Award-Winning ACT Tutors
serving Bremerton, WA
Award-Winning
ACT
Tutors in Bremerton
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 will be getting tutoring?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.

Grant's English degree makes him a natural fit for the ACT's Reading and English sections, where rhetorical analysis and grammar rules decide most questions — but his 35 composite proves he's just as dangerous on Math and Science. He teaches across all four sections plus Writing, building section-specific strategies around each student's score breakdown rather than running a one-size-fits-all prep plan. Rated 5.0 by students.

Substitute teaching across K-12 classrooms gave Angela a clear picture of how different learners freeze up under timed pressure — something she applies directly to ACT prep, where she earned a 33 composite. Her environmental science coursework keeps the Math and Science sections grounded in real problem-solving, while her strength in writing and essay editing translates to targeted English and Reading strategies that go beyond memorizing comma rules. Rated 5.0 by students.
Preparing for the ACT means juggling four sections with very different pacing demands — English gives you 36 seconds per question while Science gives you roughly 53. Antonia builds section-specific timing strategies and teaches students which question types to attack first and which to flag and revisit. She tutors every subject the ACT covers, from math and science to reading and English, so she can diagnose weak spots across the entire exam and target them efficiently.
I am a professional scientist with multiple years of experience in the biopharmaceutical field. I have spent time in the classroom with elementary aged students and am comfortable with this age group. I am also familiar with AP classes and ACT/SAT preparation. I look forward to sharing my love of learning with students and helping them achieve academic goals!
An English and drama background might not scream ACT prep, but John's 36 composite — a perfect score — means he's mastered every section of the test, and his theater training makes him unusually good at close reading the rhetorical and narrative passages that stall most students on Reading and English. He also tutors calculus, physics, and chemistry, so the Math and Science sections aren't secondary skills he's faking his way through. Rated 4.9 by students.
Georgia Tech's Industrial and Systems Engineering program sits at the crossroads of math, data analysis, and logical reasoning — which means Ilesh trained daily in exactly the quantitative and analytical thinking the ACT tests across Math, Science, and even the evidence-based Reading questions. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that full-score perspective to show students not just what the right answers look like, but why the wrong ones are designed to be tempting. Rated 5.0 by students.
Medical school at the University of Arizona sharpened Alex's science and reading comprehension chops, but it's the chemical engineering degree from Washington and Lee that keeps his ACT Math strategies rigorous — and tutoring since 2010 means he's seen every version of the test's recurring traps across all four sections. His 36 composite isn't just a number; it translates into section-by-section blueprints that show students exactly where their time is leaking and which question types to attack first. Rated 4.8 by students.
Northwestern's Honors Program in Medical Education compressed Anna's premed and MD training into a single accelerated track — meaning she learned early how to master large volumes of material under tight time constraints, which is essentially what the ACT demands across all four sections. She scored a perfect 36 composite and uses that experience to teach students how to allocate their attention strategically, particularly on the Reading and Science sections where running out of time costs more points than content gaps. Rated 5.0 by students.
Medical school admissions committees at both Rice and Baylor trusted Sugi to evaluate candidates — that same ability to spot exactly where someone's reasoning breaks down is what she brings to ACT prep, section by section. Her 36 composite and dual background in cognitive science and biochemistry mean there's no weak link across Math, Science, English, or Reading; she knows the content cold and teaches the decision-making layer on top of it. Rated 5.0 by students.
Elliot's neuroscience PhD means he's spent years designing experiments, interpreting data, and writing precisely — the exact skill set the ACT tests across all four sections, from Science passage analysis to the grammar logic underlying English questions. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that full-score perspective to show students where the test rewards careful reading over rushing, especially on the Reading and Science sections where most timing mistakes happen. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 33 on the ACT while juggling a dual PhD/MD track gave Chelain a firsthand appreciation for efficient test strategy — knowing when to skip, when to guess, and how to manage the clock across all four sections. As a radiation oncology resident at Northwestern, she brings the same analytical precision to breaking down Science and Math passages that she uses in clinical problem-solving. Rated 5.0 by students.
