Award-Winning ISEE Prep in St. Louis
Award-Winning ISEE Prep in St. Louis
Everything you need to crush the ISEE in St. Louis, MO. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.
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Instructors from
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
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Top-Rated ISEE Prep Instructors in St. Louis
Middle school math is where ISEE scores are made or lost — and Janet spent 16 years teaching exactly that level before moving on to high school algebra and geometry, giving her a precise read on where...
Education & Certificates
Northern Illinois University
MED
Competition math experience gives Chhavi an unusual angle on ISEE Quantitative Reasoning prep — she recognizes exactly which problems are designed to reward students who spot patterns over students wh...
Education & Certificates
University
Bachelor's
Twelve years of classroom teaching and instructional design give Adam an unusually precise map of where students lose points on the ISEE — not from lack of ability, but from unfamiliarity with how the...
Education & Certificates
George Mason University
MRE
University of Mary Washington
MRE
Karin created and published her own reading annotation system specifically designed for timed standardized tests — a tool she now uses to coach ISEE students through the dense academic passages that d...
Education & Certificates
San Jose State University
MFA
James Madison University
MFA
The ISEE rewards students who understand its structure as much as its content — the unscored experimental questions, the penalty-free guessing policy, and the percentile-based scoring all shape how a ...
Education & Certificates
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
AB
Medical school trains a specific diagnostic habit — identifying exactly where the breakdown is before attempting a fix — and Malik brings that same precision to ISEE prep by pinpointing which question...
Education & Certificates
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Bachelor's
Katherine's NYU Stern coursework in business and finance has sharpened exactly the numerical reasoning the ISEE Mathematics Achievement section rewards — multi-step word problems, ratio relationships,...
Education & Certificates
New York University
Undergraduate Degree
Engineering training builds a particular kind of problem-solving instinct — breaking complex systems into components — and Rija applies that same diagnostic mindset to ISEE prep, identifying exactly w...
Education & Certificates
National University of Sciences and Technology
Bachelor
The ISEE's verbal sections — synonyms and sentence completions — demand a different kind of word knowledge than most middle schoolers have built in school, and Maxwell's background in philosophy and c...
Education & Certificates
Knox College
Bachelor's (in progress)
I am a licensed physician from Florida who is currently changing careers. I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2009 and have extensive tutoring and editing experience. While a student, I...
Education & Certificates
Nova Southeastern University
PHD, Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, History
SAT Scores
Frequently Asked Questions
The Reading Comprehension section consistently challenges students because it requires both speed and accuracy—you have limited time to read dense passages and answer questions that test inference, vocabulary in context, and main idea comprehension. The Quantitative Reasoning section trips up many students who haven't practiced the specific question formats, particularly those involving data interpretation and word problems that require multiple steps. The Writing sample, while unscored, often causes anxiety because students struggle to organize their thoughts quickly under time pressure. A tutor can identify which section is your specific weakness and develop targeted strategies to address it.
Pacing is one of the biggest obstacles on the ISEE because you have roughly 1.5-2 minutes per question depending on the section. The key is practicing with timed sections repeatedly so you develop an internal clock and learn which question types to tackle first versus which to return to. Many students benefit from a "triage" strategy: quickly identify easier questions and build confidence with those, then tackle harder questions with remaining time. A tutor can teach you how to recognize when you're spending too long on a single question and help you practice the discipline of moving forward strategically.
Vocabulary appears throughout the ISEE—in dedicated Verbal Reasoning questions and embedded in Reading Comprehension passages—making it a significant component of your score. However, memorizing random word lists is inefficient; instead, focus on words in context by reading challenging material and noting unfamiliar words, then learning how they're used. The ISEE also tests your ability to infer meaning from context, so practicing that skill matters as much as knowing definitions. A tutor can help you build a personalized vocabulary strategy that targets the word difficulty level you'll actually see on test day, rather than wasting time on obscure words that won't appear.
Most students benefit from taking 3-4 full-length practice tests spaced throughout their prep timeline—enough to identify patterns in your mistakes without burning out on test fatigue. Early in prep, focus on untimed or section-by-section practice to build skills; then move to timed full-length tests every 2-3 weeks as you get closer to test day. The real value comes from reviewing every single question you missed or found difficult, understanding why you got it wrong, and adjusting your strategy. A tutor can help you interpret your practice test results to pinpoint whether your errors stem from knowledge gaps, careless mistakes, or timing issues—each requires a different fix.
Test anxiety on the ISEE often stems from unfamiliarity with the format and question types, which tutoring directly addresses by building genuine competence and confidence through repeated exposure. When you've practiced the exact types of questions you'll see and developed strategies that work, anxiety naturally decreases because you know what to expect. A tutor can also teach you specific techniques like how to manage your breathing during the test, when to skip a question without panic, and how to use the scratch paper effectively to stay organized. Many students find that working 1-on-1 with a tutor who can normalize the difficulty and celebrate progress builds the mental resilience needed to perform well under pressure.
Score improvement depends heavily on your starting point and how much you practice—a student starting at the 40th percentile might improve 10-15 percentile points with consistent tutoring and practice over 8-12 weeks, while a student already at the 75th percentile may see smaller gains because there's less room to improve. The most significant gains typically come from fixing fundamental skill gaps and learning test-specific strategies rather than last-minute cramming. Realistic expectations matter: if you're aiming for a specific school's typical ISEE range, your tutor can help you understand what score you need and create a focused plan to reach it. Consistency matters more than intensity—regular sessions with homework practice between them produce better results than sporadic intensive sessions.
ISEE word problems test reading comprehension and mathematical reasoning simultaneously—you have to extract the relevant information from wordy scenarios, set up the problem correctly, and solve it under time pressure. Many students rush through reading the problem and misidentify what's being asked, or they set up the equation correctly but make a calculation error. The ISEE also includes multi-step problems where you need to find an intermediate answer before solving the final question, and students often stop after the first calculation. A tutor can teach you a systematic approach: read carefully, identify what you know and what you're solving for, write out your setup before calculating, and double-check that your answer makes sense in context.
Main idea questions ask you to identify the overall purpose or central point of a passage—the answer is usually explicitly stated or clearly supported by the passage's structure. Inference questions require you to read between the lines and draw conclusions based on evidence that isn't directly stated, which demands deeper analytical thinking and trips up many students. For example, a passage might describe a character's actions without saying they're nervous, but you'd need to infer nervousness from the evidence provided. A tutor can teach you the difference by having you practice identifying what the passage explicitly says versus what you can reasonably conclude, and showing you how to avoid over-inferencing (reading too much into the text) while still making valid logical connections.
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