Award-Winning SAT Math Tutors
serving Queens, NY
Award-Winning
SAT Math
Tutors in Queens
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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I am now a playwriting MFA at NYU, one of the best programs in the country (the story of how I transitioned from physics to theater is pretty funny and I???m happy to share it). While my intensive study of advanced Math and Physics helps me tutor those subjects, I find my theater skills are just as valuable to effective teaching. As a playwright, I have learned to explain ideas efficiently, inspire excitement, and connect with an audience. Using these techniques, I hope to make my students not only better at individual subjects, but also help them fall in love with the beauty of new ideas.

I am a recent graduate of Columbia University currently working as a freelance writer and tutor while also maintaining a part-time job as a foreign sub-editor at "The Viet Nam News" as a Princeton in Asia fellow.
I am an interdisciplinary educator with an Ed.M. from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a B.A. from Dartmouth College. My background is primarily in integrated arts learning and museum education and I specialize in visual arts, history and art history, and object-based learning. In all subjects, I take a creative, inquiry-based and learner-centered approach, designing opportunities for each unique individual to meet their learning goals.
Scoring 1550 on the SAT herself, Nina knows the specific traps the math section sets — misleading answer choices on quadratic problems, tricky unit conversions, and data-interpretation questions designed to punish rushing. She teaches students a systematic approach to each question type so that pacing and accuracy improve together. Her statistics training also gives her an edge on the data-analysis questions that many tutors treat as an afterthought.
Scoring a 1570 on the SAT, Joey knows the Math section inside and out — from the no-calculator questions that test algebraic fluency to the data-analysis problems that reward careful reading. He teaches students to recognize question patterns and avoid common traps, turning timed practice into a strategic exercise rather than a frantic race.
Finance and statistics coursework at NYU means Dennis spends his days building models around the same quantitative reasoning the SAT Math section tests — probability, linear relationships, and interpreting data from tables and graphs. His 1550 SAT score came partly from treating the no-calculator questions as logic puzzles rather than computation drills, an approach he now teaches by walking students through how to eliminate answer choices using number properties before ever picking up a pencil.
Psychology and linguistics both demand rigorous data interpretation — Sherry's UChicago coursework in experimental design and statistical analysis maps directly onto the SAT Math section's tables, scatterplots, and percentage questions. Her perfect 1600 SAT means she's mastered every corner of the test, but she zeroes in on the geometry and advanced math problems where students most often misread what's being asked, using her linguist's instinct to untangle the SAT's deliberately tricky phrasing. Rated 5.0 by students.
Violet's 1550 SAT and her math degree from Brown mean she can diagnose exactly where a student's algebra or data analysis gaps are costing them points on SAT Math. She teaches the handful of non-obvious techniques — backsolving, strategic plugging-in, unit analysis on word problems — that turn 650-range scores into 750+ scores. Her style leans heavily on shortcuts that make the no-calculator section feel less like a time crunch.
Miranda earned a 1560 SAT composite, which means she tackled the Math section's trickiest territory — passport-to-advanced-math problems involving quadratics, systems, and nonlinear modeling. She teaches students to recognize what each question is actually asking beneath its wording, a skill that turns intimidating multi-step problems into familiar patterns.
Scoring a 1570 SAT himself, James knows exactly where the SAT Math section sets its traps — the passport-to-advanced-math questions that bury quadratic relationships in word problems, or the data-analysis questions that test statistical reasoning more than arithmetic. He breaks each problem type into a recognition step and an execution step so students stop second-guessing themselves under time pressure. His calculus and chemistry background means no student's question goes beyond his reach.
A PhD in computational mathematics means Justin doesn't just know SAT Math content — he understands the underlying structure connecting algebra, functions, and geometric reasoning well enough to show students the fastest route through each problem type. His 1560 SAT score came from the same systematic thinking he now teaches: identifying what a question actually requires before committing to a calculation, which is especially effective on the no-calculator section's trickier polynomial and quadratic setups. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring well on SAT Math requires recognizing which tool fits each problem before time pressure kicks in — is this a substitution question disguised as a word problem, or a ratio question hiding inside a geometry setup? Rachel earned a 1600 and knows the test's architecture inside and out. She teaches students to categorize problems on sight so they spend their energy solving, not figuring out where to start.
I'm not tutoring, I love walking through New York for design inspiration and taking carpentry, metalworking, and illustration classes.
Most SAT Math mistakes aren't about not knowing the content — they're about misreading what a problem is actually asking or choosing the slowest path to the answer. Jamie scored a 1550 and teaches students to decode each question type, whether it's a system of equations buried in a word problem or a statistics question testing median versus mean. His approach is built around timed practice and pattern recognition so students stop leaving easy points on the table.
Premed coursework at Cornell means Sharan regularly tackles quantitative problems under exam pressure — and she channels that same discipline into SAT Math prep, particularly the data-analysis and algebraic modeling questions where sloppy setup costs more points than weak math skills. Her 1540 SAT confirms she knows how the test actually works, and she teaches students to build a systematic checklist for each problem type so nothing gets skipped when the clock is running. Rated 5.0 by students.
