Award-Winning AP History
Tutors
Award-Winning
AP History
Tutors
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
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Latin American Studies gave Alyssa something most AP History tutors lack — deep experience analyzing how political, economic, and cultural forces interact across borders and time periods. That cross-regional lens is exactly what AP graders reward in contextualization and comparison points, and she applies it whether a student is working through U.S., World, or European content. Rated 4.9 by students.

I graduated from Northwestern University with a Bachelor's of Arts in Neuroscience and have a Post-baccalaureate Certificate in Biomedical Sciences and Health Equity. As a tutor I focus on problem solving and analytical skills. I am able to break down problems and difficult concepts in a way that every student can understand. I have numerous years of experience helping students excel in coursework, prepare for standardized tests, and compose comprehensive academic applications. I truly believe every student is capable of high levels of academic achievement and given the right framework students will propel themselves to new heights. I am proficient in many subjects but have a true passion for math, science and language arts.
I am attending the University of Pennsylvania where I am majoring in Bioengineering on the premed track, with my goal after graduation to become an orthopedic surgeon. My passion for tutoring stems from a genuine love for helping people discover their strengths and succeed in their learning journey, much like guiding a friend through a challenging but rewarding adventure. My teaching philosophy centers on adaptability and personalized instruction, tailoring each session to meet the unique needs of my students. As a tutor, I find immense joy in helping students navigate the field of STEM, while also sharing my enthusiasm for French and Arabic languages. Beyond academia, I am an avid explorer of the world, and I relish the beauty of cultural diversity. In my free time, I enjoy immersing myself in outdoor adventures, savoring diverse cuisines, and partaking in various athletic activities.
My teaching philosophy is focused on a single objective - that students learn. I have a Ph.D. in Criminology from the University of Pennsylvania and a J.D. from Temple Law School. My GRE score was a 326, and my LSAT score was a 173. I've tutored over 60 students through Varsity Tutors. I'm committed to helping students reach their full potentials.
I love literature and reading and writing -- they've been central to my life since early childhood -- and I hope as a tutor not only to help students improve their skills in these areas but to instill in them a similar kind of lifelong affection for these pursuits. I believe that reading and writing are key not only to enjoying a broadly fulfilling and exciting life but also to performing effectively in virtually any kind of serious job. As a kid, my dream was to become a writer of fiction -- novels and stories -- and I majored in English and creative writing in college. But then it was literature that led my life to take a different, unexpected path. At Princeton, I had to write a senior thesis, and the topic I chose was native American prose literature -- novels, poems and other writings that hugely enhanced the love of nature and wilderness that I had already acquired through hiking and camping trips with my father. Instead of wanting to write fiction, I became an environmental advocate, and wanted to write about wilderness and environmental issues. So, I moved from the East Coast to Montana for graduate school, where I studied wilderness and wildlife management issues and earned a Master's degree in natural resource conservation. For decades ever since I have made my living primarily as a communicator, through writing as well as public speaking. Every job I've had depended on my ability to write well, from working as an editor of technical research papers for the US Forest Service; as communications director for an environmental protection group; as a press secretary in a Presidential campaign; as an international publicist for a PR firm in New York City; as an aide in the Montana Governor's Office; and as a self-employed lobbyist and campaign manager for numerous large corporations and small nonprofit groups. I also taught public and media relations at Carroll College in Montana and have done a fair amount of freelance writing along the way, with essays published in diverse outlets including Western Wildlands, the Journal of Soil & Water Conservation, Range magazine and Playboy. My love of reading and literature has never ceased. I am always reading at least one good book at a time, and I still write almost daily. On the side, I recently have edited two books for publication and have written several grant proposals. I look forward to sharing my passion for learning with students through the Varsity Tutors program.
"BYE TO AI" DISCLAIMER: At a time when so many tutors use AI to create lesson plans, conduct research, and even grade students' work, I must disclaim that I do not and will not use AI in our work together. The humanities are fundamentally, well, human, and AI has no place here. Hi! I'm Sophia, a writer, editor, tutor, and voice teacher. I graduated Vanderbilt University with my Bachelor's in History, a second major in Voice, a concentration in Musicology, and a minor in Italian. I'm currently pursuing my Master's. I have extensive experience with academic writing and am also an award-winning creative writer. If you need help editing an essay, college personal statement, or writing of any kind, I'm here! I tutor middle school through collegiate humanities (think ELA and History), as well as Voice and musical academics (Musicology, Music Theory, Solfege, Conducting, etc.) for students of all ages.
