Award-Winning AP Calculus BC Prep in Chicago

Everything you need to crush the AP Calculus BC in Chicago, IL. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.

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AP Calculus BC Prep Classes

High School Calculus FundamentalsShort-term classLive

High School Calculus Fundamentals

Just like integration in calculus is a summation operation, your ability to pick up new calculus skills requires the sum of the skill that came before it. Every new skill builds atop a piece of math knowledge you’ve learned before, which is why Precalculus came before Calculus, and why High School Calculus Fundamentals can play such a key role in your math performance this year. Each week an expert instructor will guide you through the key concepts that your current and upcoming lessons depend on, helping you solidify things that didn’t quite click, get practice and repetition with the most important skills for what’s next, and building your skill set for the rest of the school year and the math subjects that lie beyond it!

Wed, May 201hr
MathCalculus
Precalculus FundamentalsShort-term classLive

Precalculus Fundamentals

Math is a building block subject. Just like you needed Algebra 1 to be ready for Algebra 2, so now you’re taking Precalculus because you will need these skills for Calculus. And within each subject the same is true, too: the skills you learn next month will require you to be comfortable with the skills you learned last month; for every lesson you encounter in school, you’ll need to bring some foundational knowledge to build on. That’s why Precalculus Fundamentals can play such a key role in your math performance. Each week an expert instructor will guide you through the key concepts that your current and upcoming lessons depend on, helping you solidify things that didn’t quite click, get practice and repetition with the most important skills for what’s next, and building your skill set for the rest of the school year and the math subjects that lie beyond it–like calculus!

Wed, May 201hr
MathPre-Calculus
Jump Start to PrecalculusShort-term classLive

Jump Start to Precalculus

Beat the summer slide and give your student a running start into the school year with Jump Start math classes over the summer. In live, expert-led sessions, students will review key building block skills from Algebra 2 and get a sneak preview of the new skills they’ll encounter toward the beginning of Pre-Calculus this fall. Jump Start to Pre-Calculus will emphasize working with polynomials, manipulating trigonometric functions, and graphing functions, preparing students to deepen and apply these skills to understanding continuity, finding limits, and taking derivatives in the coming school year.

Mon, Jun 11hr
MathPre-Calculus
Jump Start to AP CalculusShort-term classLive

Jump Start to AP Calculus

Start your AP Calculus journey with clarity and confidence. This live, interactive course is designed to give students entering AP Calculus AB a solid head start on core topics like limits, derivatives, and continuity. With expert instruction and real AP-style practice, you’ll feel prepared, not panicked—before the school year even begins.

Wed, Jun 31hr
MathCalculus
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
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
Jump Start to AP Computer Science AShort-term classLive

Jump Start to AP Computer Science A

Computer Science is the study of how we use logic and code to solve problems and build the digital world around us. From variables and conditionals to classes and objects, each concept builds logically on the last—so the foundations you start with often determine how efficiently and confidently you can program throughout the year. In this live, interactive summer class, you’ll learn and review the key building blocks for success in advanced high school computer science courses, including AP Computer Science A. From core Java syntax to problem-solving strategies, you’ll cover everything you need to start this rigorous coding class with structure and logic.

Wed, Jun 241hr
Technology and CodingAP Computer Science A
Jump Start to AP & Honors BiologyShort-term classLive

Jump 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.

Tue, Jun 301hr
ScienceAP Biology

Top-Rated AP Calculus BC Prep Instructors in Chicago

John

Current Grad Student, Legal Studies
6+ years of tutoring

John's B.A. in Mathematics from the University of Chicago — where the math curriculum emphasizes proof-based reasoning over procedural shortcuts — gives him a precise read on the conceptual gaps that ...

Education & Certificates

University of Chicago

B.A. in Mathematics

Washington University in St. Louis

Current Grad Student, Legal Studies

Thomas

Bachelor of Science in Physics
9+ years of tutoring

A Physics degree from Notre Dame means Thomas spent four years treating calculus not as a collection of procedures but as the language underlying every physical system — and that fluency is what he br...

Education & Certificates

University of Notre Dame

Bachelor of Science in Physics

ACT Scores

Composite33

Viktor

Bachelor of Science
7+ years of tutoring

Viktor's path from formula-memorizer to mathematics major at the University of Chicago — where he earned a 35 on the ACT along the way — gives him an unusually clear read on why students stall on the ...

Education & Certificates

University of Chicago

Bachelor of Science

ACT Scores

Composite35

Felix

Bachelor of Science, Mathematics
4+ years of tutoring

Felix's Mathematics degree from the University of Chicago — the same institution where several of the field's foundational calculus texts were written — gives him an unusually rigorous baseline for di...

Education & Certificates

University of Chicago

Bachelor of Science, Mathematics

SAT Scores

Composite1520

Peter

Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry (with Distinction, 2015)
9+ years of tutoring

Peter's Cornell chemistry degree — earned with Distinction — required the kind of calculus fluency that goes well beyond coursework: as a Teaching Assistant for both the Math and Physics departments, ...

