Award-Winning GMAT Integrated Reasoning
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Award-Winning
GMAT Integrated Reasoning
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
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I have tutored students for the GMAT, GRE, SAT, ACT and LSAT for more than 15 years. I love it! As I tailor my instructions toward the unique needs of each student, my goal is to improve not only the student's performance but also the student's confidence as test day approaches.

I specialize in high-level GMAT diagnostic and execution coaching for stalled high-achievers. I don't just teach content; I identify the execution, timing, and decision-making patterns preventing score improvement and build customized strategies to break through plateaus under time pressure. After years of coaching GMAT students across a wide range of score levels, I've found that many advanced students underperform not because they lack ability, but because they approach questions inefficientlytreating each problem like a new puzzle instead of recognizing recurring execution patterns quickly and systematically. I earned my MBA from Georgetown University and worked as a former Sony engineer, bringing a data-driven and strategic mindset to every session. With 100+ five-star reviews, I've guided GMAT students to break barriersnot just raising scores, but shifting their confidence and thinking. As a result, many of my students have earned admission to elite MBA programs, including UCL
A PhD candidate at Yale, Carl brings a medievalist's core skill to GMAT Integrated Reasoning: synthesizing information from multiple conflicting sources and drawing defensible conclusions under constraints. His teaching across six universities sharpened his ability to break down complex, multi-format material for different learners, and he applies that same clarity to IR's table analysis and two-part analysis questions. Rated 4.9 by students.
I enjoy helping students by explaining concepts in ways that make sense to them, by eliciting their feedback and tailoring my approach to their individual needs, and by conveying my enthusiasm for the learning process. It's great to see the light come on and to see their progress. I have an undergraduate degree in Politics from Princeton, a post-baccalaureate certificate in Quantitative Studies for Finance from Columbia, and an MBA from London Business School. I served as an officer in the Marine Corps and have worked in a number of academic and private-sector positions. I founded and am currently running an analytics-focused consulting practice.
I enjoy empowering students by making learning fun and believe that everyone has an "inner genius" that just takes the right technique to unlock. I bring a patient and friendly approach to teaching, specializing in the sciences, technology and math, and believe in teaching students to "learn for themselves".
I have always been driven to share my own passion for learning. While I was in high school, I tutored my peers after school. At college, I continued tutoring, but I also taught a class to middle-schoolers for a semester. Now, professionally, I teach seminars on Government and Politics. I went to Tulane University where I triple majored in Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics, and Philosophy. I tutor STEM topics, government, and test prep. My philosophy of education is that everyone is unique and must have a stimulating educational environment where they can grow. It is my desire to create this type of atmosphere where students can meet their full potential. I will provide a motivating environment where students are encouraged to take risks and strive for success. My teaching style is largely as a facilitator helping students overcome their obstacles.
I am an interdisciplinary educator with an Ed.M. from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a B.A. from Dartmouth College. My background is primarily in integrated arts learning and museum education and I specialize in visual arts, history and art history, and object-based learning. In all subjects, I take a creative, inquiry-based and learner-centered approach, designing opportunities for each unique individual to meet their learning goals.
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, mountains, forests--you name it, I love it). On rainy weekends I enjoy tinkering with computers and old electronics, playing Pokemon, or picking at my guitar.
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. In August, I will be starting a doctoral program in biostatistics at NYU. I was a teaching assistant at Columbia University in my department and also have tutored graduate students and undergraduates privately as well. My primary areas of tutoring are math and statistics coursework in addition to math sections on standardized tests such as the GRE and GMAT. I am very passionate about helping students feel more confident and excited about math. In my spare time, I enjoy running, playing piano, and spending time with friends and family.
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, history, and English, as well as helped students prepare for standardized tests. I've guided adults towards passing the US Citizenship Exam and taught English in India, where I lived for six months. Whenever I work with a student I personalize the lessons to fit their particular learning style, since I know every student is unique and having the right fit can make all the difference in making learning fun and effective. My strengths are tutoring the social sciences and humanities, as well as making math and standardized tests approachable to students that normally don't like those subjects. In my spare time I like traveling, spending time in the outdoors (climbing & backpacking), meditation, and playing soccer. Next fall I will be beginning my PhD in Education at Harvard University.
I'm Solange - a recent graduate from Harvard where I studied Sociology & Women's Studies. I've been tutoring for eight years now, and have worked with a wide range of ages and in a wide range of subjects. Some of my specialties are college prep/test taking II worked in the admissions office on campus); social sciences; and literature/writing.
