Award-Winning SAT Math Tutors
serving Jacksonville, FL
Award-Winning
SAT Math
Tutors in Jacksonville
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
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Chemical engineering coursework at Johns Hopkins means Joshitha solves math problems all day that are far harder than anything on the SAT — so she knows exactly which algebraic shortcuts and number-sense instincts make the difference when time pressure strips away the safety net of a calculator. Her 1580 SAT backs that up, and she zeroes in on the geometry and trigonometry questions that many high scorers still fumble by teaching students to sketch, label, and reason visually before jumping to computation. Rated 5.0 by students.

Scoring 1500 on the SAT gave Priya a clear picture of what the Math section actually tests versus what students think it tests. She zeroes in on the algebra and data analysis questions that make up the bulk of the score, breaking down multi-step word problems into manageable pieces so students stop second-guessing themselves.
I am a recent college graduate from the University of Florida. I studied both premedical subjects as a biology major and social sciences as an economics major. I have experience mentoring elementary and middle school students in reading and math.
Daniel scored 1480 on the SAT and approaches the Math section as a strategist, not just a calculator. He teaches students to recognize which problems reward algebraic setup versus back-solving or plugging in, cutting time on questions involving linear systems, quadratics, and data interpretation. His finance background at UNF also makes him particularly effective on the statistics and percent-change problems that trip up many test-takers.
Pre-med coursework in biology and psychology means Emerson spends most of his week buried in data — interpreting experimental results, running statistical analyses, and converting real-world observations into quantitative models, all skills the SAT Math section quietly tests through its data-interpretation and scatterplot questions. He scored a 1560 on the SAT and uses that recent familiarity to teach students how to avoid the section's sneakiest traps, particularly the percent-change and systems-of-equations problems designed to punish rushed arithmetic. Rated 5.0 by students.
Nutritional science at the University of Florida is surprisingly math-dense — dosage calculations, statistical analysis of dietary studies, unit conversions under pressure — and Harshadha draws on that daily quantitative work when prepping students for the SAT Math section's ratio, proportion, and percentage questions. She zeroes in on the habit of misreading what a problem actually asks, teaching students to annotate word problems before picking up a pencil so they stop losing easy points to careless setup errors.
Nicholas earned a 1530 SAT and brings particular strength to the Math section's trickiest territory — the no-calculator questions that test algebraic fluency and the data-analysis problems that blend statistics with reading comprehension. He walks students through how to recognize which tool a problem is really asking for, whether that's setting up a system of equations, applying circle theorems, or interpreting a scatterplot's line of best fit. That diagnostic instinct keeps students from wasting time on brute-force approaches.
After earning a 1510 SAT composite, Harrison mapped out which math topics the College Board tests most heavily — linear functions, systems of equations, and data interpretation account for a disproportionate share of questions. He teaches students to triage problems by difficulty and use strategic back-solving on the harder grid-ins. That systematic approach is reflected in his 5.0 client rating.
Scoring a 1430 on the SAT herself, Krina knows the Math section's quirks firsthand — the way a word problem buries the real question, or how a quadratic shows up disguised as a data table. She teaches students to decode what each problem is testing so they spend less time overthinking and more time earning points.
A chemistry degree from the Naval Academy meant Daniel spent four years translating word problems into equations — exactly the skill the SAT Math section tests over and over. He scored 1420 on the SAT and zeroes in on the algebra and data-analysis questions that make up the bulk of the exam, teaching students to decode what each problem is actually asking before they start calculating. His sessions emphasize recognizing problem types quickly so students can allocate time to the harder grid-ins.
I graduated from University of North Florida with a Bachelor's Degree in English and a minor in Creative Writing. My tutoring strengths are English/Writing, Math through Algebra 2, chemistry, and SAT/ACT Test Prep. I believe that students need one-on-one attention in order to succeed and would love to provide that for students to help them learn in the way that works best for them. I have been tutoring algebra/geometry, English, and chemistry for 8 years now. I pride myself in helping students to improve their grades in classes they are struggling with.
I am excited to try and help others get better and appreciate these subjects as much as I do. In my spare time, I enjoy building up by cooking language skills (currently working on Spanish and Japanese), drawing and reading manga in addition to piles and piles of books.
