Award-Winning GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment Tutors
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Award-Winning GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment Tutors serving Mesa, AZ

Certified Tutor
14+ years
Caroline
The GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment rewards structured argumentation — identifying logical flaws in an argument and dismantling them clearly within 30 minutes. Caroline is currently earning her MBA at MIT Sloan, so she knows exactly what admissions committees expect from clear, persuasive analyti...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Masters in Business Administration, Business Administration and Management
Washington University in St. Louis
Undergraduate degree

Certified Tutor
Vinay
The AWA essay isn't about having a strong opinion — it's about dismantling an argument's logical structure in 30 minutes flat. Vinay teaches students to spot the classic GMAT reasoning flaws (correlation vs. causation, unrepresentative samples, false dichotomies) and build a critique that hits every...
Columbia University in the City of New York
Master in Public Health Administration, MPA in Developmental Practice
University of California Los Angeles
B.S. in Molecular, Cell, & Developmental Biology

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Albert
Most GMAT test-takers underestimate the Analytical Writing Assessment because it's only one essay, but a weak AWA score can raise red flags for admissions committees. Albert approaches it as a logic exercise: he teaches students to systematically dismantle an argument's assumptions, identify evidenc...
University of California Los Angeles
Masters in Business Administration
Wuhan University
Bachelor in Arts, Broadcast Journalism

Certified Tutor
10+ years
The GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment rewards structured, persuasive reasoning under a tight time constraint — exactly the kind of writing Jessica practiced throughout her graduate studies. She breaks down argument prompts into identifiable logical flaws and teaches a repeatable essay framework tha...
Columbia Business School
Masters, N/A
Cornell University
Bachelors, Industrial and Labor Relations

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Edris
The GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment asks for a tight, logical critique of an argument in 30 minutes — there's no room for rambling. Edris's economics degree from Boston College trained him to spot flawed reasoning, unsupported assumptions, and statistical misuse, which are exactly the weaknesses ...
Boston College
Bachelors, Economics, Mathematics and Biology Minor

Certified Tutor
7+ years
Scoring well on the GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment comes down to producing a tightly organized critique of an argument in 30 minutes flat. Rahi, who earned a 34 ACT and has deep experience with standardized test strategy, teaches a repeatable template for identifying logical fallacies, structuri...
Princeton University
Engineer

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Rishi
The GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment rewards structured, logical arguments delivered under time pressure — exactly the kind of thinking Rishi does daily as a math and CS student at Rice. He breaks the essay task into a repeatable framework: identify the argument's assumptions, craft targeted criti...
Rice University
Engineering in Computer Science, Computer Science

Certified Tutor
The GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment rewards a very specific kind of essay: tightly structured, logically precise, and written fast. Carl has taught undergraduate writing at Yale, Oxford, and Glasgow, and he breaks down Argument Analysis essays into a repeatable framework — identifying flawed assu...
Yale University
PHD, Medieval Studies
Yale University
Masters
University of Georgia
Bachelors, English

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jason
The GMAT's Analytical Writing Assessment rewards structured thinking more than fancy vocabulary — a clear thesis, logically sequenced evidence, and direct critique of the argument's assumptions. Jason unpacks each prompt by identifying the logical flaws first, then builds an outline that practically...
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor in Business Administration

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Manuel
Scoring well on the GMAT's Analytical Writing Assessment comes down to one thing: dismantling a flawed argument with surgical precision in 30 minutes. Manuel teaches students to spot common logical fallacies — hasty generalizations, false causation, unwarranted assumptions — and organize their criti...
Princeton University
Bachelor in Arts
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Frequently Asked Questions
The Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA) is a 30-minute section of the GMAT where you write one essay analyzing an argument presented to you. You'll read a short argument, identify logical flaws or unsupported claims, and explain how the argument could be strengthened. This section is scored separately on a scale of 0-6 and tests your critical thinking and writing skills—both essential for business school success.
Most students see meaningful improvement with focused practice and feedback. The key is understanding the specific rubric business schools use—they're looking for clear structure, logical analysis, and error-free writing. Tutors can help you identify your specific weaknesses (whether that's organizing ideas, catching grammar mistakes, or strengthening your argument analysis) and develop a targeted study plan. With consistent practice, most students improve by at least one full point on the 0-6 scale.
The 30 minutes breaks down roughly as: 2-3 minutes reading and planning, 20-23 minutes writing, and 2-3 minutes reviewing. A strong outline is your best friend—spend those first few minutes mapping out your main points so you're not scrambling mid-essay. Tutors can help you practice this timing repeatedly so it becomes automatic, and teach you how to write efficiently without sacrificing quality or clarity.
Students often summarize the argument instead of analyzing it, miss logical flaws because they read too quickly, or spend too much time perfecting early sentences and run out of time for the conclusion. Another frequent issue is writing in overly complex sentences to sound impressive—business schools actually prefer clear, concise writing. Tutors can help you recognize these patterns in your own writing and build habits that avoid them.
Most students benefit from writing 10-15 full practice essays under timed conditions, spread across several weeks. This gives you enough repetition to internalize the structure and timing while staying fresh mentally. Beyond that, reviewing your practice essays with feedback is more valuable than writing more essays—you want to understand what works and what doesn't. Tutors can review your essays, identify patterns in your mistakes, and help you refine your approach.
Summarizing just repeats what the argument says; analyzing explains why the argument is weak or flawed. For example, if an argument claims "Company X is successful because it increased revenue," summarizing would restate that claim. Analyzing would point out that revenue alone doesn't prove success without considering costs, and that correlation doesn't equal causation. Tutors can teach you how to spot logical fallacies and weaknesses, then practice articulating them clearly in your essay.
Your first session typically includes a diagnostic—you'll write a practice essay under timed conditions so your tutor can assess your current strengths and weaknesses. Then you'll review it together to identify patterns: Are you analyzing effectively? Is your structure clear? Do you have grammar or clarity issues? From there, your tutor will build a personalized study plan focused on your specific needs, whether that's argument analysis skills, time management, or polishing your writing.
Anxiety often stems from uncertainty—not knowing what to expect or doubting your abilities. The best antidote is practice. By writing many timed essays before test day, the format becomes familiar and less intimidating. Tutors can also teach you practical strategies like taking a few deep breaths before you start, reading the prompt carefully to avoid rushing, and remembering that perfection isn't the goal—a well-reasoned, clearly written essay scores well. Confidence comes from preparation.
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