I am a rising sophomore at Harvard College and am about to declare as a Mechanical Engineering concentrator, working towards a Bachelor of Science degree. I've always enjoyed sharing my knowledge with my peers and those around me and have done so in both formal and informal settings. I've been a tutor for both Math and Spanish programs in high school and enjoyed the strides I made with students. I am willing to tutor any subject I have a background in, but am strong in mathematics, the sciences, Spanish, history, writing, and ACT prep. I enjoy teaching mathematics most due to the joy I can see in children once they master a topic and can answer even pointed questions meant to stump them, and maybe even put their knowledge to real world use. As a tutor, I like to give a strong foundation to orient my student, and then gradually grant them more freedom and independence until they can feel themselves grasp the concept, pointing out pitfalls or common errors along the way; teachers who used these methods on me always left the most lasting impressions. Outside of my studies, I really enjoy listening to music, both old favorites and new interests, reading classics, and gaming/playing basketball with my friends.
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Frequently Asked Questions
The GMAT Integrated Reasoning section includes Graphics Interpretation, Two-Part Analysis, Table Analysis, and Multi-Source Reasoning. Most students struggle most with Multi-Source Reasoning because it requires synthesizing information across multiple documents or tabs, and Graphics Interpretation because it demands precise data extraction under time pressure. Two-Part Analysis often trips up test-takers who aren't comfortable with the interdependent logic required between the two parts. A tutor experienced in IR can help you identify which question type is your personal weak spot and develop targeted strategies for each.
With only 30 minutes for 12 questions, pacing is critical—you have roughly 2.5 minutes per question, but Multi-Source Reasoning questions often need 3-4 minutes while Graphics Interpretation might take 1.5-2 minutes. The key is not spending time perfecting every question; instead, identify quick wins first (usually Graphics Interpretation), then tackle Two-Part Analysis and Table Analysis, and save the most time-intensive Multi-Source Reasoning for last. A tutor can help you practice this sequencing strategy and build the instinct to skip and return to questions strategically rather than getting stuck.
GMAT IR questions deliberately hide relevant data in dense tables, graphs, and text to test your ability to filter signal from noise under pressure. Students often misread values, confuse axes on charts, or miss conditional statements that change how data should be interpreted. Improvement comes from practicing active annotation—marking key numbers and relationships as you read—and learning to pause briefly to confirm you're reading the correct data point before answering. Tutors can show you common data-extraction traps specific to each question type and help you develop a consistent system for organizing information quickly.
Two-Part Analysis questions test whether you understand how two related answers work together—often one part constrains or depends on the other. The trap is treating them as independent questions; instead, you need to recognize the logical relationship first (e.g., 'if Part A is true, what must Part B be?'). Start by identifying what each part is asking, then map out how the answer choices in one part affect the validity of choices in the other. Many students benefit from sketching out the logical dependencies before diving into answer choices, and a tutor can teach you to spot common relationship patterns (inverse relationships, sequential dependencies, etc.) that appear repeatedly on the GMAT.
Untimed practice is less useful for IR than timed practice because pacing is part of the skill. Instead, practice full 30-minute sections repeatedly to build speed and accuracy together, then review every single question—not just ones you missed—to understand the test maker's logic and identify patterns in how data is presented. After 3-4 full sections, you'll start recognizing question structures and data-extraction tricks, which directly improves your speed. A tutor can help you analyze your practice performance to spot whether your errors stem from misreading data, logical reasoning gaps, or time management, then adjust your study focus accordingly.
Graphics Interpretation questions require you to read charts, graphs, or diagrams accurately and often involve interpolation or extrapolation (estimating values between or beyond data points). Students typically rush through these, misidentifying axes, misreading scales, or overlooking units (percentages vs. absolute numbers, for example). The key is to slow down just enough to verify what each axis represents, check the scale, and confirm the units before answering—usually 90 seconds is enough if you're systematic. Tutors can walk you through the common pitfalls in scatter plots, bar charts, and line graphs, and show you how to estimate values confidently when exact numbers aren't available.
Multi-Source Reasoning is the most time-consuming IR question type because you're managing multiple information sources. The strategy is to read the question stem first to know exactly what information you need, then scan the tabs/documents for that specific data rather than trying to absorb everything upfront. Many students waste time reading irrelevant information; instead, use the question as your roadmap. If a question asks about 'companies with revenue above $500M,' scan for that threshold rather than reading every company's data. A tutor can help you practice this targeted scanning approach and teach you to recognize when you need to cross-reference information across tabs versus when one source contains everything you need.
Most students see 2-4 point improvements (on the 1-8 IR scale) within 4-6 weeks of targeted practice, particularly if they identify specific weak spots like data extraction or pacing. Larger improvements (5+ points) typically require 8-12 weeks and a systematic approach to all four question types. Your starting point matters—students scoring 3-4 often improve faster than those at 6+ because there are more low-hanging fruit to address. A tutor can help you set realistic expectations based on your current performance, identify which question types offer the quickest wins, and create a study plan that prioritizes high-impact improvements.
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