Award-Winning AP Economics Tutors serving Akron, OH

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Award-Winning AP Economics Tutors serving Akron, OH

Edris

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Edris

Bachelors, Economics, Mathematics and Biology Minor
Edris's other Tutor Subjects
AP Calculus AB
College Algebra
Pre-Calculus
Middle School Math

An economics and math double at Boston College — plus premed coursework — means Edris thinks about incentives, optimization, and trade-offs from multiple angles at once. He digs into the cost-curve logic and multiplier math that underpin AP Micro and Macro, teaching students to derive graphs from fi...

Education

Boston College

Bachelors, Economics, Mathematics and Biology Minor

Test Scores
SAT
1500
Max

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Max

Current Undergrad, Economics
Max's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Competition Math
Middle School Math
Geometry

AP Micro and Macro pack an entire introductory college sequence into one year, and the free-response questions demand precise graph work and economic reasoning under time pressure. Max tackles both — teaching students to draw accurate surplus diagrams, shift curves correctly, and write explanations ...

Education

Yale University

Current Undergrad, Economics

Test Scores
SAT
1580
Patrick

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Patrick

Bachelors, Economics and Mathematics
Patrick's other Tutor Subjects
10th Grade math
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra

Double-majoring in economics and mathematics at Boston College means Patrick lives in the exact overlap AP Economics tests hardest — the point where theoretical models meet quantitative problem-solving. He teaches students to think through concepts like comparative advantage or the money market not ...

Education

Boston College

Bachelors, Economics and Mathematics

Test Scores
ACT
32
Hans

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Hans

Bachelors (Economics; minor: International Studies)
Hans's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Algebra 3/4
Arithmetic

Northwestern's economics program gave Hans a rigorous grounding in both micro and macro theory — and completing it in three years meant mastering concepts like market structures, fiscal policy mechanics, and international trade models at an accelerated pace. He teaches AP students to connect the int...

Education

Northwestern University

Bachelors (Economics; minor: International Studies)

Test Scores
SAT
1520
Marvin

Certified Tutor

Marvin

Bachelor in Arts, Economics
Marvin's other Tutor Subjects
1st Grade Writing
1st Grade Reading
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra

A University of Chicago economics degree means Marvin didn't just learn supply-and-demand diagrams — he studied the rigorous theory behind market structures, monetary policy, and welfare analysis that the AP exam distills into graph-and-explain questions. His statistics coursework sharpens the quant...

Education

The University of Chicago

Bachelor in Arts, Economics

Dana

Certified Tutor

Dana

Bachelor in Arts, Public Policy and American Institutions
Dana's other Tutor Subjects
College Algebra
Algebra 3/4
Middle School Math
Geometry

Both AP Micro and AP Macro exams test whether students can move fluidly between graphs, calculations, and written explanations — often within a single free-response question. Dana digs into each of those skills separately before combining them, making sure students can sketch an AD-AS shift, calcula...

Education

Brown University

Bachelor in Arts, Public Policy and American Institutions

Test Scores
Perfect Score
SAT
1450
ACT
36
Damian

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Damian

Current Undergrad, None
Damian's other Tutor Subjects
1st-12th Grade math
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Arithmetic

Strong SAT math scores and a deep comfort with quantitative reasoning give Damian a practical edge when teaching the graphing and calculation-heavy portions of AP Economics — things like working through elasticity formulas or tracing how a change in interest rates ripples through the AD-AS model. He...

Education

University of Chicago

Current Undergrad, None

Test Scores
SAT
1570
Nima

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Nima

Bachelors, Physics
Nima's other Tutor Subjects
1st-7th Grade math
1st-7th Grade Reading
1st-6th Grade Writing
3rd-7th Grade Science

Physics trained Nima to think in models — isolate variables, predict what happens when one thing changes, trace the chain of consequences. That's exactly the skill AP Economics tests when it asks students to shift a curve and explain the ripple effects through a market or an entire economy. His quan...

