Award-Winning AP Computer Science Principles Prep in San Diego
Award-Winning AP Computer Science Principles Prep in San Diego
Everything you need to crush the AP Computer Science Principles in San Diego, CA. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.
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No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.
Instructors from
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
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AP Computer Science Principles Prep Classes
Short-term classLiveAmazing Animal Adventures
In Amazing Animal Adventures classes, learners will get to know some of the world’s most exotic and incredible animals, and learn about the habitats, habits, and adaptations that made them that way. Each week students will explore a different wildlife theme and “meet” several incredible animals while learning how scientists analyze and learn about them, too. Students can drop in for one weekly adventure or return often to explore them all.
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.
Short-term classLiveHigh School Biology Fundamentals
High School 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. That’s why High School Biology Fundamentals is an integral component of your biology studies. Each week, an expert instructor will break down the key concepts that your current and upcoming biology 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.
Short-term classLiveAP Precalculus 4-Week Exam Review
The AP Precalculus exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks brushing up on concepts and getting the most important skills, formulas, and strategies top of mind to be ready for test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical concepts along with strategic guidance on how to handle the test day question formats, time limits, and calculator restrictions. By the end of the course, you’ll have the most critical knowledge, skills, and strategies top of mind and ready to apply on the AP Precalculus exam. From polynomials and complex numbers to logarithmic and trigonometric functions, you’ll cover everything you need to conquer the test.
Short-term classLiveAP Literature & Composition: 4-Week Exam Review
The AP Literature & Composition exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks reviewing key skills and concepts from across the year and focusing on the concepts and strategies necessary to succeed on test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical content and preparation for the question types you’ll face on the exam. From fiction to poetry and multiple choice to free response questions, you’ll cover everything you need to conquer the test.
Short-term classLiveHigh School Physics Fundamentals
Is your Physics grade a little too low? Want to improve your understanding of the most challenging concepts? Fundamentals of High School Physics is a live, interactive class designed for students wanting to improve their knowledge of formulas, definitions, and equations. In weekly sessions, guided by an expert instructor, you’ll gain a better understanding of the laws and applications of motion, forces, gravity, work, and energy, as well as light and sound waves.
Short-term classLiveThe Science of Growing
One of the most noticeable parts of growing up is, well, growing up. Your shoe size changes seemingly overnight, your shortest classmate can become your tallest over the summer, and your teeth are literally falling out of your head to make room for bigger ones. If you stop to think about it, being a kid is crazy: how does your body know it's time to spurt up a few inches? Where does the "stuff" come from to make more of you? And how does so much of it happen without you feeling it every minute of every day? Join pediatrician Dr. Tabitha Michaud to investigate the science of growing: how your cells communicate with one another to know when (and where) to grow; how your body turns food into new teeth, longer bones, and stronger muscles; and how your body tells you what's happening inside so that you can give it the nutrients and rest it needs.
Short-term classLiveFood, Fuel, and the Body
We all know that our bodies need food, and that feeling hungry is the body's way of making sure we never forget it. But past that, what really happens when we give our bodies food and which foods are best for which purposes? And how much of what we think we know is just clever marketing more than actual science: is breakfast really the most important meal of the day? Do carrots give you superhuman eyesight? Join pediatrician Dr. Tabitha Michaud to learn all about how our bodies turn food into fuel for energy, for growing, for bone and muscle development, for your immune system, and more. You'll see how food gets converted into nutrients from your mouth to your stomach to your bloodstream, discover which nutrients serve which purposes, and come away much more in tune with what your body is telling you it needs based on how you feel. Note: This course focuses on how the body works, not rules about eating. There is no “good vs bad food” language — just science, empowerment, and body literacy.
Short-term classLiveAP Language & Composition: 4-Week Exam Review
The AP English Language & Composition exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks brushing up on concepts and getting the most important skills, formulas, and strategies top of mind to be ready for test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical concepts along with strategic guidance on how to handle the question formats and time limits you’ll face on the exam. By the end of the course, you’ll be ready for multiple choice and free response questions on everything from the argument structure through rhetorical analysis.
