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Award-Winning College Accounting Tutors

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Tiffany
Intermediate and advanced accounting courses are where many students hit a wall — topics like depreciation methods, inventory valuation, and statement of cash flows require precision that intro classes don't demand. Tiffany earned her BBA in accounting and understands the conceptual framework behind...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor in Business Administration, Accounting
University of Chicago
Juris Doctor, Legal Studies

Certified Tutor
Hari
Debits and credits click faster when someone explains the logic behind the accounting equation instead of just handing you T-account templates. Hari tackles journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation by tying each step back to what the numbers actually represent about a ...
University of South Florida-Main Campus
Masters, MBA (Finance and Management)
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelors
Certified Tutor
Gerard
Gerard's MBA training grounds his accounting instruction in business context — when he walks through journal entries or cost classifications, he connects them to the managerial decisions those numbers actually inform. That business-school lens is especially useful for students who struggle to see ac...
Yale School of Management
Masters in Business Administration, Business
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Benjamin
Intermediate and cost accounting courses demand precision that intro classes don't — allocating overhead, preparing consolidated statements, or working through variance analysis. Benjamin's Notre Dame finance and economics training included rigorous accounting coursework, and he approaches each prob...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science in Finance and Economics (minor: Innovation and Entrepreneurship)
Certified Tutor
7+ years
Debits, credits, and journal entries follow a logic that's easier to internalize than to memorize, and Rahi approaches accounting that way — as a system with consistent rules. His engineering mindset breaks the accounting cycle into clear steps, from adjusting entries through financial statement pre...
Princeton University
Engineer
Certified Tutor
Peter
Accounting at the college level trips students up when debits and credits stop being simple and journal entries involve adjustments, depreciation, and accruals. Peter's structured teaching approach — honed through his master's in education — turns the accounting cycle into a logical sequence rather ...
Ohio State
Masters in Education, English Education
Syracuse University
Bachelor of Science, Journalism
Certified Tutor
Jack
The jump from introductory to intermediate accounting — when adjusting entries, depreciation methods, and multi-step income statements pile up — is where most students start struggling. Jack approaches these topics systematically, connecting each accounting procedure back to the economic logic he st...
Northwestern University
B.A. in Theatre and Economics
Certified Tutor
Sam
Intermediate and advanced accounting courses are where many college students hit a wall — topics like consolidations, lease accounting, and statement of cash flows require layered thinking that intro classes don't prepare you for. Sam earned his MS in Accounting and teaches these concepts by tracing...
University of Rhode Island
Master of Science, Accounting
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
Debits, credits, journal entries, and the full accounting cycle can feel like learning a new language — which is something Lulu understands literally, having mastered multiple languages and two master's degrees, including one in accounting from UT Arlington. She walks students through each step of t...
Harvard University
Master degree in Education
The University of Texas at Arlington
Masters, Accounting
National Taiwan University
Bachelors, Psychology
Certified Tutor
2+ years
Angelo
I love helping students in topics related to math, to finance (public and private equity) and to engineering. I believe that if I can't explain concept, then I don't understand it. By that same token, if a student can't explain a concept back to me, then they don't understand it even if they say ...
University of Chicago
Master's/Graduate
University of Pennsylvania
Master's/Graduate
Certified Tutor
Eric
Once college accounting moves past introductory journal entries into adjusting entries, depreciation methods, and multi-step income statements, the detail level jumps significantly. Eric digs into each transaction's logic — why deferred revenue sits on the balance sheet, how LIFO versus FIFO changes...
University of Michigan
Bachelor in Business Administration, Business
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Thirty years as a controller and CFO across multiple midsized industrial companies means Alan has closed the books, built budgets, and analyzed variances in settings where accuracy isn't optional. He holds both an MBA and a CMA credential, and he teaches college accounting topics like cost allocatio...