Chemical engineering at Michigan means Edward spends his semesters deep in the math and science that dominate half the ACT — but his literature, essay editing, and grammar tutoring keep the English and Reading sections just as locked in, giving him genuine coverage across all four. His perfect 36 composite isn't decorative; he uses it to show students exactly how each section rewards different reading speeds and elimination habits, especially on the Science passages where most prep falls short. Rated 4.8 by students.
Classics and philosophy trained Austin to do two things quickly: parse dense texts and build logical arguments from limited evidence — which maps almost perfectly onto ACT Reading and Science, where students need to extract answers from unfamiliar passages under serious time pressure. His 33 composite and breadth across math, biology, and writing mean he covers all four sections without relying on generic tricks, connecting each question type back to the specific reasoning skill it's actually testing.
Eric's business administration background might seem unusual for ACT prep, but it gave him exactly the kind of cross-disciplinary fluency the test rewards — reading dense passages quickly, interpreting data under pressure, and writing structured arguments for the optional Writing section. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that score to reverse-engineer each section, showing students which question types are worth slowing down for and which ones reward a confident first instinct.
Logan teaches every ACT section with equal fluency — his communication degree sharpens the English and Reading approach, while his calculus and physics background keeps the Math and Science strategies grounded in actual content rather than shortcut gimmicks. That 36 composite means he's seen the ceiling on every section and knows exactly which habits close the gap between a strong score and a perfect one. Rated 5.0 by students.
Most ACT prep treats all four sections like they require the same skillset — Benjamin actually lives in both worlds, with a computer science degree and a graduate English program at Columbia giving him native fluency in quantitative reasoning and close reading alike. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that dual background to teach section-specific strategies, whether it's eliminating trap answers in Reading or managing the Math section's escalating difficulty curve. Rated 5.0 by students.
Double-majoring in molecular biology and French at Yale gave Emily something most ACT tutors lack — genuine fluency in both the STEM and humanities sides of the exam, so she's not faking comfort in any section. She earned a perfect 36 composite and uses her epidemiology training to teach the Science section as a data-literacy exercise, then pivots to the grammar and rhetorical questions on English with the same precision. Rated 5.0 by students.
Mechanical engineering at Harvard keeps Christopher deep in the math and science reasoning the ACT demands, but his Spanish and writing background means he's not faking it on the English and Reading sections either — he earned a 35 composite covering all four with genuine fluency. He teaches students to catch the small misreads and timing traps that separate a strong score from a great one, building section-specific habits rather than generic test tricks. Rated 4.8 by students.
Neuroscience at Columbia trains a specific kind of thinking — pulling signal from noise in dense, data-heavy material — and that's essentially what the ACT Science and Reading sections demand. Sarah scored a 35 composite and applies that same analytical rigor across all four sections, teaching students to decode unfamiliar passages quickly and avoid the second-guessing that burns time. Rated 5.0 by students.
Cornell's chemical engineering program forced Rahul to master everything from thermodynamics to technical writing under pressure — a combination that maps neatly onto the ACT's full spread of math, science, and English content. He earned a perfect 36 composite and leans heavily on conceptual understanding when prepping students, teaching them to reason through unfamiliar Science passages and tricky Math problems instead of relying on memorized shortcuts. Rated 4.9 by students.
A PhD in Computational Mathematics from the University of Chicago paired with dual bachelor's degrees in physics and math means Justin doesn't bluff his way through any ACT section — the Math and Science content is second nature, and his literature, philosophy, and essay editing background keeps the English and Reading sides just as grounded. He earned a 1560 SAT and 33 ACT composite, and he uses that cross-disciplinary fluency to teach students how each section actually thinks, from the Science section's emphasis on graph literacy over scientific knowledge to the English section's small set of recycled grammar conventions. Rated 5.0 by students.
