Award-Winning AP English Language and Composition Prep in Denver
Award-Winning AP English Language and Composition Prep in Denver
Everything you need to crush the AP English Language and Composition in Denver, CO. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.
Who needs prep?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.
Instructors from
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
Featured by
AP English Language and Composition Prep Classes
Semester classLiveBeginner ESL for Adults
Beginner ESL is a live course designed for students who have begun to speak and read English and want to continue on the path to fluency. Students will connect with an expert instructor and a group of peers to advance on a path of learning how to speak, read, and carry on sentence dialog. Interactive lessons will mainly focus on situations and places common to everyday life, while students also learn necessary foundations of grammar and sentence structure that they can build upon as their vocabulary becomes more diverse. At the end of this course, students will feel confident in the concepts listed in the section below.
Short-term classLiveStoryteller's Studio
Everyone loves a good story. So what turns a reader or talker into an author? Drop in to the storyteller’s studio to find out! Each week, learners will examine key elements of a story, explore the components of their favorite tales, and learn to use these elements to create their own characters and stories. Tell your young author to bring their imagination; these sessions will show them how to turn it into art.
Short-term classLiveBuilding Blocks of 2nd Grade Reading
The school year moves quickly, with so many skills to cover and even more opportunities for learning gaps to emerge. But reading is a building block subject: fluency is necessary for comprehension, and comprehension is necessary for just about all other learning in a student’s life. It is therefore critical for students to address and fill reading learning gaps quickly and to continually strengthen these foundations for future learning. That’s why Building Blocks of 2nd Grade Reading meets weekly to give learners the instruction and repetition they need to master building block skills permanently. Each week, an expert instructor will lead students through engaging demonstrations and exercises designed to fill in learning gaps and solidify understanding of the 2nd grade reading skills–such as reading to determine main idea, understanding non-literal vocabulary and using context and root words to determine meaning–most essential for success the rest of the school year and beyond.
Short-term classLiveBuilding Blocks of 1st Grade Reading
The school year moves quickly, with so many skills to cover and even more opportunities for learning gaps to emerge. But reading is a building block subject: fluency is necessary for comprehension, and comprehension is necessary for just about all other learning in a student’s life. It is therefore critical for students to address and fill reading learning gaps quickly and to continually strengthen these foundations for future learning. That’s why Building Blocks of 1st Grade Reading meets weekly to give learners the instruction and repetition they need to master building block skills permanently. Each week, an expert instructor will lead students through engaging demonstrations and exercises designed to fill in learning gaps and solidify understanding of the 1st grade reading skills–such as reading to determine how characters respond to events, compare and contrast versions of stories, use context clues to determine word meanings, and understand and comprehend text–most essential for success the rest of the school year and beyond.
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 classLiveBuilding Blocks of 8th Grade Reading & Writing
The school year moves quickly, with so many skills to cover and even more opportunities for learning gaps to emerge. But reading and writing are building block subjects: not only are advanced skills built atop fundamentals, but a student’s ability to read and write is essential for their success in other classes, too. It is therefore critical for students to address and fill reading learning gaps quickly and to continually strengthen these foundations for future learning. That’s why Building Blocks of 8th Grade Reading & Writing meets weekly to give learners the instruction and repetition they need to master building block skills permanently. Each week, an expert instructor will lead students through engaging demonstrations and exercises designed to fill in learning gaps and solidify understanding of the 8th grade literacy skills–such as writing well-developed arguments and narratives, identifying and using rhetorical structures, and reading for theme and main idea–most essential for success the rest of the school year and beyond.
Short-term classLiveBuilding Blocks of 7th Grade Reading & Writing
The school year moves quickly, with so many skills to cover and even more opportunities for learning gaps to emerge. But reading and writing are building block subjects: not only are advanced skills built atop fundamentals, but a student’s ability to read and write is essential for their success in other classes, too. It is therefore critical for students to address and fill reading learning gaps quickly and to continually strengthen these foundations for future learning. That’s why Building Blocks of 7th Grade Reading & Writing meets weekly to give learners the instruction and repetition they need to master building block skills permanently. Each week, an expert instructor will lead students through engaging demonstrations and exercises designed to fill in learning gaps and solidify understanding of the 7th grade literacy skills–such as distinguishing between connotations of similar words, determining and analyzing an author’s point of view, and writing argumentative essays–most essential for success the rest of the school year and beyond.
Short-term classLiveSummer Learning: Bridging the Gap to 8th Grade Reading
Beat the summer slide and give your rising 8th-grader a running start into the school year with Bridging the Gap reading classes this summer. In this class, students will review the most important building block skills from 7th grade and get advanced practice with the new skills they’ll encounter in the early months of 8th grade this fall. Bridging the Gap to 8th Grade Reading will emphasize interpreting words based on Greek and Latin roots and identifying an authors’ primary purpose and point of view, preparing students for identifying rhetorical structures within complex texts and reading to find the main idea and theme of informational and literary texts in the school year to come.
