure of your approach. Personalized tutoring builds confidence through mastery—as you practice strategies, see your accuracy improve, and understand question patterns, the test feels less intimidating. Tutors also teach calming techniques for managing time pressure and help you develop a pre-test routine that works for you, so you walk in feeling ready.
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