Award-Winning ACT Tutors
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Award-Winning
ACT
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Scoring a 35 composite on the ACT gave Veena firsthand insight into how each section works, but it's her science background that really sets her apart on the Science reasoning portion — she teaches students to read data displays and conflicting viewpoints passages like a researcher would. Her dual focus on STEM and English Literature at the University of Miami means she's equally comfortable breaking down grammar rules on the English section and tackling experimental design questions. Rated 5.0 by students.

Civil engineering at UF means Cavan spends his days solving multi-step quantitative problems under pressure — the same mental muscle the ACT's Math and Science sections demand — while his IB diploma background keeps his grammar and reading analysis skills sharp enough to cover the full exam. He earned a 1500 SAT and 33 ACT composite, and uses that cross-section fluency to teach students how to identify which question types are costing them the most time and build targeted habits for each one. Rated 5.0 by students.
Having taught engineering in a classroom setting and tutored across math, science, Spanish, and writing, Apoorva covers every ACT section with real content depth rather than surface-level test tricks — her 34 composite reflects that same cross-disciplinary range. She's especially effective at dismantling the perception that certain sections are impossibly hard, walking students through the specific grammar patterns on English and the graph-reading shortcuts on Science that turn intimidating questions into routine ones.
Scoring a 34 composite on the ACT herself, Kelsey knows how the test rewards careful reading across every section — even Math and Science questions hinge on parsing what's actually being asked. Her training at St. John's College, where every class revolves around close reading and Socratic discussion, built exactly the kind of analytical habits that translate to quick, accurate reasoning under time pressure. She's especially sharp on the English and Reading sections, breaking down how the ACT tests grammar rules and passage structure in predictable, learnable patterns.
Scoring a 32 on the ACT means Manuela knows how to perform consistently across all four sections — English, Math, Reading, and Science — not just the ones that come naturally. As a Romance Languages major who's also pre-med and comfortable through calculus, she tackles the test holistically, coaching pacing strategies and question-type recognition that keep scores climbing across the board. Rated 5.0 by students.
Five years running his own tutoring business across math, physics, and computer science gave Jared an unusually clear picture of how the ACT recycles core concepts — the Math section leans heavily on algebra and pre-calc patterns he's drilled with hundreds of students, while his science background makes the data-heavy Science passages feel like familiar territory. He earned a 34 composite and builds prep around diagnosing exactly which question types are eating up a student's time, then targeting those with focused practice. Rated 5.0 by students.
A physics degree means Payal thinks in graphs, equations, and data — which covers the ACT's Math and Science sections naturally — but her breadth across AP Statistics, IB Chemistry, and competition math means she's built to handle the less obvious crossover questions that trip students up between sections. She scored a 33 composite and teaches students to attack the Math section's later problems by identifying which formula or concept is actually being tested underneath the word-problem disguise. Rated 5.0 by students.
Stephanie scored a 32 ACT composite and tutors across nearly every section the test covers — math from pre-algebra through calculus, English grammar and syntax, reading comprehension, and science data interpretation. That cross-subject fluency means she can diagnose exactly where a student is losing points and build targeted strategies for those specific sections. Rated 5.0 by students.
I like helping students. I am very patient. I have experience teaching Calculus classes at the University of Miami. I have done private tutoring for all levels of math up to Calculus, as well as Statistics, Business Math, and Math Finance. I have worked in the actuarial field. I have an undergraduate degree in mathematics from Michigan State University and a Master's degree in mathematics from the University of Miami. I worked for The Princeton Review as a tutor for the SAT. I did very well on both the SAT and ACT, and like teaching students how to do better on those. I like history, too, and always find it fun to tutor history.
Noah's business economics training at the University of Miami means he's comfortable with the quantitative reasoning and data analysis that drive the ACT's Math and Science sections, while his law school acceptance speaks to the close-reading and argumentation skills tested in English and Reading. He scored a 32 composite and uses his cross-section strengths to zero in on the specific question types — whether it's conflicting viewpoints in Science or pronoun agreement in English — where each student is leaving the most points behind.
Having studied both environmental biology and writing, Andrew covers the ACT's full spread without defaulting to one side — he's equally comfortable unpacking the data-heavy Science passages and diagnosing comma-splice errors on English. His 33 composite and pre-med trajectory mean the Math section's trigonometry and algebra questions draw on material he uses regularly, while his writing minor sharpens his approach to the Reading section's evidence-based reasoning.