Short-term classLiveLearn to Love Public Speaking
Many people would list public speaking among their biggest fears, alongside sharks, snakes, and heights. But it doesn’t have to be that way! With practice and confidence, your student can learn to love public speaking. In weekly sessions, they’ll learn how to confidently prepare for and deliver speeches, and how to initiate and lead conversations. Each week will focus on a different technique or type of speech, led by an expert instructor who–by nature of the job–has learned to love public speaking.
Short-term classLiveSummer Learning: Bridging the Gap to 4th Grade Reading
Beat the summer slide and give your rising 4th-grader a running start into the school year with Bridging the Gap reading classes this summer. In this class, students will review the most important building block skills from 3rd grade and get advanced practice with the new skills they’ll encounter in the early months of 4th grade this fall. Bridging the Gap to 4th Grade Reading will emphasize using context clues and root words to get “unstuck” when confronted with new vocabulary and reading for the main idea of a passage, preparing students for identifying and describing different genres of writing and understanding figurative language such as similes and metaphors in the school year to come.
Short-term classLiveSummer Learning: Bridging the Gap to 5th Grade Reading
Beat the summer slide and give your rising 5th-grader a running start into the school year with Bridging the Gap reading classes this summer. In this class, students will review the most important building block skills from 4th grade and get advanced practice with the new skills they’ll encounter in the early months of 5th grade this fall. Bridging the Gap to 5th Grade Reading will emphasize understanding and using figurative language and identifying and describing different genres of writing, preparing students for comparing and contrasting multiple texts and understanding vocabulary in context in the school year to come.
Short-term classLiveSummer Learning: Bridging the Gap to 3rd Grade Reading
Beat the summer slide and give your rising 3rd-grader a running start into the school year with Bridging the Gap reading classes this summer. In this class, students will review the most important building block skills from 2nd grade and get advanced practice with the new skills they’ll encounter in the early months of 3rd grade this fall. Bridging the Gap to 3rd Grade Reading will emphasize using context clues to determine the meaning of words and reading to understand how characters react to events within stories, preparing students for reading to find the main idea of a passage and using root words and context clues to decipher unknown words in the school year to come.
Top-Rated AP English Language and Composition Prep Instructors in Denver
Most students who score a 3 on AP Lang write fluently but treat the free-response prompts as essay assignments rather than rhetorical tasks — and Jennifer's NYU teacher-training in secondary English e...
Education & Certificates
New York University
Master of Arts Teaching, Language Arts Teacher Education
Mcgill University
Bachelor in Arts, English
SAT Scores
AP Lang free-response questions trip up students who write well but haven't learned to argue rhetorically — and that gap shows up most on the synthesis and rhetorical analysis prompts. Ariel, drawing ...
Education & Certificates
Brown University
Bachelor of Science, Psychology
SAT Scores
Maddy's Harvard honors thesis on New York art criticism — a project that required dissecting how writers construct persuasive arguments about culture — gives her an unusual entry point into AP Lang pr...
Education & Certificates
Harvard University
B.A. in American History and Literature (minor in Theater)
AP Lang free-response questions — especially the synthesis and argument essays — reward students who can build a clear rhetorical structure under timed pressure, not just students who write well. Moll...
Education & Certificates
University of Pennsylvania
Current Undergrad Student, Communication, General
Theatre training at Northwestern builds a skill most AP Lang students underestimate: the ability to read a text for performance — who is speaking, to whom, and what effect they're after — which is exa...
Education & Certificates
Northwestern University
B.A. in Theatre and Economics
ACT Scores
Data science training at Duke sharpens a specific skill that transfers directly to AP Lang prep: the ability to read a text not for what it says, but for how its structure produces a particular effect...
Education & Certificates
Duke University
Master's/Graduate, Data Science
Sacred Heart University
Bachelor in Arts, Mathematics Teacher Education
Merav's MFA training at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art is built around one discipline that maps directly onto AP Lang's hardest prompts: understanding exactly how a speaker shapes an aud...
Education & Certificates
London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art
Master of Fine Arts, Theater Arts
Northwestern University
Bachelor of Science in Theatre (Minor in Psychology)
SAT Scores
Richard's path from high school math and SAT prep instruction to a Harvard Government degree gave him an unusual lens for AP Lang: he reads persuasive nonfiction the way a policy analyst does, trackin...
Education & Certificates
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Government
ACT Scores
Jonathan's years of competitive debate — first in high school, then at the University of Chicago — trained him to do exactly what AP Lang's free-response section demands: construct a clear argument, a...
