Award-Winning College Accounting Tutors
serving Madison, WI
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Award-Winning College Accounting Tutors serving Madison, WI

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Tiffany
Intermediate and advanced accounting courses are where many students hit a wall — topics like depreciation methods, inventory valuation, and statement of cash flows require precision that intro classes don't demand. Tiffany earned her BBA in accounting and understands the conceptual framework behind...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor in Business Administration, Accounting
University of Chicago
Juris Doctor, Legal Studies

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Benjamin
Intermediate and cost accounting courses demand precision that intro classes don't — allocating overhead, preparing consolidated statements, or working through variance analysis. Benjamin's Notre Dame finance and economics training included rigorous accounting coursework, and he approaches each prob...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science in Finance and Economics (minor: Innovation and Entrepreneurship)

Certified Tutor
Jack
The jump from introductory to intermediate accounting — when adjusting entries, depreciation methods, and multi-step income statements pile up — is where most students start struggling. Jack approaches these topics systematically, connecting each accounting procedure back to the economic logic he st...
Northwestern University
B.A. in Theatre and Economics

Certified Tutor
Hari
Debits and credits click faster when someone explains the logic behind the accounting equation instead of just handing you T-account templates. Hari tackles journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation by tying each step back to what the numbers actually represent about a ...
University of South Florida-Main Campus
Masters, MBA (Finance and Management)
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Albert
Debits and credits are just the entry point — the real challenge in college accounting is building fluency with journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation under accrual-basis rules. Albert's MBA finance concentration required extensive work with income statements, balanc...
University of California Los Angeles
Masters in Business Administration
Wuhan University
Bachelor in Arts, Broadcast Journalism

Certified Tutor
7+ years
Debits, credits, and journal entries follow a logic that's easier to internalize than to memorize, and Rahi approaches accounting that way — as a system with consistent rules. His engineering mindset breaks the accounting cycle into clear steps, from adjusting entries through financial statement pre...
Princeton University
Engineer

Certified Tutor
Peter
Accounting at the college level trips students up when debits and credits stop being simple and journal entries involve adjustments, depreciation, and accruals. Peter's structured teaching approach — honed through his master's in education — turns the accounting cycle into a logical sequence rather ...
Ohio State
Masters in Education, English Education
Syracuse University
Bachelor of Science, Journalism

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Asher
Asher earned his Bachelor of Accountancy from Penn State on a CPA track, completing all 150 credits in four years — meaning he's worked through the full gauntlet of financial accounting, managerial accounting, cost accounting, and auditing. He breaks down journal entries, T-accounts, and financial s...
Pennsylvania State University-Penn State Berks
Bachelor of Accountancy, Accounting

Certified Tutor
Maria
The jump from introductory to intermediate accounting trips up a lot of college students once adjusting entries, depreciation methods, and multi-step income statements enter the picture. Maria's approach is to build each concept from the underlying accounting equation outward, so students can recons...
University of California Los Angeles
Bachelor of Science, Applied Mathematics and Business Economics

Certified Tutor
Debits and credits make intuitive sense once someone shows you how they map to what's actually happening in a business. Andrew tackles college accounting by connecting journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation back to the real transactions they represent. His MBA in fin...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MBA in Finance
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelor's in Engineering
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Frequently Asked Questions
College accounting introduces complex concepts like accrual accounting, journal entries, and financial statement analysis that build on foundational bookkeeping skills. Many students struggle with the transition from basic accounting to understanding how transactions affect multiple accounts simultaneously, and the abstract nature of concepts like depreciation and deferred revenue can feel disconnected from real-world applications. Additionally, the fast pace of college courses—combined with heavy problem sets and exams—leaves little room for students to ask clarifying questions in a lecture hall setting.
In a classroom with an 11.7:1 student-teacher ratio, instructors must move at an average pace that doesn't always match individual learning needs. Personalized 1-on-1 instruction allows tutors to identify exactly where you're getting stuck—whether it's understanding debits and credits, mastering the accounting cycle, or applying concepts to case studies—and adjust explanations and practice problems accordingly. This targeted approach means you spend less time on concepts you've already mastered and more time building confidence in areas where you need it most.
Your first session is designed to establish a foundation for your tutoring relationship. A tutor will discuss your current course material, review any recent exams or assignments, and identify specific topics causing difficulty—whether that's understanding the accounting equation, preparing adjusting entries, or analyzing financial statements. From there, you'll work together to create a personalized plan that aligns with your college accounting curriculum and addresses your most pressing challenges before your next exam or assignment deadline.
Yes. Personalized accounting instruction covers the full scope of college-level accounting, including the accounting cycle, journal entries and ledgers, financial statement preparation (income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement), adjusting entries, depreciation methods, and introductory cost accounting. Tutors can also help with more advanced topics like revenue recognition, inventory valuation methods, and analysis of financial statements—ensuring you're prepared for whatever your specific course emphasizes.
Many students see noticeable improvement within 2-3 weeks of consistent tutoring, especially if they're working on upcoming exams or assignments. However, accounting is cumulative—concepts in later chapters build on earlier foundations—so the real benefit comes from sustained practice and clarification of foundational skills. With regular sessions focused on your specific weak areas, you'll develop the problem-solving confidence and conceptual understanding needed to tackle increasingly complex accounting challenges throughout your course.
Varsity Tutors connects you with tutors who have demonstrated expertise in college accounting and understand the specific curriculum you're working through. When you describe your course focus—whether it's financial accounting, managerial accounting, or intermediate accounting—you'll be matched with someone qualified to teach those concepts at the college level. This personalized matching ensures you're learning from someone who understands both the material and the expectations of your specific course.
If you're finding the basics challenging—like understanding debits and credits, the accounting equation, or how to post journal entries—personalized tutoring is especially valuable because a tutor can slow down, use visual explanations, and work through practice problems until these foundational concepts click. Many students who feel behind benefit from revisiting these fundamentals with a tutor who can explain them in a way that makes sense to you personally, rather than moving forward with gaps that will make later topics even harder.
Accounting problems require both conceptual understanding and procedural accuracy—you need to know *why* you're doing something, not just *how* to do it. Tutors help you develop a systematic approach to problem-solving by walking through examples, asking guiding questions that help you think through the logic, and providing practice problems that build your confidence. Over time, you'll develop the ability to recognize problem types, apply the right accounting principles, and catch your own mistakes before submitting work.
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