Duke pre-med students rarely get through organic chemistry, biology, and Spanish without learning how to study strategically — and Caitlin applies that same structured approach to ACT prep, covering all four sections with particular strength in Science and Reading where her coursework keeps those skills sharp daily. Her 32 composite and 5.0 tutoring rating come from teaching students to identify the specific question types costing them points and building targeted habits around those weak spots, not just running endless practice tests.
Majoring in both mathematics and economics while minoring in psychology and education, Christine understands the ACT from the content side and the learning side — she knows why students stall on a Science graph or second-guess an English comma rule, not just what the right answer is. Her 32 composite and experience across every section mean she builds prep around each student's actual weak spots, whether that's algebraic shortcuts in Math or passage-mapping techniques in Reading.
Going through the IB program and then into aerospace engineering at Georgia Tech gave Vansh a rare combination — the verbal rigor to dissect Reading and English passages plus the quantitative instincts to fly through Math and Science under pressure. He earned a perfect 36 composite and builds his prep around the specific pacing mistakes and question-type blind spots that keep each student's score stuck. Rated 5.0 by students.
A perfect 36 composite wasn't an accident — Yash developed specific timing strategies and question-recognition patterns across all four sections that he now breaks down for his students. His engineering background at Georgia Tech means the Math and Science sections get especially detailed treatment, from trigonometry shortcuts to his technique for reading data-heavy passages in under a minute. Rated 5.0 by students, he also builds in test-day tactics that keep nerves from undoing good preparation.
A 36 composite score means Michael didn't just do well on the ACT — he maxed it out across every section, from the science data interpretation to the English rhetorical skills questions. That range mirrors his own academic background spanning fine arts, languages, and quantitative subjects, so he can pinpoint exactly where a student is losing points and rebuild that specific skill. Rated 4.9 by students.
Priya's Burnett Medical Scholars coursework at UCF means she's actively using the biology, chemistry, and quantitative reasoning that show up across the ACT's Math and Science sections — and her biotechnology training sharpens the analytical reading that drives the trickiest English and Reading questions. She earned a 35 composite and builds prep around diagnosing each student's weakest question types section by section, then drilling those specific patterns until they become automatic.
Dual-majoring in computer science and studio art means Parker's brain toggles between algorithmic precision and creative problem-solving — a combination that translates to ACT prep covering every section without defaulting to a one-size-fits-all playbook. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that cross-disciplinary thinking to tailor strategies per section, whether it's eliminating answer traps on Reading or mapping the fastest path through a Science passage's competing data sets. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 34 on the ACT himself, Anthony knows the specific pacing traps and question structures that trip students up — especially on the Math and Science sections where time pressure does more damage than content gaps. His background in math education means he teaches the underlying reasoning behind each problem type, so students can adapt when the test throws an unfamiliar variation at them. He's equally comfortable drilling English comma rules and walking through data interpretation passages.
Computer science trained Brandon to debug systematically — isolate the problem, test a fix, move on — and that's exactly how he approaches ACT prep, diagnosing which question types are costing a student the most points before drilling targeted strategies section by section. His 33 composite and breadth across math, writing, and reading comprehension mean he covers the full exam without leaning on a single strength. Rated 4.9 by students.
Founding and running his high school's Mu Alpha Theta chapter for four years gave Gabriel a habit of explaining math concepts on the spot — a skill that translates directly to ACT prep, where he covers not just the Math section but also the data-heavy reasoning the Science section demands. His 35 composite and Penn coursework in both business and computer science mean the English and Reading sections get equal attention, with a focus on identifying the two or three question types each student consistently misses. Rated 4.9 by students.
Having tutored across social sciences, English, and math, Kayla knows how each ACT section connects to real classroom skills — which means she can explain *why* the English section tests a particular comma rule or why a Reading passage is structured a certain way, not just which answer to pick. Her 34 composite and 5.0 student rating come from building section-specific game plans, especially for students whose scores swing wildly between the verbal and quantitative halves of the test.
Aditi scored a 33 on the ACT and brings an engineer's precision to breaking down each section — from pacing strategies on the Science passages to identifying grammar patterns that repeat on English. Her biomedical engineering background is especially useful for the data interpretation and experimental design questions that trip up most test-takers. Rated 4.8 by students.
Nanotechnology research and an interdisciplinary science degree mean Harrison doesn't just know the ACT's content — he's actively working in the kind of quantitative and analytical reasoning the test measures across Math, Science, and Reading. His 35 composite came from treating each section as a distinct challenge, and he teaches students to do the same: isolate the grammar patterns English recycles, extract data from Science passages without getting lost in jargon, and manage the Math section's escalating difficulty. Rated 4.9 by students.