Cornell University
MBA
Cornell University
Bachelor of Science, Labor and Industrial Relations
Certified Tutor
Debits and credits make intuitive sense once someone shows you how they map to what's actually happening in a business. Andrew tackles college accounting by connecting journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation back to the real transactions they represent. His MBA in fin...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MBA in Finance
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelor's in Engineering
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Albert
Debits and credits are just the entry point — the real challenge in college accounting is building fluency with journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation under accrual-basis rules. Albert's MBA finance concentration required extensive work with income statements, balanc...
University of California Los Angeles
Masters in Business Administration
Wuhan University
Bachelor in Arts, Broadcast Journalism
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Professor
An MBA from USC and Ph.D.-level engineering work might seem like an unusual path into accounting, but Professor Florence's applied mathematics background means she treats the accounting cycle as a logical system — every debit, credit, and adjusting entry follows from a consistent set of rules rather...
University of California Los Angeles
Bachelor of Science, Applied Mathematics
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Non Degree Doctorals, Engineering Design
Top 20 Business Subjects
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Eric
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +37 Subjects
Once college accounting moves past introductory journal entries into adjusting entries, depreciation methods, and multi-step income statements, the detail level jumps significantly. Eric digs into each transaction's logic — why deferred revenue sits on the balance sheet, how LIFO versus FIFO changes cost of goods sold — so students build the reasoning skills that carry through intermediate and managerial accounting.
Alan
Calculus Tutor • +15 Subjects
Thirty years as a controller and CFO across multiple midsized industrial companies means Alan has closed the books, built budgets, and analyzed variances in settings where accuracy isn't optional. He holds both an MBA and a CMA credential, and he teaches college accounting topics like cost allocation, standard costing, and financial statement preparation by grounding them in how these concepts actually function inside a business. Rated 4.9 by students.
Andrew
Calculus Tutor • +24 Subjects
Debits and credits make intuitive sense once someone shows you how they map to what's actually happening in a business. Andrew tackles college accounting by connecting journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation back to the real transactions they represent. His MBA in finance gives him the big-picture fluency to explain why accounting rules exist, not just what they are.
Albert
Calculus Tutor • +42 Subjects
Debits and credits are just the entry point — the real challenge in college accounting is building fluency with journal entries, adjusting entries, and financial statement preparation under accrual-basis rules. Albert's MBA finance concentration required extensive work with income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow analysis, so he teaches accounting mechanics with a clear eye toward what these numbers actually mean to decision-makers.
Professor
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +66 Subjects
An MBA from USC and Ph.D.-level engineering work might seem like an unusual path into accounting, but Professor Florence's applied mathematics background means she treats the accounting cycle as a logical system — every debit, credit, and adjusting entry follows from a consistent set of rules rather than arbitrary conventions. She unpacks topics like cost allocation and financial statement preparation by emphasizing the quantitative reasoning underneath, which tends to stick better than rote memorization of procedures.
Logan
Applied Mathematics Tutor • +52 Subjects
Accounting isn't one of Logan's core subjects, but his physics and applied mathematics training built the kind of precise, systematic thinking that transfers well to balancing ledgers and working through the accounting cycle. He approaches problems methodically — breaking multi-step processes into logical sequences — which is exactly what journal entries and financial statement preparation demand.
Emina
Statistics Tutor • +27 Subjects
Balancing debits and credits is straightforward until you hit adjusting entries, accruals, and multi-step income statements — that's where most college accounting students start to struggle. Emina breaks these concepts down by connecting each journal entry to the real financial story it tells, making the logic behind GAAP principles click rather than feel arbitrary.
Bill
Calculus Tutor • +20 Subjects
Running the books as a CFO for both for-profit and nonprofit organizations means Bill has lived the full accounting cycle — journal entries, financial statements, cost accounting — in contexts where getting it wrong has real consequences. He teaches college accounting by grounding each topic in how it actually plays out inside a company, from accrual entries through managerial reporting. His MBA from Harvard Business School and ongoing CPA candidacy keep him sharp on both the theory and the technical details.
