Achieve a top score with Award-Winning AP Chemistry Prep
Achieve a top score with Award-Winning AP Chemistry Prep
Everything you need to crush the AP Chemistry. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics to help you reach your target score.
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Award-Winning AP Chemistry Prep Classes
Short-term classLiveJump Start to AP & Honors Chemistry
Chemistry is the study of the properties, structures, and reactions of matter—and how substances transform through interactions at the atomic and molecular level. From the periodic table to chemical equations, each concept builds on the last—so the foundations you begin the school year with tend to shape the reactions, outcomes, and confidence you carry through every lab and lesson. In this live, interactive summer class you will learn and review the key building blocks for success in advanced high school chemistry classes, including AP, IB, and honors classes. From scientific principles to essential math concepts, you’ll cover everything you need to confidently conquer your most challenging fall class.
Short-term classLiveJump Start to AP & Honors Biology
Biology is the study of the building blocks of life, how cells, systems, and processes interact to enable complex organisms to adapt and thrive. And just like living systems build from their foundations, your own biology knowledge builds concept by concept toward the complex skills you need for your labs and exams throughout the year. In this live, interactive summer class you will learn and review the key building blocks for success in advanced high school biology classes, including AP, IB, and honors classes. Armed with sound fundamentals you’ll be ready to hit the ground running in the new school year and thrive in your most challenging fall class.
Short-term classLiveHigh School Chemistry Fundamentals
Much like chemistry itself is the study of how the building blocks of matter–particles, atoms, molecules–combine, your chemistry knowledge builds from basic elements toward complex concepts, lab reports, and exams. That’s why High School Chemistry Fundamentals can be an integral force in your chemistry studies. Each week, an expert instructor will break down the key concepts that your current and upcoming chemistry lessons depend on, helping ensure that you’re ready for the challenges you encounter in your coursework and your foundations remain strong for midterm and final exams, cumulative assignments, and even future science classes.
Top-Rated AP Chemistry Prep Instructors
Perry's double biology degree from Rice — combined with an incoming seat at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine — gives him a clinician's instinct for which AP Chemistry concepts the exa...
Education & Certificates
Rice University
Bachelor of Science in Biology
SAT Scores
Kate's MIT environmental engineering training — which required mastering chemical equilibria, thermodynamics, and reaction kinetics at a rigorous collegiate level — gives her a precise read on exactly...
Education & Certificates
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Masters, Environmental Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelors
SAT Scores
Phillip's biomedical engineering coursework at Brown runs directly through the chemistry concepts AP students struggle with most — reaction kinetics, thermodynamics, and equilibrium — which means he c...
Education & Certificates
Brown University
Bachelor of Science, Biomedical Engineering
SAT Scores
Brian's Caltech economics and computer science training built exactly the quantitative reasoning AP Chemistry demands — the ability to set up a problem's logic before executing it, which is what the F...
Education & Certificates
University of California-Santa Cruz
PHD, Technology & Information Mgmt (Indef. deferred)
California Institute of Technology
Bachelors in Economics and Computer Science
SAT Scores
Biomedical engineering at Duke demands the same cross-concept fluency AP Chemistry tests on its hardest free-response questions — connecting thermodynamics to reaction spontaneity, or equilibrium prin...
Education & Certificates
Duke University
Bachelor of Science, Biomedical Engineering
ACT Scores
AP Chemistry's calculation-heavy free-response questions demand that students show logical setup before they solve — a missing unit or skipped step can cost points even when the final answer is right....
Education & Certificates
University of Chicago
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
ACT Scores
Electrochemistry, thermodynamics, and reaction mechanisms are the AP Chemistry topics that separate 4s from 5s — and they're also the ones most students under-prepare because they feel conceptually de...
Education & Certificates
Princeton University
Bachelor of Science
ACT Scores
Electrochemistry, equilibrium, and acid-base problems account for a disproportionate share of AP Chemistry's hardest free-response points — and they're also the most coachable once a student understan...
Education & Certificates
Stanford University
Bachelor of Science, Mathematics and Computer Science
SAT Scores
Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at Georgia Tech runs through the same thermodynamics, kinetics, and equilibrium concepts that AP Chemistry tests — but at a depth that makes the exam's hardest qu...