Scoring a 34 composite on the ACT gave Lia firsthand insight into pacing strategies across all four sections — especially the math, where jumping between algebra, geometry, and trigonometry under time pressure trips up even strong students. Her certified math teaching background means she can quickly diagnose where points are being lost and drill the specific question types that move scores. Rated 4.8 by students.
Studying both neuroscience and computer science at Duke gave Ankit an unusual combination — the analytical rigor to crush the Math and Science sections and the reading-intensive coursework to handle English and Reading with equal confidence. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that across-the-board strength to pinpoint exactly which section strategies a student needs, whether it's eliminating trap answers on Science passages or managing the 60-question Math sprint. Rated 4.8 by students.
Destiny's human biology training at Harvard means the ACT Science section reads like familiar territory — interpreting experimental designs, extracting trends from data tables, parsing conflicting viewpoints — while her 35 composite proves she's just as sharp on the English, Reading, and Math sections that have nothing to do with a lab. She zeroes in on the specific question types each student gets wrong under time pressure and builds targeted drills around those weak spots. Rated 5.0 by students.
Industrial engineering trained Abigail to optimize systems — and she applies that same mindset to ACT prep, diagnosing exactly which question types eat up a student's time and rebuilding their approach section by section. Her 34 composite and breadth across math, science, reading, and writing mean she covers the full exam without handing off weak spots, and her 4.9 rating speaks to how well that structured, efficiency-first style clicks with students.
An American Studies degree means Olivia spent years doing exactly what the ACT Reading and English sections demand — pulling arguments out of dense texts and writing precisely under pressure. She scored a 34 composite and uses her cross-disciplinary background to cover the full exam, including the Math and Science sections where her calculus and analytical training fill in the STEM side. Her strength is teaching students to read ACT questions as carefully as they read the passages, since most lost points come from misinterpreting what's actually being asked.
Med school trains you to absorb massive amounts of information under pressure, and Kaitlyn applies that same discipline to ACT prep — she earned a 33 composite and teaches students how to manage the clock across all four sections, especially the Science passages where her biology background lets her cut straight to the relevant data. Her 4.8 rating from students speaks to a prep style built around diagnosing each person's specific weak spots rather than running through generic practice sets.
Scoring a 34 composite on the ACT taught Nikhil that each section has its own rhythm — the Science section rewards fast data interpretation, while English hinges on spotting punctuation and transition errors almost instinctively. As a microbiology and immunology major at the University of Miami, he brings genuine science fluency to the Science and Math sections while breaking down reading passages with the same analytical precision. He keeps sessions loose and engaging so test prep doesn't feel like a grind.
As a visual artist and political science grad, Emily approaches ACT prep from an unusual angle — she teaches students to read Science passages the way you'd read a photograph, pulling key data from figures before touching the questions, and applies the same argument-dissection skills from her poli-sci training to the Reading and English sections. Her 34 composite and 5.0 tutoring rating back up a method that spans all four sections, with particular strength in helping visual learners map out problems they'd otherwise rush through.
Noelle scored a 34 ACT composite and tutors across a unusually wide range of subjects — from AP Calculus and trigonometry to literature and essay editing — which means she can coach all four sections of the test without handing students off to someone else. She's especially sharp on the math-to-English pivot, teaching pacing strategies for the Science section's data interpretation passages and the grammar rules that repeat most on English. Rated 5.0 by students.
Licensed to teach middle and high school math, Jacob brings classroom-tested instinct for where students actually get stuck — which means his ACT Math prep zeroes in on the algebra and geometry traps that eat up time in the back half of the section. His 34 composite and subject range spanning Russian to competition math to college essays means he covers English, Reading, and Science without needing to fake comfort in any of them. Rated 5.0 by students.
Running experiments in a clinical neuroscience lab and assisting in a chemistry lab means Anabel reads ACT Science passages the way they're meant to be read — as miniature research summaries where the data matters more than the jargon. Her 33 composite and Vanderbilt coursework spanning biology, writing, and quantitative methods let her coach all four sections without handing off the ones that don't match her major. Previous work at Mathnasium sharpened her ability to diagnose exactly where a student's process breaks down under time pressure.
Mechanical engineering trained Andrea to think systematically under pressure — a skill she applies to the ACT by mapping each section's question types and building a timing plan around where a student's points are actually slipping. Her 32 composite and breadth across math, physics, English, and science means she covers the full exam without handing off weak sections, from the grammar patterns on English to the graph-heavy Science passages. Rated 4.8 by students.
