Award-Winning AP Computer Science A Prep in Denver

Everything you need to crush the AP Computer Science A in Denver, CO. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.

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AP Computer Science A Prep Classes

Medical Mysteries & Rare ConditionsShort-term classLive

Medical 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.

Tue, May 261hr
ScienceMiddle School Science
High School Biology FundamentalsShort-term classLive

High 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.

Tue, May 261hr
ScienceHigh School Biology
High School Chemistry FundamentalsShort-term classLive

High 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.

Tue, May 261hr
ScienceHigh School Chemistry
Ocean AdventuresShort-term classLive

Ocean 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.

Thu, May 281hr
ScienceElementary School Science
Introduction to GeneticsShort-term classLive

Introduction to Genetics

Dive into the fascinating world of genetics! In this four-week course, middle school students will explore the basics of DNA, how traits are inherited, and the science behind genetic variation. Through fun examples and engaging discussions, students will uncover how genetics shapes all living things.

Tue, Jun 91hr
ScienceMiddle School Science
Jump Start to AP & Honors ChemistryShort-term classLive

Jump 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.

Tue, Jun 161hr
ScienceAP Chemistry
Inside the BrainShort-term classLive

Inside the Brain

The most fascinating organ in the body is the only one that can find something fascinating in the first place. That’s right, we’re talking about the brain! So drop in to fascinating weekly workshops where we’ll examine everything you’ve ever wanted to know about the human brain. We’ll use household items to examine the senses; we’ll explore secrets of psychology; and we’ll break down the brain into its lobes and parts as we investigate neuroscience. Each week is a new adventure: just be ready to exercise your brain!

Wed, Jun 1745 min
ScienceElementary School Science
Dino or Di-Not?One-time classLive

Dino or Di-Not?

What makes a dinosaur a dinosaur? Join us for an interactive journey as we explore various creatures and their features with an educator from the Field Museum! You'll learn how paleontologists define what's truly a "dinosaur" — and what isn't. Some of the answers might surprise you! **Meet your expert instructor, Jeff** Jeff is an educator and docent at the Field Museum in Chicago, IL. Since 2013, he has conducted numerous tours and programs on dinosaurs, most recently the ongoing Discovery Adventures and SUE Virtual Tour on the Field Museum's website. Jeff enjoys talking dinos, animals, and debunking myths propagated by certain popular movies and cartoons.

Thu, Jun 181hr
Science
Animal Adventure CampShort-term classLive

Animal Adventure Camp

Embark on a wild adventure with "Animal Adventure Camp," where Ms. Amalia brings the animal kingdom right to your screen! In this immersive five-day experience, young explorers will come face-to-face with fascinating creatures from across the globe through exciting live animal presentations. Students will journey from the slithering world of reptiles to the soaring heights of birds, track magnificent mammals, dive into mysterious ocean depths, and discover the tiny but mighty invertebrates that shape our world. Each day offers new animal friends to meet, amazing facts to learn, and unforgettable encounters that will spark curiosity and foster a deeper appreciation for wildlife in all its remarkable forms—whether ferocious or cuddly, massive or microscopic, from land, sea, or sky. Ms. Amalia, from Nature Explorers International, is an environmental educator and world explorer who makes classes come alive with stories from her real-life adventures, props from her science shelf, and live program animals. She’ll be joined by Scaly the corn snake, Slimy the tiger salamander, and Lizzie the leopard gecko, as well as coloring pages, art projects, and outdoor after-camp activities to supplement daily learning. Each day will include three interactive sections full of fun facts, guessing games, and investigating natural specimens. A short break in between each section will include movement game options such as animal yoga and freeze dance.

Mon, Jun 221hr 30min
ScienceEnrichment
Mini Med School CampShort-term classLive

Mini Med School Camp

Step into the exciting world of medicine as a student physician at our Mini Med School summer camp! Under the expert guidance of Dr. Tabitha Michaud, MD, young "medical students" will uncover the fascinating science behind how our bodies work, heal, and protect us. Young doctors-in-training will explore what's actually happening during common symptoms like coughing, fever, and pain; learn what doctors look for during examinations; and understand how the body's intricate defense systems operate. From understanding the healing process of a simple scrape to exploring the events in an allergic reaction, campers will develop a new appreciation for the remarkable machine that is the human body. No prior medical knowledge required—just bring your curiosity for an unforgettable experience of medical discovery!