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 perfect 36 composite means Jenna didn't just ace one section — she performed at ceiling across English, Math, Reading, and Science, which lets her diagnose exactly where a student is losing points and tailor strategy accordingly. Her approach to the Science section treats it as a data-interpretation exercise, teaching students to ignore jargon and zero in on graph trends and table relationships. Rated 5.0 by students, she also brings her biochemistry and French double-major background to bear on the reading-heavy sections where cross-disciplinary vocabulary matters.
Research in astrophysics and optical engineering means Dennis doesn't just know the ACT's Math and Science content — he built his career on the quantitative reasoning and data analysis those sections actually test. His perfect 36 composite came from treating each section as a distinct problem set with its own logic, and he teaches students to decode Science passages the same way he'd read a physics paper: extract the variables, ignore the jargon, find the trend. Rated 4.7 by students.
Biology, chemistry, organic chemistry, Spanish, and college-level math — Ashley's subject range means she's not faking fluency in any ACT section, which matters when a student's weak spot shifts from Science to English mid-prep. She earned a 35 composite and uses that cross-discipline foundation to diagnose exactly which question types are dragging a score down, then builds targeted drills around those gaps instead of running through generic practice tests.
Studying physics and classics at Vanderbilt gives Dylan an uncommon combination — the quantitative fluency to own the Math and Science sections and the close-reading discipline to dissect English and Reading passages with equal precision. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that dual lens to show students how each section rewards a different type of attention, then builds targeted drills around the specific question types eating their time.
Going from a 25 to a perfect 36 ACT gave Astoria something most tutors don't have — a precise map of where scores stall and which strategies break through each plateau. She teaches section-specific pacing techniques, particularly for Science (treating passages as data interpretation puzzles) and English (spotting grammar patterns without overthinking). Rated 4.8 by students, she tailors her approach based on where each student's composite currently sits.
A perfect 36 ACT composite means Arthur has mastered every section of the exam, but what sets him apart is his background in economics — he brings a data-driven, strategic mindset to pacing, question triage, and score maximization across English, Math, Reading, and Science. He's especially sharp on the Science section's data interpretation passages and the Reading section's social science and humanities pairings, where knowing how to extract arguments quickly makes all the difference.
Dual degrees in Biological Sciences and Russian mean Eric can genuinely cover every section of the ACT without faking fluency — the Science and Math sections draw on his STEM training, while his language and literature coursework keeps the Reading and English strategies grounded in real comprehension rather than surface-level tricks. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses problem-driven sessions to zero in on the exact question types each student is missing, then builds targeted drills around those gaps. Rated 5.0 by students.
David's computer science training shows up most clearly in how he teaches the ACT — he treats each section as a system to debug, isolating exactly where a student's process breaks down rather than reteaching content they already know. His perfect 36 composite means he's pressure-tested every section himself, and his CS instinct for logical structure is especially useful on Science and Math, where students often have the knowledge but lose points to disorganized problem-solving. Rated 5.0 by students.
Three semesters teaching ESL to immigrants and refugees at Tufts gave Danielle something most ACT tutors lack — a trained instinct for spotting exactly where a student's understanding breaks down and adjusting on the fly. She earned a perfect 36 composite and applies that adaptability across all four sections, with particular strength in the English and Reading strategies her language-teaching background sharpened. Rated 5.0 by students.
Notre Dame trained Benjamin in finance and economics, but his 36 ACT composite — a perfect score — is what matters here: he knows every section cold and teaches the specific computation shortcuts and pattern-recognition tricks that turn near-misses into correct answers under time pressure. His math and science instincts are obvious, but his breadth across writing, literature, and essay editing means the English and Reading sections get the same depth of attention. Rated 5.0 by students.
Having just gone through the ACT herself — earning a perfect 36 composite — Sreya knows which moments in each section actually cost students points, from the tricky pronoun-antecedent questions buried in English to the time crunch on Science's conflicting-viewpoints passages. Her chemistry and computer science coursework at Michigan means the Math and Science content is second nature, freeing her to zero in on the reading speed and strategic elimination skills that push scores from the low 30s into the mid-30s. Rated 5.0 by students.