Education & Certificates
The University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts, Political Science and Government
SAT Scores
Michelle's Columbia MA in American Studies trained her to read nonfiction the way AP Lang rewards: tracking how cultural context, audience, and purpose shape an argument's construction — not just its ...
Education & Certificates
Columbia University in the City of New York
Masters, American Studies
New York University
Bachelors, Journalism and Africana Studies
SAT Scores
Frequently Asked Questions
Students often struggle with the rhetorical analysis essay, which requires identifying and explaining how an author uses language strategies to persuade an audience—many students can spot techniques but struggle to connect them to the author's purpose and effect. The synthesis essay is another major challenge, as it demands integrating multiple sources while maintaining a clear argument rather than just summarizing. Additionally, students frequently underestimate the importance of understanding tone, diction, and syntax as analytical tools, treating them as vocabulary exercises rather than persuasive devices. Time management during the exam is also critical, as the three essays in 3 hours leaves little room for revision.
A tutor can help you move beyond identifying rhetorical devices to analyzing their effect—teaching you to ask "why did the author choose this word/structure?" and "how does this persuade the audience?" rather than just naming techniques. Tutors work through real AP prompts to help you develop a thesis that explains the author's overall persuasive strategy, not just list observations. Practice with timed essays under exam conditions helps you internalize the process so you can execute it confidently, and personalized feedback on your drafts shows you exactly where your analysis is surface-level versus insightful.
The key is to develop your own argument first, then use sources as evidence—not the other way around. A tutor can teach you to read the prompt carefully, identify the central question or issue, and take a clear position before looking at sources. Then you learn to integrate sources strategically: paraphrasing or quoting only the most relevant parts, explaining how each source supports your specific claim, and maintaining your voice throughout. Many students improve dramatically once they stop treating synthesis as "include all six sources" and start treating it as "build the strongest argument using the best evidence available."
Most successful students allocate roughly 50 minutes to the rhetorical analysis essay (the most straightforward), 40 minutes to the argument essay, and 40 minutes to synthesis, leaving 10 minutes for reading prompts carefully and reviewing. However, your breakdown may differ based on which essay type is your strength. A tutor can help you practice this pacing with full-length timed exams, identifying where you tend to lose time—whether it's overthinking your thesis, getting stuck on source selection, or revising excessively. Building a personal timing strategy and rehearsing it repeatedly removes anxiety on test day and ensures you complete all three essays rather than rushing the last one.
The argument essay rewards a clear, defensible position supported by specific evidence and logical reasoning—not emotional appeals or broad generalizations. Unlike the rhetorical analysis, you're not explaining someone else's persuasion; you're doing the persuading yourself. Strong essays anticipate counterarguments and address them, show awareness of context and audience, and use varied evidence (personal examples, historical facts, current events, hypotheticals). Many students struggle because they either make obvious claims that need little support or take extreme positions that are hard to defend. A tutor helps you develop nuanced arguments that are both interesting and sustainable, then teaches you to build them efficiently within the time limit.
Effective analysis explains the rhetorical effect of word choice and sentence structure on the reader. Instead of "the author uses short sentences," strong analysis says "the author uses short, declarative sentences to create urgency and conviction, making the argument feel inevitable." A tutor teaches you to consider the emotional impact, the pace created, the emphasis given to certain ideas, and how the choice differs from what the author could have done instead. Practicing with annotated texts where you label not just the technique but its effect trains your analytical eye. Over time, this becomes automatic—you read a passage and immediately see how the language choices work together to persuade.
Students who work consistently with a tutor typically see 2-4 point improvements on the AP Lang exam (which is scored 1-9 per essay, or 3-27 total). The amount of improvement depends on your starting point: students scoring 4-5 per essay often jump to 6-7 with focused work on essay structure and analytical depth, while students already at 7-8 may improve to 8-9 by refining their argument development and source integration. Realistic timelines depend on frequency—students meeting weekly for 8-12 weeks see more dramatic gains than those meeting monthly. The biggest improvements come from understanding what the rubric actually rewards and practicing full essays under timed conditions with feedback.
Test anxiety often stems from uncertainty about what to do, so building confidence through repeated practice is the strongest antidote. Taking full-length practice exams under real conditions—same time limit, same three essays, same pressure—trains your brain that you can execute the process even when stressed. A tutor can also teach you concrete strategies like reading the prompt twice before writing, jotting a quick thesis outline before drafting, and knowing which essay to tackle first based on your strengths. Developing a personal routine (how you'll read prompts, how you'll structure your time, what you'll do if you get stuck) removes decision-making from exam day and lets you focus on writing. Many students find that anxiety drops significantly once they've successfully completed several timed practice exams.
Other Denver test prep
Let's find your perfect prep plan
Answer a few quick questions. We'll recommend the right plan and match you with a top 5% instructor.