Short-term classLiveMedical Mysteries & Rare Conditions
Being a doctor involves a lot of detective work: symptoms make for good clues, but people often don't do a great job of describing them and even when they are, the clues don't always point to one clear suspect or diagnosis. That's why students love Medical Mysteries & Rare Conditions, a chance to learn a bit of biology through the lens of a doctor detective. Over four weekly sessions, you'll join Dr. Tabitha Michaud to learn to think like a doctor as you learn about types of symptoms, causes, and cures, and put your symptom sleuthing skills to the test to diagose, treat, and understand rare illnesses.
Short-term classLiveOcean Adventures
Over 70 percent of the earth’s surface is covered in oceans, so there’s always plenty to explore in Ocean Adventures class. Here students will learn about the waves and tides, amazing aquatic animals, shipwrecks, and more as each session covers a different oceanic theme. Students can join a single session to get their feet wet or come weekly to really exercise their sea legs.
One-time classLiveCrustacean Exploration
What do crabs, lobsters, shrimp, and even tiny “sea monkeys” all have in common? They’re part of the fascinating world of crustaceans! Join the South Carolina Aquarium as we explore the unique features that make these animals stand out, from hard exoskeletons to impressive claws and surprising survival skills. Take a closer look at where crustaceans live, whether it’s the deep ocean, sandy shores, or a tank at your local aquarium, and how they’ve adapted to thrive in so many environments. We’ll also uncover the life cycle of brine shrimp and why these miniature creatures have captured the curiosity of generations. Along the way, discover the important roles crustaceans play in ecosystems and how they interact with other marine life. Let's dive in and discover just how amazing these shelled sea creatures can be!
Top-Rated AP Computer Science Principles Prep Instructors in San Diego
Running an SAT prep class in high school taught Samuel something that transfers directly to AP CSP coaching: students earn more points when they understand the scoring logic behind a test, not just th...
Education & Certificates
California Institute of Technology
Bachelor of Science, Applied Mathematics
SAT Scores
Finance and economics training at Notre Dame built Benjamin's strongest prep skill: spotting how systems fit together — exactly the reasoning AP CSP's algorithm and data abstraction questions reward m...
Education & Certificates
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science in Finance and Economics (minor: Innovation and Entrepreneurship)
ACT Scores
Operations Research PhD training at Georgia Tech is built on a simple premise: complex systems behave predictably when you understand their underlying logic — and that's exactly the mindset Isabella b...
Education & Certificates
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelor of Science in Mathematics (minors in Management Science and Ancient and Medieval Studies)
Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Current Grad Student, Operations Research
SAT Scores
Biomedical engineering at Rice sits at the intersection of computation and biology — and that cross-disciplinary thinking is exactly what Daniel brings to AP CSP prep, where students who understand ho...
Education & Certificates
Rice University
Current Undergrad Student, Biomedical Engineering
SAT Scores
Cognitive science at Stanford trains a specific skill set — understanding how humans process information and make decisions — that maps directly onto the AP Computer Science Principles exam's emphasis...
Education & Certificates
Stanford University
Master of Science, Computer Science
Stanford University
Bachelor of Science, Cognitive Science
SAT Scores
Daniel's electrical engineering curriculum at Vanderbilt — built on logic circuits, signal processing, and computational systems — gives him an unusually precise lens for the algorithm and data repres...
Education & Certificates
Vanderbilt University
Bachelor of Engineering, Electrical Engineering
ACT Scores
Derek's Harvard Computer Science curriculum — the same environment that produced his 800 on the SAT Math Level 2 Subject Test and a 5 on AP Computer Science A — gives him a precise read on the gap bet...
Education & Certificates
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Computer Science
SAT Scores
Cornell's biology curriculum demands the same kind of systems reasoning that AP CSP rewards on its algorithm and data abstraction questions — and Pratik uses that scientific framing to make computatio...
Education & Certificates
Cornell University
Bachelor in Arts, Biology, General
ACT Scores
AP Computer Science Principles trips up students on the Create Performance Task more than any multiple-choice section — and knowing how to document code decisions for a non-technical reader is a skill...