A psychology degree from Duke — magna cum laude — means Frances reads the ACT's Reading and English sections through the lens of argument structure and rhetorical intent, not just grammar rules and vocab. Her 35 composite and experience across writing, science, and math tutoring let her build section-by-section plans that address the specific question types each student struggles with most.
I am no longer needed.
Graduate-level math at the University of Illinois paired with a computer science degree means Nicholas can dissect the ACT's quantitative sections at a level most tutors can't — but his philosophy reading habit and essay editing experience keep him equally dangerous on English and Reading. His perfect 36 composite isn't just a number; it reflects a section-by-section approach where he teaches students exactly which question types to attack first and which to strategically defer when the clock tightens. Rated 4.9 by students.
Elizabeth scored a 34 ACT composite while balancing a full course load in aviation and management — a background that trained her to think systematically under pressure, which is exactly what the ACT rewards. As a Chicago Public Schools math teacher, she knows the specific content gaps that cost students points on the Math and Science sections and builds targeted strategies around them. Rated 5.0 by students, she's especially effective at turning test anxiety into structured confidence.
Dana's public policy training at Brown means she spent years dissecting dense arguments and pulling evidence from complex texts — the exact muscle the ACT's Reading and English sections test, and a skill most prep courses gloss over. Her perfect 36 composite means she's equally sharp on Math and Science, where she teaches students to stop overthinking data passages and start treating them as straightforward information-retrieval exercises.
Having spent a year as a course assistant in Harvard's math department while majoring in Government, Richard is genuinely comfortable on both sides of the ACT — the quantitative reasoning that dominates Math and Science and the rhetorical analysis that drives English and Reading. His 36 composite means he didn't just survive every section; he maxed each one, and he teaches students the specific pacing and elimination habits that make that possible.
Testimonials
Because the right ACT tutor makes all the difference.
Average Session Rating – Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
Practice ACT
Free practice tests, flashcards, and AI tutoring for ACT
Other Bremerton Tutors
Related Test Prep Tutors in Bremerton
Frequently Asked Questions
Varsity Tutors matches Bremerton students with expert ACT tutors for 1-on-1 instruction. We pair each student with a tutor based on their specific needs, learning style, and goals.
Whether you need homework help, exam prep, or want to get ahead, our ACT tutors are ready to help.
Common challenges include gaps from earlier material, difficulty with specific concepts, and trouble applying learning to new problems. These issues can snowball quickly in ACT.
A tutor identifies where you're stuck, fills in gaps, and provides targeted practice. The 1-on-1 format means you get help exactly where you need it.
Tutors work with your student's actual coursework—homework assignments, class notes, and upcoming tests. This keeps tutoring directly relevant to what's happening in the classroom.
When you share information about your student's school and curriculum, we can match you with a tutor who has relevant experience.
All tutors complete background checks, credential verification, and teaching evaluation. Many of our ACT tutors hold advanced degrees or have years of teaching experience.
You can review tutor profiles to find someone with the right background for your student's level and needs.
Many students see improved grades within a few weeks, along with better understanding of ACT concepts and more confidence tackling challenging material.
Tutors track progress and adjust their approach to ensure continued improvement.
Most students benefit from 1-2 sessions per week. More frequent sessions help if your student is significantly behind or has an important exam coming up.
Your tutor can recommend a schedule based on your student's specific situation and goals.
Tutoring is purchased in packages of hours, with rates varying by tutor experience. Varsity Tutors offers several options to fit different budgets and needs.
You can discuss pricing during your consultation to find what works best.
Your tutor will assess where your student is, discuss goals, and start working on priority areas. Most students bring current homework or upcoming test material to focus on.
By the end, you'll have a clear sense of how the tutor can help and a plan for moving forward.
Let’s find your perfect tutor
Answer a few quick questions. We’ll recommend the right plan and match you with a top 5% tutor.