I'm a graduate of Columbia University with a B.A. in History. I'm passionate about history and English, but I'm a competent math tutor as well. I have received outstanding scores on my SAT and AP tests, and am confident in my ability to pass on these skills to the next generation.
I am in the process of selecting a masters program in education that will begin this summer. I have 2 years experience doing 1 on 1 tutoring and it is very effective compared to classroom teaching because there is only one student to focus on. I look forward to working with you and helping you or your child get better. Always remember, even the best of us need help and support from others to be successful.
After earning a 1590 on the SAT, Daniel built a clear playbook for the math section that separates "concept" problems from "strategy" problems — because a student who knows the algebra can still lose points to time pressure or misread graphs. He walks through data-interpretation and word-problem translation techniques that turn careless errors into reliable points.
I'm a hardworking, compassionate, and patient individual who has been tutoring since high school and helping my little sister with her homework long before. I'll work with every new student individually to recognize his or her strengths and weaknesses to make sure that material is actually being learned, not just memorized.
Years of music performance training — sight-reading, pattern recognition, working under pressure — gave Vivian an unusual edge on timed math tests, and her 1530 SAT backs that up. She's especially sharp on the algebra-to-geometry crossover questions where students need to visualize what an equation actually represents, a skill she builds by teaching students to sketch before they solve. Rated 4.9 by students.
Richard scored a 1600 on the SAT and spent a year as a calculus course assistant at Harvard, so the math on this test — from quadratic modeling to data analysis and passport-to-advanced-math questions — sits well within his comfort zone. He breaks down each problem type by identifying what concept the College Board is actually testing beneath the word-problem packaging. That pattern recognition is what turns a 700 into a 780 or higher.
Katherine scored a 1500 on the SAT and knows the Math section inside out, from the no-calculator portion's emphasis on algebraic manipulation to the calculator section's data-analysis and modeling questions. She digs into the specific concept gaps that cost students points — whether that's systems of equations, quadratic behavior, or tricky word problems involving ratios and percentages. Her approach is to build fluency with the question formats so nothing on test day feels unfamiliar.
I am a graduate of the College of William and Mary 2014 with a B.A. in Linguistics and History. Currently I am a M.A./Ph.D student in Linguistics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. My current research deals with how language is used and how understanding can change in differing contexts, for example how people define what counts as a lie, and how our brains process emojis. At the University of Illinois, I've taught several linguistics courses, including the popular Linguistics 100 introductory course. I spent a semester abroad in Sevilla, Spain during my undergraduate studies and that remains one of the best experiences of my life.
Heart-of-algebra and problem-solving questions make up the bulk of SAT Math, and Rachel approaches each category with specific, repeatable techniques — like translating word problems into equations before touching the calculator. Her own 1580 composite score came from exactly this kind of disciplined, strategic prep. She's rated 5.0 by the students she's worked with.
Computer science at Cornell means Eric spends most of his time turning abstract problems into precise, step-by-step logic — exactly the skill that separates a good SAT Math score from a perfect one, which he earned with his 1600. He's especially sharp on the no-calculator section's polynomial and function questions, where clean algebraic manipulation beats trial-and-error every time. Rated 5.0 by students.
The SAT Math section tests familiar algebra and geometry concepts in unfamiliar packaging, which is why content knowledge alone isn't enough. Jonathan scored a 1570 composite and approaches SAT prep strategically, showing students how to recognize problem types quickly — whether it's a disguised quadratic, a systems question, or a percent-change trap — and choose the fastest path to the answer.
I am excited to be home and help fellow straphangers on their educational paths! My largest wealth of tutoring experience is in foreign languages--particularly French--but I also feel very comfortable editing essays of any kind and working through standardized test concepts. My availability is extremely flexible, and anywhere in New York City works for me. I look forward to working with you.
I'm thrilled every time one of my students begins to understand a grammar concept or reads alone, and that enthusiasm for both small victories and language and literature that is yet to be studied is contagious.
Scoring 1510 on the SAT, Sabira knows the math section inside out — from the no-calculator questions testing algebraic fluency to the data-analysis problems that reward careful graph reading. She breaks down each question type by identifying what concept the College Board is actually testing, which cuts through the trap answers that cost students easy points.
Robert treats the SAT Math section as a pattern-recognition game — after scoring 1550, he mapped out which question types (quadratic setups, coordinate geometry, systems of equations) appear most predictably and built a decision tree for attacking each one under time pressure. He's especially useful for students who already know the underlying math but keep losing points to misreads and second-guessing on test day. Rated 4.8 by students.
I'm a recent graduate from the University of Pennsylvania who studied Linguistics and Deaf Studies. I eventually hope to work towards breaking down barriers between the Deaf and hearing worlds and encouraging greater focus on reforming Deaf education practices.
I am a very patient tutor who tries to understand exactly where the student is struggling and how they can improve. Outside of the classroom, you can often find me baking or drawing!