Education & Certificates
Yale University
Bachelor of Science, Computer Science
SAT Scores
Julia's Stanford economics training sharpens exactly the analytical skill AP CSP's multiple-choice section rewards most: reasoning about how systems behave under different inputs, not just recognizing...
Education & Certificates
Stanford University
Bachelor of Science, Economics
SAT Scores
Frequently Asked Questions
Students typically struggle most with the Create Performance Task (CPT), which requires designing and implementing an original program while documenting the development process—many find the balance between coding complexity and clear documentation difficult. Algorithm design and abstraction also challenge students, particularly understanding how to break down problems into manageable pieces and recognize patterns across different coding contexts. Additionally, the Explore Performance Task's data analysis component requires students to interpret real-world datasets and draw meaningful conclusions, which demands both technical skills and critical thinking that don't always come naturally together.
A tutor can guide you through the entire performance task lifecycle—helping you select a meaningful project idea, plan your program's architecture, and implement it with clean, efficient code. They can also help you develop strong documentation practices by reviewing your written explanations of your code's purpose, design decisions, and how you tested it. For the Explore task, tutors can teach you how to formulate compelling research questions, select appropriate data analysis techniques, and communicate your findings clearly, which are often the weakest areas for students who focus only on the technical side.
AP Computer Science Principles is language-agnostic, so you can use Python, JavaScript, Java, C++, or any other language—the exam focuses on computational thinking and problem-solving, not syntax. That said, Python and JavaScript are popular choices because they have simpler syntax that lets you focus on algorithms and logic rather than wrestling with language details. A tutor can help you choose a language that matches your learning style and ensure you're using it effectively to demonstrate your understanding of core CSP concepts like loops, conditionals, functions, and data structures.
The multiple-choice section (2 hours) requires careful reading of code snippets and tracing through logic—practice identifying what variables store at each step and predicting output without running code. Time management is critical since you'll see 50-70 questions; flagging difficult ones and returning to them helps. For performance tasks, starting early in the school year and treating them like real projects (not last-minute submissions) makes a huge difference. A tutor can help you develop a practice testing schedule that simulates exam conditions and teaches you to recognize common question patterns, like identifying bugs in code or understanding how different algorithms compare in efficiency.
Abstraction—hiding complexity behind simpler interfaces—is easier to grasp when you build it yourself rather than just reading about it. A tutor can have you write functions that encapsulate specific tasks, then use those functions without worrying about their internal details, which builds intuition for why abstraction matters. For algorithms, working through trace-throughs on paper (following code line-by-line) and comparing different approaches to the same problem (like bubble sort vs. merge sort) helps you see why algorithm choice matters. Practice problems that ask you to predict what code does, modify it, or write similar code from scratch reinforce these concepts far better than passive reading.
You'll need to understand how to clean datasets, identify relevant variables, and use basic statistical measures (mean, median, standard deviation) or visualization techniques to uncover patterns and trends. The key is connecting your analysis back to a meaningful question—students often get caught up in the technical side and forget to explain *why* their findings matter. A tutor can teach you how to select appropriate analysis methods for different data types, interpret results correctly (avoiding common mistakes like confusing correlation with causation), and write clear explanations that show you understand what your data actually reveals about the real world.
Score improvement depends heavily on where you're starting and how much time you invest. Students who struggle with specific topics like algorithm design or performance task documentation often see significant gains (2-3 score points) within 4-6 weeks of focused tutoring, while students aiming for a 5 typically need to address subtle conceptual gaps that take longer to identify and fix. Consistent practice with performance tasks and timed practice exams, combined with targeted instruction on weak areas, tends to produce the most reliable improvements. A tutor can help you diagnose exactly where your understanding breaks down and create a realistic timeline based on your current level and target score.
Look for someone with strong programming experience across multiple languages and a clear understanding of computational thinking concepts—they should be able to explain *why* an algorithm works, not just show you the code. Experience with AP Computer Science Principles specifically (ideally having taught it or tutored it before) is valuable since they'll know which topics trip up students and how the exam actually tests your knowledge. They should also be comfortable with both the technical coding side and the communication skills needed for performance tasks, since many strong programmers struggle to document their thinking clearly—a good tutor bridges that gap.
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