Education

Duke University

Bachelors, Physics

Test Scores
SAT
1580
Daniel

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Daniel

Current Undergrad, Applied Mathematics
Daniel's other Tutor Subjects
AP Calculus BC
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra
Linear Algebra

Elasticity, marginal analysis, and equilibrium models all rely on mathematical reasoning that many econ students weren't expecting when they signed up. Daniel unpacks the algebra and graphing behind both micro and macro concepts, turning abstract curves into something students can actually interpret...

Education

Yale University

Current Undergrad, Applied Mathematics

Test Scores
ACT
31
Grant

Certified Tutor

Grant

Bachelors
Grant's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Geometry
Calculus

Grant's economics degree means he learned the underlying theory behind every AP-tested model — from aggregate demand shifts to monopolistic competition graphs — not just the simplified versions in a prep book. He teaches students to trace cause-and-effect through each diagram so they can handle the ...

Education

Vanderbilt University

Bachelors

Test Scores
ACT
33

Frequently Asked Questions

AP Economics covers two main areas: Microeconomics (about 50% of the exam) and Macroeconomics (about 50%). Microeconomics focuses on supply and demand, elasticity, production costs, market structures, and factor markets. Macroeconomics covers national income accounting, inflation, unemployment, monetary and fiscal policy, and international economics. The exam includes 60 multiple-choice questions and 3 free-response questions, so understanding both breadth and depth across these topics is essential for success.

Score improvement depends on your starting point and study intensity, but students who work with expert tutors typically see meaningful gains—often 2-4 points on the 5-point scale. The key is identifying your specific weak areas (like elasticity calculations or policy analysis) and targeting them systematically. With consistent practice, targeted review, and personalized feedback on free-response questions, many students move from a 2 or 3 to a 4 or 5.

Many students struggle with the mathematical and graphical components—interpreting supply and demand curves, calculating elasticity, and understanding shifts versus movements along curves. Others find the policy applications challenging, particularly connecting economic theory to real-world scenarios in the free-response section. Time management is also critical, as students must answer 60 multiple-choice questions in 70 minutes and complete three free-response questions in 50 minutes. Tutors can help you build confidence with graphs, practice efficient problem-solving, and develop strategies for tackling each question type.

Start by reading all multiple-choice questions carefully—many include subtle wording that changes the answer. For graph-heavy questions, label axes and identify key relationships before calculating. On free-response questions, organize your answer clearly and show your reasoning step-by-step, even if you're unsure of the final answer—partial credit is valuable. Practice pacing by completing full-length practice tests under timed conditions so you know how to allocate your 70 minutes for multiple-choice and 50 minutes for free-response.

Most students benefit from starting review 8-12 weeks before the exam, dedicating 3-5 hours per week to focused study. This timeline allows you to cover both Micro and Macro thoroughly, complete multiple practice tests, and address weak areas with targeted tutoring. If you're starting later or struggling with specific concepts, more intensive preparation—perhaps 5-7 hours weekly—can still yield significant improvement. The goal is consistent, strategic practice rather than cramming.

Look for tutors with strong economics backgrounds and proven experience helping students succeed on the AP exam. They should be comfortable with both the mathematical and conceptual sides of economics, and skilled at explaining complex topics like monetary policy or market structures clearly. The best tutors also understand common student misconceptions and can identify your specific weak areas quickly, then create a personalized study plan that focuses your effort where it matters most.

Practice tests are essential—they help you identify weak topics, build test-taking stamina, and get comfortable with the exam format and pacing. Plan to take at least 2-3 full-length practice tests under timed conditions in the weeks leading up to the exam. After each test, review not just the questions you missed, but also the ones you guessed on or found confusing. This analysis reveals patterns in your understanding and helps you prioritize your tutoring sessions on the areas that will have the biggest impact on your score.

Your first session is typically a diagnostic—an expert tutor will assess your current understanding of key concepts, review your practice test results if you have them, and identify your specific strengths and gaps. Together, you'll discuss your goals (whether it's reaching a 4, improving from a 3 to a 5, or building confidence in specific topics) and create a personalized study plan. This foundation ensures your tutoring is focused and efficient, targeting the concepts that will move your score the most.

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