I graduated from Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, with a Bachelor of Arts degree, having majored in mathematics. Since then, I've worked for a number of health technology companies as a business analyst, usually helping to bridge the communications gap between programming staff and end users with clear documentation and presentations. I was also a theater nerd in high school and college, and (with my wife) developed and co-taught an elementary/middle school theater program for our neighborhood school. I've been a private tutor in mathematics for a number of years, working with local families on a handful of subjects, mostly pre-calculus and calculus. My favorite part of tutoring is helping my students to see that one little insight that can unlock the whole of the subject or lesson, and helping them pick the right tool or method to get a good answer.
I am a current undergraduate student at Cornell University. I began tutoring 4 years ago because I am passionate about helping students become confident in their academic skills and reach their academic goals. Each session with a student consists of consistent, guided instruction that fosters independence and confidence in their skills. While I can instruct in many subjects, I love to tutor in math and English.
When I was young, I used to hate swimming at the beach. The idea of sharks moving around under the waves where I could not see them made me scared to go into the water. As I grew up, however, and began to learn about the different sharks that lived off the shores of my home in Massachusetts, USA, I became less and less scared and more and more fascinated with how and why sharks move around in this underwater world. I began to ask questions like, what do sharks do under the water when we cannot see them? and, where do sharks like to go and why? As a marine scientist now I try to answer these questions. Because sharks live and breathe under the water and can swim long distances and go deep into the ocean, further and deeper than I could follow by myself, to study how these animals move and behave underwater I have to use lots of different types of technology. Sometimes I use underwater robots that can follow the sharks down deeper than humans can go, and that can carry things like cameras so I can directly see what the sharks are doing. In my work now, I use special tags that send out signals every few seconds with a unique name that identifies individual sharks. When the shark swims close enough to receivers placed out in the ocean, these receivers are able to hear and record the tag name, telling where and when individual sharks are present in different areas of the ocean. One thing I love about being a shark scientist is that I can follow sharks all over the world. First, I followed the movement of sharks all the way over in the Atlantic Ocean off the east coast of the USA. Then I moved to Tasmania, Australia, and I followed young sharks as they move around off the coast of New South Wales. Now I am back home in Massachusetts and working on publishing my research.
I am a driven, positive, affirming tutor who is happy to help students in any way he can. I graduated magna cum laude from Dartmouth College in 2020, and I obtained my Master's in Political Science from the University of Toronto in 2022. In 2016, I received an SAT score of 1550. That year, I also received a 5 on my AP exams in Calculus AB, English Language, U.S. History, and U.S. Government. I am happy to tutor students in mathematics, English, and social sciences (e.g., history, government). I especially enjoy tutoring pre-algebra and algebra. I believe in a practice-based approach in which I take students step-by-step through the concepts at hand. After practicing together with my guidance, the student will soon be able to apply what they have learned on their own.
I am a graduate of Rice University with a Bachelor of Science in Physics, a Bachelors of Arts in Philosophy, and a minor in Neuroscience. My previous tutoring experiences have primarily focused on college level physics, math, and chemistry; AP Calculus, AP Physics, and AP Chemistry; the ACT and SAT college entrance exams; general mathematics at the high school level; and middle school level math and english for state standardized testing. Additionally, I have experience working with students with learning differences including dyslexia, ADHD, and ASD. As someone who loves learning, I am a firm believer in making our meetings enjoyable as well as educational. STEM subjects in particular have the reputation for being boring and complicated, but I love that as a tutor I can help students make sense of the topics and find the fun!
I recently graduated from Northwestern University with a BA in Communications and a minor in Business. Since 2020, I have had the privilege of tutoring students of all ages, forming meaningful connections that I deeply cherish. While I tutor a diverse array of subjects, my passions lie in Math, English, and Writing. I also love helping students with college admissions! I firmly believe that learning should be an enjoyable and enriching experience for everyone, so I strive to make each tutoring session unique and engaging.