Scoring a 1570 on the SAT, Perry knows exactly where the math section tries to trip students up — especially on quadratic and exponential word problems that test conceptual understanding rather than computation speed. He teaches efficient strategies for data analysis and passport-to-advanced-math questions that turn tricky phrasing into straightforward algebra. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am currently pursuing a Bachelors of Science in Aerospace Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. I am also a graduate of the high school International Baccalaureate Program. I have informal experience tutoring high school physics, but am most passionate about tutoring students for the ACT standardized test, having had extensive experience preparing for standardized tests throughout high school. I am eager to aid students in boosting their scores before their upcoming college applications, an important milestone in many students' lives. In my free time, I also enjoy playing tennis.
I'm a 2nd year medical student at the University of Miami. I have extensive experience tutoring in all science subjects (orgo, biology, genetics, physics), math and reading. I have been an SAT and ACT tutoring for over 6 years now at the local Boys and Girls Club. I also have extensive experience tutoring for the MCAT, from best practices to more technical skills as well. I enjoy tutoring and realize everyone learns in a unique way. I try to cater my style to my student and help them reach the full extent of their capabilities.
An 800 on the SAT Math Level 2 Subject Test and a 1550 SAT composite give Derek deep familiarity with every question type the College Board throws at students, from quadratic modeling to data interpretation. He teaches students to recognize which problems deserve full solutions and which can be solved in under thirty seconds with strategic shortcuts. Rated 4.9 by students.
I am a 22-year-old medical student. In college, I triple majored in Theoretical Mathematics, Computer Science, and Chemistry. My tutoring experience includes over a dozen classes where I was a TA or grader, many of which involved me teaching classes independently. I am looking forward to tutoring hardworking and motivated students who want to challenge themselves.
No subject, no test, and no question is bigger than you. By the end of our time together, I hope to make you see that my only job was really just to make you see--you really had it in you, all along. If there's any subject in which you truly believe you suck--that you're just the worst, and that nothing will ever help you improve--then don't you dare give up until you've given me a call! I'm a writer, but I love numbers, and nothing makes me more proud than helping students overcome their biggest challenges. I've scored near-perfect on both standardized tests, and I've been helping students understand how to improve their own scores ever since. I'm also capable of tutoring advanced Music Theory topics, as well as Spanish and Mandarin Chinese
I am a rising sophomore at Columbia University studying philosophy. I specialize in tutoring high school math, English, and the SAT. This past year I tutored English and math at an elementary/middle school near Columbia. In my free time, I enjoy listening to and playing jazz in a band at Columbia as well as exploring NYC.
I'm an undergraduate at Princeton University working toward a degree in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, with the Sustainable Energy Certificate.
I'm Veena and I recently graduated from the University of Miami with a B.S. in Microbiology and Immunology with Chemistry and English Literature as my minors. I've tutored at a Math and Reading learning center in high school and became an employee of the Academic Resource Center at UM where I tutored my peers in STEM subjects. I was an assistant science teacher at a middle school for a year, and a workshop leader for chemistry classes at UM.
Computer science majors solve math problems all day — and Parker's dual focus in CS and studio art means he attacks SAT Math questions from two angles: the systematic, algebraic reasoning that drives the Heart of Algebra block, and the spatial intuition that makes geometry and graph-based problems click faster. His 1600 SAT speaks for itself, and a 5.0 tutoring rating suggests he's just as good at explaining the shortcuts as he is at using them.
A certified math teacher with a 1430 SAT composite, Anthony approaches SAT Math prep by teaching the underlying reasoning behind each problem type — so when a linear system shows up disguised as a word problem about ticket sales, students already know how to set it up. His background in mathematics education means he builds lasting problem-solving instincts, not just test-day tricks.
Jessica scored a 1540 SAT and uses that firsthand experience to pinpoint where students lose points — whether it's coordinate geometry, advanced algebra, or the no-calculator section's emphasis on number properties. She builds targeted practice around the specific question types a student struggles with rather than grinding through full-length tests repeatedly. Rated 4.8 by her students.
