Award-Winning GRE Prep in St. Louis

Everything you need to crush the GRE in St. Louis, MO. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.

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GRE Prep Classes

GRE 8-Week Prep ClassSemester classLive

GRE 8-Week Prep Class

The GRE Prep Class is designed to prepare students to take the GRE General test by equipping them with skills and test-taking strategies to improve their score. The course will cover content and strategies for verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, and analytical writing. Upon completion of the course, students should have an understanding of the exam structure, scoring methodology, section-specific test-taking strategies, and the ability to identify and handle difficult or tricky questions.

Sun, Apr 191hr 30min
Test PrepGRE
GRE 4-Week Prep ClassShort-term classLive

GRE 4-Week Prep Class

The GRE Prep Class is designed to prepare students to take the GRE General test by equipping them with skills and test-taking strategies to improve their score. The course will cover content and strategies for verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, and analytical writing. Upon completion of the course, students should have an understanding of the exam structure, scoring methodology, section-specific test-taking strategies, and the ability to identify and handle difficult or tricky questions.

Sun, Apr 191hr 30min
Test PrepGRE

Top-Rated GRE Prep Instructors in St. Louis

Jai

Bachelors in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
9+ years of tutoring

Stanford's Electrical Engineering and Computer Science program runs on the same core skill the GRE Quantitative section rewards most: translating ambiguous, complex problems into clean logical structu...

Education & Certificates

Stanford University

Bachelors in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

ACT Scores

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Aaron

Current Grad Student, Mechanical Engineering
10+ years of tutoring

Most GRE Quantitative questions aren't testing advanced math — they're testing whether a test taker can recognize patterns under time pressure, and that's a trainable skill Aaron drills into every pre...

Education & Certificates

The University of Texas at Dallas

Bachelors, Mechanical Engineering

Duke University

Current Grad Student, Mechanical Engineering

SAT Scores

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Jacob

Bachelors in Literature
1+ years of tutoring

Jacob's double literature degree from Vanderbilt gives him a precise coaching edge on the GRE sections most students neglect: Analytical Writing and Verbal, where dense academic prose and argument-eva...

Education & Certificates

Vanderbilt University

Bachelors in Literature

ACT Scores

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Asta

Bachelor in Arts in Political Science
1+ years of tutoring

Political science training at the University of Chicago is essentially argument analysis under pressure — the same skill that separates a 4 from a 6 on the GRE Analytical Writing section, where studen...

Education & Certificates

University of Chicago

Bachelor in Arts in Political Science

ACT Scores

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Ethan

Bachelor in Arts, Environmental Science and Public Policy
1+ years of tutoring

Environmental science training at Harvard requires something GRE prep demands in equal measure: synthesizing data from multiple sources and constructing a defensible argument under constraints — exact...

Education & Certificates

Harvard University

Bachelor in Arts, Environmental Science and Public Policy

ACT Scores

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Claire

Bachelor in Arts, Double Major: Spanish Literature; History
14+ years of tutoring

Law school trained Claire to do something GRE Analytical Writing directly rewards: locate the weakest assumption in an argument and dismantle it precisely, which is exactly what separates a 4 from a 6...

Education & Certificates

The University of Texas at Austin

Bachelor in Arts, Double Major: Spanish Literature; History

ACT Scores

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Jason

PHD, Medicine and Education
14+ years of tutoring

Jason's MD-PhD training at Penn — where he also earned a master's in education — means he understands both the academic rigor graduate programs demand and the specific reasoning patterns ETS tests acr...

Education & Certificates

University of Pennsylvania

PHD, Medicine and Education

University of Pennsylvania

Master's degree in Education

ACT Scores

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Tom

PHD, American Studies
1+ years of tutoring

Tom's PhD in American Studies from Boston University trained him to read dense, argument-driven prose at the level GRE Verbal demands — and that same discipline is what he brings to coaching the Analy...

Education & Certificates

Boston University

PHD, American Studies

Harvard University

Bachelors

SAT Scores

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Nina

Masters in biostatistics
10+ years of tutoring

Nina's path through Northwestern neurobiology and two Columbia biostatistics degrees gives her a precise read on where GRE Quantitative actually separates scores — not in algebra recall, but in the da...