Mon, Jun 221hr 30min
ScienceEnrichment
It's Not Magic, It's ScienceShort-term classLive

It's Not Magic, It's Science

Learning can be magical! In this class, students will learn magic tricks and solutions to seemingly-impossible challenges, plus learn the scientific explanations that make them work. In each class, learners will participate in several tricks and challenges that use the principles of science to do something amazing, break down the scientific principles that made each trick possible, and learn how those principles apply to practical purposes in our daily lives. By the end of each session, students will have new magic tricks to wow their friends and family, and new scientific knowledge to impress their teachers, too. Most tricks will simply use household items and school supplies, making it easy for students to learn, practice, and perform their new tricks.

Tue, Jun 231hr
ScienceElementary School Science
Jump Start to AP & Honors PhysicsShort-term classLive

Jump Start to AP & Honors Physics

Physics is the study of the fundamental forces and principles that govern how matter and energy interact in the universe. From motion and momentum to waves and electricity, each concept builds on the last—so the foundations you begin the school year with tend to govern your trajectory and velocity throughout the school year. In this live, interactive summer class you will learn and review the key building blocks for success in advanced high school physics classes, including AP, IB, and honors classes. From scientific principles to essential math concepts, you’ll cover everything you need to start your most challenging fall class with energy and momentum.

Wed, Jun 241hr
ScienceAP Physics 1

Top-Rated AP Computer Science A Prep Instructors in Denver

Ravnoor

Bachelor of Science, Computer Science
3+ years of tutoring

Ravnoor, a Cornell Computer Science student who has been coaching programming and CS concepts for nine years, structures AP Computer Science A prep around the exam's two biggest score drivers: the fre...

Education & Certificates

Cornell University

Bachelor of Science, Computer Science

SAT Scores

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Florence

Bachelor of Science, Computer Science
5+ years of tutoring

Florence's Computer Science degree from Duke — where she served as a teaching assistant for Electricity and Magnetism and Computer Network Architecture — means she can diagnose exactly where a student...

Education & Certificates

Duke University

Bachelor of Science, Computer Science

ACT Scores

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David

Master of Science, Computer Science
9+ years of tutoring

Cognitive science at Stanford trains a specific skill the AP Computer Science A exam quietly demands: modeling how a system processes information before writing a single instruction — the same discipl...

Education & Certificates

Stanford University

Master of Science, Computer Science

Stanford University

Bachelor of Science, Cognitive Science

SAT Scores

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Dennis

Bachelor of Science
9+ years of tutoring

Dennis's physics research at Princeton — simulating turbulent plasma dynamics and modeling cosmic ray acceleration — demanded the same precise, step-by-step computational thinking that AP Computer Sci...

Education & Certificates

Princeton University

Bachelor of Science

ACT Scores

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Jonathan

Bachelors, Chemical Engineering and Computer Science
1+ years of tutoring

AP Computer Science A's trickiest multiple-choice questions aren't about syntax — they're about predicting what a method does when it's called with edge-case inputs, which requires careful mental simu...

Education & Certificates

Cornell University

Bachelors, Chemical Engineering and Computer Science

ACT Scores

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Margaret

Current Undergrad Student, Political Science and Government
9+ years of tutoring

Stanford's political science program trains students to read dense, structured arguments and extract precise meaning quickly — a skill that transfers directly to AP Computer Science A's multiple-choic...

Education & Certificates

Stanford University

Current Undergrad Student, Political Science and Government

SAT Scores

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Ronit

Bachelor of Science, Computer Science
6+ years of tutoring

Ronit's computer science training at Yale sharpened exactly the kind of systematic reasoning the AP Computer Science A exam rewards — particularly on the object-oriented design and inheritance prompts...

Education & Certificates

Yale University

Bachelor of Science, Computer Science

SAT Scores

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Pratik

Bachelor in Arts, Biology, General
8+ years of tutoring

Pratik's biology training at Cornell sharpened a skill that transfers directly to AP Computer Science A: breaking complex systems into discrete functional units and tracing how each component behaves ...

Education & Certificates

Cornell University

Bachelor in Arts, Biology, General

ACT Scores

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Dylan

Bachelor of Science, Physics
8+ years of tutoring

Physics training at Vanderbilt builds a precise analytical habit: before solving anything, model the system — inputs, outputs, constraints — and only then work through the mechanics. Dylan brings that...