Scoring a 1550 on the SAT gave Max firsthand knowledge of how the Math section layers algebra, data analysis, and advanced math concepts into multi-step problems that punish careless mistakes. He teaches students to identify which tool each question actually requires — whether it's setting up a system of equations or interpreting a scatterplot's line of best fit — before picking up a pencil. That deliberate problem-identification step is often the difference between a 650 and a 750.
I am definitely qualified to tutor. However, more than being qualified, what I've always hoped to achieve as a tutor is to develop the ability in my tutees to become strong independent learners with effective study strategies that they can take with them wherever they go. My motto is "Study Smarter, not just Harder!"
Kaitlyn scored a 1500 on the SAT and teaches math at every level from pre-algebra through calculus, so she knows exactly where the College Board pulls its trickiest problems — especially in quadratics, systems of equations, and data interpretation. She breaks down each question type by identifying what concept is actually being tested beneath the wording, which cuts through the anxiety of unfamiliar setups. Rated 4.8 by students.
The SAT Math section rewards pattern recognition more than raw computation, and Michelle's 1510 SAT score reflects how well she cracked those patterns. She breaks down problem types — from quadratic modeling to data interpretation — so students learn to identify what a question is really asking before they ever pick up a pencil.
Dual-majoring in neuroscience and computer science at Duke means Ankit spends his days toggling between data analysis and algorithmic thinking — two skills that collapse the SAT Math section's trickiest problems into manageable steps, especially the "Additional Topics" geometry questions and systems-of-equations setups that reward structured reasoning over brute-force calculation. His 1580 SAT speaks for itself, and his 4.8 rating suggests students actually enjoy the process of getting there.
My tutoring sessions are interactive, patient, and highly personalized. I don't believe in a one-size-fits-all methodeach student learns differently, so I adapt my approach to match their individual pace, goals, and learning style. I focus on helping students truly understand the why behind each concept, not just memorize formulas or shortcuts. Together, we work step-by-step through problems, discussing reasoning, strategy, and underlying principles until everything clicks. My goal is to build lasting confidence and clarity. Whether a student is catching up, aiming to excel, or just trying to feel more comfortable with the material, I create a supportive environment where they can ask questions freely, think critically, and stay engaged. I also believe in strong communicationkeeping parents informed and helping students take ownership of their learning. Above all, I want my students to leave each session feeling capable, confident, and genuinely connected to what they're learning.
Scoring a 1570 SAT composite required near-perfect execution on the Math section, and Harrison knows exactly where the test hides difficulty — nested functions, systems with no solution, and multi-step word problems that punish students who skip setting up equations. His interdisciplinary science background means he can connect abstract algebra concepts to real modeling scenarios, which is increasingly what the SAT rewards.
Scoring 1500 on the SAT, Veronica knows the math section inside out — from the no-calculator questions that test algebraic fluency to the data-analysis problems that reward careful reading. She teaches specific time-management strategies for each question type so students aren't just getting answers right but getting them right quickly. Her engineering background also means she can explain the underlying math, not just test-taking tricks.
I am rising Junior at Harvard College looking to help tutor and help young minds amidst what is a uniquely challenging time we're currently living through. I love working with kids of all ages, and tutor a wide variety of subjects such as math, english, and standardized tests.
I am a National Merit awardee, and a recent USF Graduate with a D.B.A. with Honors in Philosophy and History, both of which I enjoy thoroughly. My job is to make the material as easy to understand for you as it is for me. I have done this by mastering conversational Socratic ask-and-answer methodology to ensure my students attain the capacity to come to the right answers on their own. Additionally, I have invented multiple general tactics and even detailed strategies pertinent to specific question types, with the ability to translate the above to all learning styles including neurodivergent ones -particularly ADHD and anxiety which I myself have- to radically and adaptably simplify the exam for students as per their personal learning aptitudes.
Dalila scored a 1520 on the SAT and brings a math major's depth to the quantitative section — she knows which algebra, geometry, and data analysis concepts the test leans on hardest and where students most often lose points. Her approach breaks each problem type into a decision tree so students can identify the fastest path to the answer under time pressure.