Scoring a 1570 SAT composite, Kevin knows the math section inside out and teaches students to spot the fastest path through each problem rather than defaulting to brute-force algebra. His approach is methodical: identify the concept being tested, eliminate traps in the answer choices, and manage time across the no-calculator and calculator sections.
Aaron scored a 1570 SAT and brings particular strength to the Math section's trickiest territory: the no-calculator questions that test conceptual fluency with quadratics, systems, and rational expressions. He teaches students to identify what each problem is really asking — a skill that turns confusing multi-step questions into straightforward algebra.
I'm currently an MA student in French at Middlebury College, after graduating with my BA from Barnard College at Columbia University in 2014. Overseas, I spent a year at the Sorbonne-Paris. I'm a passionate, patient tutor of both English and French with four years of experience. In both languages, I focus on grammar skills, essay writing, and standardized test preparation, especially the SAT and SAT II. I most often tutor high school and college students, but have found that young children are also some of my favorite to teach! I have additional experience with ESL students and those with learning disabilities, including dyslexia, ADHD and cognitive impairments. Language arts are a true passion of mine, both academically and professionally. As a bilingual writer for the State Department and two publishing companies, I've learned effective writing skills I love to share with students. I believe that each individual learns differently, so I tailor my teaching strategies to every student's needs. Seeing students overcome challenges and meet their goals is always the highlight of my day. When I'm not tutoring, I'm an avid film photographer and an enthusiastic yoga amateur.
Scoring a 1550 on the SAT, Stephanie knows the math section inside out — including the no-calculator portion where comfort with algebraic manipulation and number properties makes or breaks a score. She teaches students to identify which tool each problem actually requires, whether that's setting up a system of equations, interpreting a scatterplot, or recognizing a quadratic pattern.
Scoring a 1590 on the SAT wasn't luck — Julia developed a repeatable system for the math section that she now teaches to her students. She digs into the specific question types the College Board favors, from quadratic modeling and systems of inequalities to scatterplot interpretation, showing students how to spot the fastest path to each answer. Timed practice with targeted review afterward is central to her method.
I'm Esther! I am currently a student at Binghamton University, studying in the School of Management.
After scoring 1550 on the SAT, Lyall reverse-engineered the math section into a set of recognizable problem types — heart-of-algebra, passport-to-advanced-math, and data analysis — each with its own short list of strategies. He teaches students to diagnose a question's category in seconds so they can apply the right technique without wasting time. That pattern-recognition approach is especially effective for students who understand the math but struggle with pacing.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and how consistently you work with a tutor. Students typically see gains of 50-100+ points over a few months of regular practice, though improvement varies based on your baseline score and the areas you're targeting. The SAT Math section is scored from 200-800, and tutoring is particularly effective for identifying the specific concepts holding you back—whether that's algebra, geometry, or test-taking strategy—rather than trying to improve everything at once.
The biggest obstacles are usually pacing (running out of time on later, harder questions), misreading what a question is actually asking, and gaps in foundational skills like algebra or systems of equations. Many students also struggle with word problems that require translating English into mathematical equations. A tutor can help you diagnose which of these is your main challenge and develop targeted strategies, like learning when to skip difficult questions and come back to them, or practicing the specific problem types you find most confusing.
Most students benefit from meeting 1-2 times per week for 4-12 weeks, depending on their timeline and current score. For students in Queens preparing for the test several months away, starting with weekly sessions gives you time to build skills gradually and practice between sessions. If you're testing soon or targeting a significant score improvement, twice-weekly sessions combined with consistent independent practice can accelerate progress. Your tutor can help you create a realistic schedule based on where you're starting and your target score.
Taking a full practice test under realistic conditions is the best starting point—you'll see which questions you miss and how much time you spend on each section. From there, a tutor can help you analyze patterns: Are you missing algebra questions? Geometry? Word problems? Grid-ins? Once you identify the specific topics, you can focus your study time there instead of reviewing everything. Many students are surprised to find their struggles aren't with "math in general" but with 2-3 specific concept areas that, once targeted, lead to quick score gains.
Test anxiety often comes from feeling unprepared or uncertain about what to expect. Working with a tutor builds confidence by familiarizing you with the exact question formats you'll see, teaching you strategic approaches (like which problems to skip), and giving you repeated practice with timed sections. This repetition reduces anxiety naturally—the more you've seen and solved similar problems, the less scary test day feels. Many tutors also share specific techniques for managing nervousness in the moment, like how to pace yourself to avoid rushing.
Practice tests are essential—they're the best way to measure progress and simulate the actual test experience. You should take at least 3-5 full practice tests during your prep, spacing them out over your study timeline. However, taking a test isn't enough; the real value comes from reviewing every question you missed or found difficult, understanding why you got it wrong, and identifying patterns. Your tutor can guide you through this review process to extract the most learning from each practice test.
Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who specialize in SAT Math preparation. When you reach out, you'll share details about your target score, current level, and timeline so we can match you with a tutor who fits your needs. Your first session is typically a diagnostic—your tutor will assess your strengths and weaknesses, understand your goals, and create a customized study plan so your preparation is focused and efficient.
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