Award-Winning Writing
Tutors
Award-Winning
Writing
Tutors
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
UniversitiesSchools & Universities
DeliveredHours Delivered
ProficiencyGrowth in Proficiency
Who needs tutoring?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.

Tom's PhD work produced hundreds of pages of academic writing, from seminar papers to a full dissertation, so he knows firsthand how to move from a messy first draft to a polished argument. He teaches students to outline before they write, build paragraphs around single claims, and revise with an eye toward clarity rather than word count. His 4.9 rating speaks to how well that process clicks with students.

Turning a vague idea into a structured, compelling piece of writing is a skill most students never get explicitly taught — they're just told to "write a five-paragraph essay" and figure it out. Sabira breaks the process into concrete steps: narrowing a topic, building an outline with real claims, drafting body paragraphs around evidence, and revising for clarity. Her 5.0 rating speaks to how well that structured approach works.
The hardest part of writing isn't grammar — it's figuring out what you're actually trying to say and then organizing evidence around that claim. Brittney tackles this by teaching students to outline arguments before drafting, develop thesis statements that do real analytical work, and revise with purpose. Her Princeton training in Comparative Literature means she's comfortable coaching writing across disciplines, from personal narratives to research papers.
Joyce Carol Oates selected Sash as one of two advisees at Princeton, where he wrote his first novel under her mentorship — an experience that drilled home how revision, not inspiration, is what turns rough drafts into finished work. His ongoing career as a playwright and theater director keeps him immersed in the craft of shaping language for specific audiences and purposes. He teaches students to treat each draft as raw material, breaking it down structurally before refining voice, argument, and clarity.
Brian treats writing as an engineering problem: identify the core argument, design the structure to support it, then refine sentence by sentence. His dual background in economics and computer science at Caltech means he's written everything from research papers to technical documentation, giving him a versatile toolkit for teaching persuasive, analytical, and expository writing.
Trained in comparative literature at Columbia, Jacob treats writing as a craft with movable parts — thesis construction, evidence integration, paragraph architecture, and revision strategy each get dedicated attention. He's particularly sharp at teaching students how to move from a rough idea to a polished argument without losing their own voice in the process.
Strong writing starts with having something specific to say and a clear reason for saying it — the mechanics follow from there. Jessica earned her writing certification through Penn's selective Critical Writing program as a freshman, then spent years tutoring peers on everything from argumentative essays to research papers. She teaches students to outline with a claim in mind, draft without self-editing, and revise with ruthless attention to whether each sentence actually advances the argument.
Strong writing starts with having something specific to say — and Mimi's inquiry-based approach means she spends real time on the thinking stage before a student ever drafts. From thesis development to paragraph architecture to revision strategy, she walks through each phase of the writing process so students internalize it for the next assignment, not just the current one.
Henry's senior thesis at Harvard on John Dewey's philosophy of education required building a sustained, evidence-based argument across dozens of pages — a process that sharpened his instinct for what makes writing persuasive versus merely correct. He teaches students to outline with a clear claim in mind, develop paragraphs around specific evidence, and revise with an ear for voice and rhythm.
Christopher treats writing as engineering on the page: every paragraph needs a clear purpose, every transition should carry the reader forward, and the whole piece has to hold together under scrutiny. Whether a student is working on a personal narrative or a research paper, he digs into thesis development, organization, and voice to make the writing sharper from the inside out.
Getting ideas out of your head and onto the page in a coherent, compelling way is a learnable craft, not an innate talent. Maya treats writing as a process — brainstorming, outlining, drafting, revising — and teaches specific techniques for each stage, from building a thesis that actually argues something to cutting filler that weakens a paragraph. She's a working writer herself, which keeps her feedback practical and current.
Strong writing is really rewriting — and Meghan learned that through two journalism degrees at Northwestern and daily practice at a New York magazine. She teaches students to draft with a clear argument, revise for structure and evidence, and edit for voice, moving a piece from rough idea to polished final draft without losing what made it theirs.
Testimonials
Because the right Writing tutor makes all the difference.
Average Session Rating – Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
Top 20 English Subjects
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
A writing tutor provides personalized feedback on the elements that matter most—thesis development, argument structure, evidence integration, and revision strategies. Rather than just correcting grammar, tutors help you understand why certain choices strengthen your writing and guide you through the process of developing your own voice and style. With one-on-one instruction, you get targeted feedback on your specific weaknesses, whether that's organization, clarity, or supporting your claims effectively.
Grammar is the foundation—correct punctuation, sentence structure, and word choice ensure your ideas are clear and professional. Style, on the other hand, is about how you express those ideas: your tone, sentence variety, word selection, and overall voice. A strong writer masters both. Tutoring addresses both elements, starting with grammar fundamentals if needed, then helping you develop a distinctive, compelling writing style that engages readers and communicates your unique perspective.
Writer's block usually stems from one of a few issues: unclear thinking about your topic, perfectionism, or not knowing how to start. Tutors help by breaking the writing process into manageable steps—brainstorming ideas, creating outlines, drafting without judgment, and then revising. They also teach strategies like freewriting, asking guiding questions to clarify your thinking, and building momentum by focusing on one section at a time rather than the whole essay at once.
Absolutely. Many students find citation formats confusing, but they're learnable with clear guidance. Tutors can explain how MLA and APA differ, show you how to format in-text citations and works cited pages correctly, and teach you the reasoning behind these formats. More importantly, they help you understand why proper attribution matters—not just as a rule to follow, but as a way to acknowledge sources and build credibility in your writing.
Literary analysis requires you to move beyond summarizing a text to interpreting what it means and why the author made specific choices. Tutors guide you in developing strong analytical claims, finding textual evidence that actually supports those claims, and explaining the significance of that evidence. They teach you how to read closely for literary devices, themes, and character development, then help you organize those observations into a coherent, persuasive essay that demonstrates genuine understanding.
The best writing tutors combine subject expertise with strong teaching skills. Look for someone who understands essay structure, argumentation, and grammar thoroughly, but also listens carefully to your specific challenges and adjusts their approach accordingly. They should ask questions that help you think deeper about your own writing, provide clear feedback with specific examples, and encourage you to take ownership of your revision process rather than simply fixing errors for you.
Improvement depends on how frequently you work with a tutor and how actively you apply feedback. Many students notice better organization and clearer thesis statements within 2-3 sessions. Developing a more sophisticated writing style and consistently strong essays typically takes longer—usually several weeks of regular practice and feedback. The key is consistent practice between sessions, applying what you've learned to new assignments, and building confidence in your ability to revise your own work effectively.
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