Testimonials
Because the right AP History tutor makes all the difference.
Average Session Rating – Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
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Frequently Asked Questions
Students typically find the greatest difficulty with synthesis questions that require connecting multiple historical periods or themes—particularly on the DBQ (Document-Based Question) and LEQ (Long Essay Question). Periodization challenges are also common, as students struggle to understand how to frame arguments across different eras like the Columbian Exchange's long-term effects or the continuities and changes in American foreign policy. Additionally, many students underestimate the reading load: the AP History exams require processing dense primary and secondary sources quickly while identifying bias, perspective, and historical context simultaneously.
Tutors who specialize in AP History focus on teaching the specific argument structure that graders reward: a clear thesis that directly answers the prompt, strategic use of evidence from documents (for DBQs) or historical examples (for LEQs), and explicit analysis connecting each piece of evidence back to your argument. They'll help you practice time management—typically 40 minutes for a DBQ and 40 minutes for an LEQ—and teach you how to quickly identify which documents or examples best support your position rather than trying to use everything. Many students improve significantly once they understand that graders prioritize the quality and relevance of your analysis over the quantity of information included.
Effective source analysis requires training in what historians actually look for: the author's perspective and potential bias, the historical context in which the source was created, and the intended audience. Rather than summarizing what a source says, AP History tutors teach you to ask critical questions like "Why would this person say this at this moment?" and "What does this source reveal about the beliefs of its time?" Practice with a tutor helps you move beyond surface-level observations to the deeper contextual analysis that distinguishes high-scoring responses. Consistent practice with real AP sources, followed by feedback on your analytical depth, is the fastest way to build this skill.
The AP History multiple-choice section tests both content knowledge and reading comprehension under time pressure—you have roughly 1.5 minutes per question. Tutors help by teaching you to identify question types (straightforward recall vs. those requiring source interpretation) and prioritize accordingly, skipping difficult questions initially to maximize points on easier ones. They'll also help you recognize common trap answers that sound plausible but misinterpret the historical context. Practicing full timed sections repeatedly, with detailed review of both wrong and right answers, is essential—many students improve 5-10 points on this section alone through targeted pacing strategies and pattern recognition.
AP History rewards students who can see patterns across time periods rather than treating each era as isolated. Tutors help you build mental frameworks—like understanding how ideas about democracy, power, or identity evolved from the colonial period through the modern era—so you can draw connections confidently in essays. They teach you to identify turning points (like the Civil War or the Cold War's end) and understand how they reshaped American society, which is exactly what synthesis questions test. This approach transforms studying from memorizing disconnected facts into understanding cause-and-effect chains, making both the multiple-choice section and essays significantly easier.
Score improvement depends on your starting point and consistency. Students who begin tutoring 8-12 weeks before the exam and work on essay skills, source analysis, and full-length practice tests typically see improvements of 2-4 points (on the 1-5 scale), which often means the difference between a 3 and a 4 or a 4 and a 5. Students starting earlier or with more intensive preparation sometimes see larger gains. The biggest improvements come from fixing essay structure and analytical depth rather than cramming more content—most students already know more than they think, but struggle to organize and present it effectively under timed conditions.
AP History anxiety often stems from the essay sections, where students feel pressure to "get it perfect" rather than understanding that graders reward clear argument and relevant evidence over flawless prose. Under stress, students also tend to rush through source analysis, missing crucial context clues that would strengthen their answers. Tutors help manage this by building confidence through repeated practice with real exam conditions, teaching you what actually matters to graders (so you stop worrying about minor details), and developing a pre-exam routine that reinforces your preparation. Many students report that working through practice essays with detailed feedback significantly reduces anxiety because they realize their skills are stronger than they thought.
The most effective approach is taking full-length practice exams under timed conditions and analyzing your performance by topic and question type. Tutors help you track patterns—for example, you might consistently miss questions about economic history or struggle with essays on foreign policy—so you can focus your remaining study time strategically. Many students waste time reviewing topics they already understand well. By working with a tutor to diagnose your specific weak areas through practice test analysis, you can allocate your prep time efficiently and target the concepts that will actually move your score.
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