Running General Chemistry and Organic Chemistry review sessions as a Supplemental Instruction leader at UCF gave Rick a teaching style built around breaking down complex problems in real time — a skill that translates directly to the ACT's Science and Math sections, where speed and pattern recognition matter more than deep content mastery. His 33 composite and pre-med science background anchor the quantitative side, while his experience tutoring English and essay writing means he can coach the verbal sections without handing students off to someone else.
Scoring a 34 composite on the ACT gave Jai firsthand insight into the pacing traps and question patterns that cost students points across all four sections. His computer science background at UIUC means he takes a data-driven approach — identifying which question types a student consistently misses and drilling those specifically, rather than grinding through full-length practice tests without direction. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 33 composite on the ACT while juggling a demanding biomedical sciences curriculum taught Nicholas exactly how to study strategically under pressure — a skill he now passes along to students prepping for test day. He breaks the exam into manageable pieces, drilling pacing techniques for the Science section's data interpretation passages and tackling the Math section's trigonometry and algebra questions with repeatable shortcuts. Rated 5.0 by students, he also addresses test anxiety head-on, building familiarity with question formats so nothing on exam day feels like a surprise.
Preparing for the ACT means juggling four timed sections that each demand a different skill set — and Kiera covers all of them. She builds a customized study plan by diagnosing whether a student loses the most points on English conventions, Reading pacing, Math content gaps, or Science data interpretation, then attacks the highest-impact area first. Her own experience navigating competitive college admissions at Brown keeps her coaching grounded in real strategic priorities.
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Frequently Asked Questions
University of Florida typically admits students with ACT scores between 29-33, with most admitted students scoring 30 or higher. To be truly competitive for UF's most selective programs, aiming for a 31+ gives you a strong position. Keep in mind that UF also considers your GPA, essays, and extracurriculars, so a score in the 29-30 range doesn't disqualify you—it just means other parts of your application need to be particularly strong.
Florida State University typically admits students with ACT scores between 26-31, while University of Miami is more selective with a range of 30-33. If you're targeting University of Miami, you'll want to aim for at least a 30 to be competitive. Both schools use test scores as one factor among many, so strong grades and a compelling application can help even if you're toward the lower end of their ranges.
Florida's Bright Futures Scholarship program has specific ACT score requirements that determine your scholarship level. The exact thresholds change annually, but generally you'll need at least a 28-29 composite score to qualify for merit aid. Since scholarship amounts are tied directly to your test score, working with a tutor to push your score from, say, 26 to 29 can mean thousands of dollars in additional funding over four years.
The ACT Science section tests data interpretation and scientific reasoning—not memorized science facts. You'll analyze graphs, tables, and experimental designs across biology, chemistry, physics, and earth science topics. Many Miami students struggle with this section because it requires speed (35 minutes for 40 questions) and the ability to extract information quickly from unfamiliar data. The key is learning to skim strategically and focus on what the question is actually asking rather than trying to understand the full scientific context.
Most students benefit from 3-4 months of consistent ACT prep, though this varies based on your starting score and target. If you're aiming for a 28+ (competitive for Florida's state universities), plan to dedicate 10-15 hours per week to focused study. Starting prep in the fall of your senior year or spring of your junior year gives you time to take the test multiple times if needed, which is especially valuable since colleges can see all your scores and you want to show improvement.
With focused, personalized instruction, students typically improve 2-4 composite points over 8-12 weeks, though improvement depends on your starting score and effort level. A student starting at 24 might realistically reach 27-28, while someone at 26 could push to 29-30. The biggest gains usually come from targeting your weakest section—if Science is holding you back, concentrated work there can add 1-2 points to your composite score relatively quickly.
ACT pacing is notoriously tight—you have roughly 45-60 seconds per question depending on the section. The strategy isn't to answer every question perfectly; it's to get the easier questions right quickly and know when to make an educated guess on harder ones. Tutors can teach you section-specific pacing strategies, like spending 8-9 minutes on each Reading passage or tackling Math problems in order of difficulty rather than sequentially. Practice under timed conditions is essential—taking full practice tests helps you internalize the rhythm.
Most colleges no longer require the ACT Writing section, so unless a specific school you're targeting requires it, you can skip it and save 40 minutes. Check the requirements for your target universities—University of Florida, Florida State, and University of Miami don't require it. If you do take Writing, it's scored separately and doesn't affect your composite score, so colleges see it as optional information. Focus your prep time on the four main sections unless a school explicitly asks for Writing.
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