Education & Certificates

Cornell University

Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry (with Distinction, 2015)

ACT Scores

Composite32

Ben

Bachelors in Statistics and Political Science
1+ years of tutoring

I am a 2009 graduate of the University of Chicago in Statistics and Political Science. I have been a tutor for test prep (including ACT, SAT, LSAT and AP testing), academic and creative writing, and g...

Education & Certificates

University of Chicago

Bachelors in Statistics and Political Science

Grant

Current Undergrad Student, Mechanical Engineering
6+ years of tutoring

I am actively working in this area I have constant practice with the fundamentals of math and physics.

Education & Certificates

Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus

Current Undergrad Student, Mechanical Engineering

SAT Scores

Composite1490

Spencer

Bachelor of Science, Environmental Engineering
6+ years of tutoring

Four years of peer tutoring at Fenwick High School and work with Mathnasium gave Spencer a precise read on where calculus students break down — not conceptually, but procedurally, when exam pressure c...

Education & Certificates

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Bachelor of Science, Environmental Engineering

ACT Scores

Composite36

Ben

Masters, Mathematics Education
1+ years of tutoring

Ben's Master's in Mathematics Education from DePaul gives him a precise read on the habits that quietly separate a 3 from a 5 on the AP Calculus BC exam — and his coaching zeroes in on the written jus...

Education & Certificates

DePaul University

Masters, Mathematics Education

University of Michigan

Bachelor in Arts, Economics

ACT Scores

Composite31

Zain

Current Undergrad Student, Computer Science
6+ years of tutoring

Computer Science students at Michigan live in calculus — it's the engine behind every algorithm, physics simulation, and data model Zain works with daily, and that applied context shapes how he coache...

Education & Certificates

University of Michigan-Ann Arbor

Current Undergrad Student, Computer Science

Frequently Asked Questions

AP Calculus BC covers everything in AB plus additional topics: parametric equations, polar coordinates, vector-valued functions, and series (including Taylor and Maclaurin series). BC also moves faster through AB content. A tutor experienced with BC understands how to build connections between these advanced topics and the foundational calculus concepts, and can help you see why series matter for understanding function behavior—not just memorize formulas.

Students typically struggle most with series convergence tests (knowing when to use ratio test vs. comparison test), understanding parametric and polar derivatives, and connecting L'Hôpital's Rule to limit problems. Many also find the conceptual leap to Taylor series difficult—it's easy to plug into a formula but harder to understand why the approximation works. A tutor can break these topics into smaller pieces and use visual explanations (graphing parametric curves, animating series convergence) to build genuine understanding rather than just procedure.

The exam is 3 hours 15 minutes for 45 questions, split between multiple-choice (no calculator, then calculator-allowed) and free response. A strong strategy is to spend roughly 1.5 minutes per multiple-choice question and save harder ones for later, then allocate 10-15 minutes per free-response question. A tutor can help you practice this pacing with full-length practice tests, identify which question types slow you down (series problems often take longer), and develop shortcuts for calculations so you're not racing the clock on computational steps.

Common errors include: forgetting to check endpoints when finding absolute extrema, misidentifying which convergence test applies to a series, making sign errors with polar derivatives (the formula is r²dθ/dr, not r dθ/dr), and losing points on free response by not showing sufficient work or justifying answers. Many students also second-guess correct answers on the no-calculator section when they should trust their algebra. Tutoring helps you recognize and avoid these patterns through targeted practice on past exams and error analysis.

Yes—a tutor can identify exactly which AB concepts are holding you back (often implicit differentiation, related rates, or integration by parts) and rebuild those foundations while keeping you moving forward in BC content. This is more efficient than starting over; a skilled tutor will show you how AB gaps directly impact BC topics like parametric derivatives or improper integrals, so you see why filling the gap matters right now.

Series convergence is conceptual: the ratio test works because it compares growth rates of consecutive terms, the integral test works because it connects series to areas under curves, and alternating series converge when terms shrink to zero. A tutor can help you visualize these ideas (drawing the integral test, animating how ratios behave), work through why each test answers a specific question about the series, and practice choosing tests by recognizing patterns in the series structure—not by flowchart. This approach makes the tests stick and helps you apply them to unfamiliar series on the exam.

Free response requires clear justification and communication—you can't just write an answer. A tutor helps you practice writing explanations for each step (e.g., 'By the Intermediate Value Theorem, since f is continuous and changes sign, a zero exists'), showing all work even when you use a calculator, and correctly interpreting what the question is asking (does it want a derivative or an antiderivative?). Working through released exam free responses with feedback is the best preparation; a tutor can grade your work like the AP graders do and show you exactly where you're losing points.

You'll need to find zeros, compute definite integrals, and solve equations numerically on the calculator section. But many students waste time fumbling with calculator syntax or don't know their calculator can compute derivatives numerically. A tutor familiar with BC exams knows which calculator skills actually save time (and which are traps) and can show you efficient techniques—like using your calculator's solver feature for related rates problems or computing Taylor polynomial remainders quickly. The goal is using your calculator as a tool, not a crutch.

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