Education & Certificates

Columbia University

Masters in biostatistics

Northwestern University

Bachelor of Arts in biological sciences (focus in neurobiology)

SAT Scores

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Samuel

Bachelor's in Statistics and East Asian Languages and Civilizations
6+ years of tutoring

Samuel's Statistics degree from the University of Chicago gives him a precise diagnostic lens for GRE Quantitative — he identifies exactly which data interpretation and quantitative comparison formats...

Education & Certificates

University of Chicago

Bachelor's in Statistics and East Asian Languages and Civilizations

ACT Scores

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Frequently Asked Questions

Pacing is one of the biggest challenges GRE test-takers face, especially on the Quantitative section where you have roughly 1.5 minutes per question. A tutor can help you identify which question types consistently slow you down—whether that's data interpretation, geometry, or complex word problems—and teach you strategic shortcuts specific to those formats. Practice with timed sections is essential; tutors often use full-length practice tests to pinpoint where you're losing time and help you develop realistic strategies for skipping difficult questions strategically rather than getting stuck.

GRE Reading Comprehension passages are dense and often feature unfamiliar academic topics, making it easy to get lost in details. Effective tutors teach active reading techniques like annotating for main idea, author's tone, and argument structure—skills that differ significantly from how you read for pleasure. They also help you practice the specific question types (inference, detail, main idea, author's purpose) so you recognize what each question is really asking, which is often the key to avoiding trap answers designed to catch careless readers.

Many test-takers struggle with algebra (especially manipulating equations and solving for variables), word problems (translating English into math), and data interpretation under time pressure. Geometry and coordinate geometry also trip up students who haven't seen these topics since high school. A tutor can assess which of these areas are holding back your score and focus on building conceptual understanding rather than just memorizing formulas—this approach helps you tackle unfamiliar variations of familiar topics, which is what the GRE tests.

The Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA) is often neglected, but it's highly improvable with targeted practice. Most students can gain 1-2 points (on the 0-6 scale) by learning the specific structure GRE graders expect: a clear thesis, relevant examples, logical reasoning, and error-free writing. A tutor can provide feedback on your essays that goes beyond grammar—helping you develop stronger arguments, anticipate counterarguments, and manage the 30-minute time constraint. Since many programs weight the AWA less heavily than Quant and Verbal, tutors often help you decide whether to prioritize it based on your target schools.

Most students see measurable improvements within 4-8 weeks of consistent tutoring and practice, though the timeline depends on your starting point and target score. If you're aiming for a 10-15 point increase, you might achieve that in 6-10 sessions; larger jumps (20+ points) typically require longer commitment and more independent practice between sessions. The key is combining tutoring with regular full-length practice tests—tutors use these to track progress and adjust strategy, so you're not just studying harder but studying smarter based on what's actually holding your score back.

Test anxiety on the GRE often stems from unfamiliar question formats, time pressure, or past experiences with standardized tests. Tutors build confidence by demystifying the test structure, teaching you exactly what to expect in each section, and running timed practice drills so the format feels familiar on test day. They also help you develop a realistic pacing strategy and permission to skip hard questions—knowing you have a plan reduces panic. Many tutors discuss mindset and test-day logistics (sleep, timing, breaks) to help you approach the exam as a manageable challenge rather than a high-stakes threat.

Taking full-length, timed practice tests under realistic conditions is non-negotiable for GRE prep—they reveal your true score, not just your ability on untimed questions. A tutor helps you use practice tests strategically: taking one early to establish a baseline, then using subsequent tests to track progress and identify patterns in your mistakes (Are you missing inference questions? Running out of time on Quant?). The real value comes from thorough review afterward—tutors help you understand not just what you got wrong, but why the right answer is correct and how to recognize similar questions in the future.

While the GRE does test vocabulary, memorizing a 5,000-word list is an inefficient approach. Modern GRE questions often provide context clues, and the test focuses more on your ability to understand how words function in sentences and arguments. A tutor can teach you to use word roots, prefixes, and suffixes to decode unfamiliar words, and help you focus on high-frequency GRE vocabulary (words that actually appear repeatedly). They'll also help you practice reading comprehension and text completion in context, which is far more effective than flashcards alone for building the vocabulary skills the GRE actually tests.

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