Karl earned a 1550 SAT, and his approach to the Math section centers on recognizing problem types quickly — distinguishing a systems-of-equations setup from a rate problem, or knowing when a quadratic needs factoring versus the quadratic formula. He teaches students to build a mental checklist for each question category so that even unfamiliar-looking problems map onto familiar techniques. His tutoring spans pre-algebra through calculus, so he can fill foundational gaps on the spot.
I'm passionate about guiding high schoolers through the college application process. The admissions process is probably one of the most confusing, anxiety-inducing experiences you'll have in high school, but I'm full of ideas for making the entire process as successful and stress-free as possible. I've successfully guided many students through every stage of admissions -- from figuring out where to apply and then staying organized and on-track, to "packaging" themselves and producing a perfect personal statement -- and I love witnessing them achieve their admissions dreams.
I am a certified Math 5-9 Teacher in FL. I taught middle and high school for two years. I am a graduate of Florida State University. I received my Bachelor of Science in Social Science with a focus in Public Administration and Sociology. After graduation, I took a gap year before graduate school to serve in AmeriCorps. I highly recommend it! I currently do photography and work at a startup. While I tutor a broad range of subjects, I am most passionate about Math. I have worked with students in grades K-12. I cater to each student's individual learning style. In my experience, it is always rewarding seeing my students have that "aha moment" when they understand a concept or when their confidence and attitude towards a subject has changed from when we started. This in turn is reflected in their improved test scores and grades in the class. I am a firm believer in fully investing in my students to help them reach their highest potential.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and effort, but most students see meaningful gains with focused, personalized instruction. Students typically improve by 50-100+ points when working with a tutor who targets their specific weak areas—whether that's algebra fundamentals, geometry concepts, or test-taking strategy. The key is identifying exactly where you're losing points and addressing those gaps systematically rather than studying broadly.
The SAT Math section gives you 80 minutes for 58 questions, which means you need to average about 1.5 minutes per question. A smart strategy is to tackle easier questions first to build confidence and secure those points, then spend more time on harder problems. Tutors can help you practice pacing with real SAT questions, identify which problem types slow you down, and develop a personalized approach that plays to your strengths.
Many students struggle with algebra and linear equations, word problems that require translating English into math, and geometry/trigonometry concepts that haven't been reinforced in a while. Another frequent issue is rushing through questions and misreading what's being asked—especially on grid-in problems where a small error costs full points. Personalized tutoring helps you identify which of these areas trip you up and build confidence through targeted practice.
Taking 4-6 full-length SAT practice tests under timed conditions is ideal for most students preparing over 2-3 months. The first test gives you a baseline; the middle tests help you practice strategy and pacing; the final ones build test-day confidence. A tutor can help you review your practice test results to spot patterns in your mistakes—whether you're missing certain question types, rushing, or struggling with specific content areas.
The best way is to take a full practice test, then carefully review every question you missed or guessed on. Look for patterns: Are most mistakes in algebra? Geometry? Word problems? Data interpretation? Once you've identified your weak spots, you can focus your study time there instead of reviewing topics you already know. Tutors specialize in this diagnostic work—they'll pinpoint exactly where you're losing points and create a targeted study plan to address those gaps.
Test anxiety often comes from feeling unprepared or unsure of your approach. The antidote is practice and confidence-building: the more you solve SAT-style problems under timed conditions, the more familiar and manageable they feel on test day. Tutors help by teaching you a consistent problem-solving strategy, having you practice with real SAT questions until they feel routine, and building your confidence through incremental wins on the toughest problem types.
Your first session is about understanding where you are and where you want to go. Expect to discuss your current score (if you've taken the SAT), your target score, and any topics that feel shaky. Many tutors will have you work through a few SAT Math problems to see your problem-solving approach firsthand. From there, they'll create a personalized plan that focuses on your specific weak areas and fits your timeline.
Look for tutors with strong math backgrounds and proven SAT experience—ideally someone who has helped multiple students improve their scores. They should know the current SAT format inside and out, understand common student mistakes, and be skilled at explaining concepts clearly. Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who specialize in SAT Math and can tailor their teaching to your learning style and goals.
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