Education & Certificates

Vanderbilt University

Bachelor of Science, Physics

ACT Scores

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Tolu

Bachelor's in Economics
6+ years of tutoring

Tolu's Stanford Economics degree sharpened something that transfers directly to AP Computer Science A: the ability to see logic structures as systems with predictable inputs and outputs — exactly the ...

Education & Certificates

Stanford University

Bachelor's in Economics

Frequently Asked Questions

Students often find inheritance and polymorphism conceptually challenging, especially understanding how to design class hierarchies and override methods effectively. The 2D array section trips up many students—particularly nested loops and manipulating rows and columns. Additionally, many struggle with ArrayList operations, especially when working with objects versus primitives, and understanding when to use enhanced for loops versus traditional indexing. Recursion is another major pain point; students grasp the concept but struggle to trace through recursive calls and recognize when recursion is the right approach versus iteration.

The free-response section gives you 90 minutes for four questions, so aim to spend roughly 20-22 minutes per question. A strong strategy is to read all four questions first, identify which ones feel most straightforward, and tackle those first to build confidence and secure points. When writing code, focus on the main logic before worrying about edge cases—partial credit is awarded for correct approach even if implementation has minor bugs. Practice writing code by hand during study sessions to simulate exam conditions, which helps you develop faster, cleaner code without relying on IDE autocomplete.

The 40 multiple-choice questions in 90 minutes gives you about 2 minutes per question. Don't spend more than 2-3 minutes on any single question—if you're stuck, mark it and move on. For code-tracing questions, write down variable values as they change rather than trying to track them mentally; this prevents careless errors. When a question shows code with output or asks what happens, try to trace through it step-by-step, and watch for off-by-one errors in loops and array indexing, which are common traps. If you finish early, review questions where you guessed or felt uncertain.

Tutors who specialize in AP Computer Science A focus on helping you recognize when to use encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism in real-world contexts, not just memorizing definitions. They guide you through designing classes from scratch—choosing appropriate instance variables, writing constructors, and determining which methods belong in parent versus child classes. This is critical because the free-response section often requires you to write or extend classes, and understanding design principles helps you write code that's both correct and efficient. Practice designing simple systems (like a student roster or inventory system) builds the intuition you need to tackle unfamiliar free-response scenarios.

On the exam, you won't have an IDE to run and test your code, so you need to spot logical errors by reading code carefully. Tutors help you develop this skill by giving you broken code and asking you to identify the bug—whether it's an off-by-one error in a loop, a missing return statement, or incorrect conditional logic. They also teach you to trace through code systematically, writing down what variables hold at each step. This practice directly translates to exam success because you'll be more confident in your own code and better at spotting mistakes in multiple-choice code-tracing questions.

Take full-length practice tests under timed conditions to build stamina and identify pacing issues before exam day. After each test, spend significant time reviewing every question you missed or found tricky—understand not just the correct answer, but why your approach was wrong. Focus especially on free-response questions; re-solve them multiple times until you can write clean, correct code without hesitation. Tutors can review your practice test work, point out patterns in your mistakes (like consistently misunderstanding ArrayList methods or struggling with nested loops), and target those weak areas with focused practice before your next attempt.

While the exam doesn't formally test Big O notation, understanding efficiency matters because free-response questions sometimes ask you to write code that solves a problem correctly, and inefficient solutions may not be optimal. More importantly, recognizing efficient versus inefficient approaches helps you write better code during the exam—for example, knowing that searching an unsorted ArrayList is O(n) but searching a sorted one can be optimized helps you think strategically. Tutors help you understand when to use enhanced for loops versus indexed loops, when ArrayList is better than arrays, and how to avoid nested loops when possible—practical efficiency skills that improve both your code and your exam performance.

Consistent practice with real exam-style questions is the most effective anxiety reducer—when you've solved similar problems dozens of times, the exam feels less intimidating. Tutors help by creating a low-pressure practice environment where mistakes are learning opportunities, not failures, and by breaking down complex topics into manageable pieces so you build competence gradually. Mock exams under timed conditions also help normalize the exam experience. Finally, having a tutor review your work and point out your actual strengths—areas where you consistently get questions right—helps counter the anxiety that comes from focusing only on weak spots.

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