Education & Certificates
Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Current Grad Student, Biological/Biosystems Engineering
ACT Scores
Kathleen's chemistry classroom at a Philadelphia magnet school runs on the same conceptual rigor AP Chemistry tests — her students work through thermodynamics, equilibrium, and acid-base systems the w...
Education & Certificates
University of Pennsylvania
M.S.Ed in Secondary Science Education
Haverford College
Bachelor of Science, Chemistry
ACT Scores
Frequently Asked Questions
Students typically find equilibrium concepts, thermodynamics, and electrochemistry most challenging because they require understanding abstract molecular behavior and applying multiple interconnected principles simultaneously. Acid-base chemistry and redox reactions also trip up many students because they demand precise stoichiometric reasoning and careful attention to electron transfer. A tutor can break these dense topics into digestible pieces, use visual models to clarify molecular-level processes, and provide targeted practice on the specific question formats the AP exam uses for these concepts.
The free-response section rewards clear reasoning and proper notation over just getting the right answer—showing your work, balancing equations correctly, and explaining your logic are critical. Many students lose points by skipping steps, using incorrect chemical formulas, or failing to include units in calculations. A tutor can teach you how to organize your responses to maximize partial credit, practice writing concise explanations that demonstrate understanding, and develop a time-management strategy so you don't rush through the six questions.
The AP Chemistry exam includes questions about experimental design, data analysis, and interpreting lab results, so understanding core lab techniques and how to evaluate experimental validity is essential. You won't be performing experiments during the test, but you need to understand concepts like limiting reagents, percent yield, and sources of error in real lab contexts. Tutoring can help you connect hands-on lab experience to the theoretical concepts tested, practice analyzing experimental data, and learn how to discuss experimental design and error analysis with the precision the exam demands.
Common culprits include forgetting to convert units, rounding too early in multi-step problems, misidentifying which stoichiometric relationships to use, and making arithmetic errors under test pressure. The AP Chemistry exam is unforgiving with units—leaving them off or using the wrong ones costs points even if your numerical reasoning is sound. A tutor can help you develop a systematic approach to calculations: organizing given information, clearly showing unit conversions, checking your work for reasonableness, and practicing timed problem sets to build accuracy and confidence without sacrificing speed.
The 60 multiple-choice questions must be completed in 90 minutes, which means you have about 1.5 minutes per question—not much time if you're second-guessing yourself or getting stuck on conceptually dense questions about molecular orbital theory or kinetics. Many students waste time re-reading questions or overthinking answers when they should move forward and return to difficult questions later. A tutor can teach you to identify question types quickly, recognize common wrong-answer traps (like answers that are mathematically correct but conceptually wrong), and practice full-length sections under timed conditions so you develop a sustainable pace and know when to move on.
The best approach is to take a full practice test under exam conditions, score it carefully by topic, and track which areas consistently give you trouble—whether it's kinetics, gas laws, or bonding. Many students think they understand a topic until they see it in a novel question format or combined with another concept, which is exactly what the AP exam does. A tutor can help you analyze your practice test results to pinpoint whether your struggles are conceptual (you don't understand equilibrium) or strategic (you understand it but misinterpret what the question is asking), then design targeted review that addresses your specific gaps rather than re-studying everything.
Test anxiety often stems from uncertainty about whether you truly understand the material or can apply it under pressure—tutoring directly addresses this by building genuine mastery and giving you repeated practice with authentic exam questions in timed conditions. When you've solved similar problems multiple times with a tutor, worked through your reasoning out loud, and received feedback on your approach, you develop real confidence rather than just hoping you'll remember formulas. A tutor can also help you develop test-day strategies like managing your time, staying calm when you encounter unfamiliar question formats, and recognizing that partial credit is available so you don't panic if you can't solve a problem perfectly.
Score improvement depends heavily on your starting point and how consistently you engage with tutoring—students who begin with foundational gaps and work with a tutor for several months often see 2-4 point improvements (on the 1-5 scale), while students closer to proficiency might improve by 1-2 points. The most significant gains come from addressing specific conceptual misunderstandings and learning to recognize and avoid recurring mistakes, which tutoring is uniquely positioned to do. Realistic expectations matter: if you're scoring a 2, reaching a 4 is achievable with sustained effort; jumping from a 4 to a 5 requires mastering subtle distinctions and nearly eliminating careless errors, which takes focused practice and feedback.
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