Shih
College Algebra Tutor • +29 Subjects
Debits, credits, and the accounting equation can feel like learning a new language, especially when journal entries start stacking up into adjusted trial balances and multi-step income statements. Shih's finance background at UGA gives him daily exposure to financial reporting, so he walks through each accounting cycle step with the precision the subject demands.
Idara
8th Grade Math Tutor • +60 Subjects
Idara's Stanford management science training and years in finance give her a practical grip on the accounting cycle — from journal entries and adjusting entries through to financial statement preparation. She connects debits and credits to real business decisions, which makes the logic behind accrual accounting click faster than rote memorization alone.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
College Accounting students most commonly struggle with understanding the mechanics behind journal entries and the accounting equation (Assets = Liabilities + Equity), especially when transactions involve multiple accounts. Many students also find it challenging to move from memorizing debit/credit rules to truly understanding why accounts move in specific directions based on their classification. Other frequent pain points include preparing and interpreting financial statements (income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow statements), mastering accrual accounting versus cash accounting, and applying GAAP principles to real-world scenarios where transactions aren't straightforward.
The key is connecting the accounting equation to real business activity. Rather than memorizing "debit assets, credit liabilities," work through concrete examples: when a company borrows $10,000, cash (an asset) increases, so you debit it; the loan obligation (a liability) increases, so you credit it. A strong tutor helps you visualize how every transaction affects the fundamental equation and why the balance sheet must always balance. Once you understand that debits and credits are simply a system for tracking increases and decreases within the equation, the rules become logical rather than arbitrary, and you can confidently handle complex multi-step transactions.
Many students can prepare financial statements mechanically but struggle to interpret what the numbers reveal about a company's health. Common mistakes include ignoring the connections between statements (how net income flows to retained earnings, or how operating activities affect cash), misunderstanding what ratios like current ratio or debt-to-equity actually measure, and failing to consider context (is a high inventory level concerning or normal for this industry?). A tutor can teach you to read statements as a narrative of business performance: start with the income statement to understand profitability, move to the balance sheet to assess financial position, and use the cash flow statement to verify the company actually generated cash. This systematic approach prevents the fragmented understanding that leads to errors on exams and in real-world analysis.
Accrual accounting requires recognizing revenue when earned and expenses when incurred—not when cash changes hands—which contradicts how most people think about money. Students often struggle because they're used to cash accounting (from personal finance) where you only record transactions when money moves. The challenge intensifies with concepts like accounts receivable, accounts payable, prepaid expenses, and accrued liabilities, which all require recording activity before or after cash flow. A tutor helps by emphasizing the core principle: accrual accounting matches revenues to the period they're earned and expenses to the period they're incurred, giving a more accurate picture of performance. Working through realistic examples—like recognizing revenue on an invoice before payment arrives, or recording rent expense for a month you haven't yet paid—makes the logic click and prevents costly errors on case studies and exams.
GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) can feel like a rulebook to memorize, but it's actually a framework built on core concepts: the entity assumption (the business is separate from owners), the revenue recognition principle (record revenue when earned), the matching principle (match expenses to revenues), and conservatism (when uncertain, choose the option that doesn't overstate assets or income). Rather than memorizing every rule, a tutor helps you understand these underlying principles so you can reason through unfamiliar scenarios. For example, if you encounter a transaction involving a warranty obligation, you can apply the matching principle to recognize the warranty expense in the period you sold the product, not when you later pay claims. This principle-based approach builds confidence for both exams and real accounting work, where you'll constantly face situations that don't fit neatly into textbook examples.
College Accounting is the foundation for the CPA exam, which tests increasingly complex applications of the same principles you're learning now—financial reporting, auditing, taxation, and regulation all build on solid fundamentals in journal entries, financial statements, and GAAP. Mastering College Accounting deeply (rather than just passing) gives you a significant advantage because you won't struggle with foundational concepts when tackling advanced material in intermediate accounting, auditing, or tax courses. Additionally, employers and CPA review courses expect you to think critically about accounting problems, not just apply formulas. A tutor who pushes you to explain *why* an account is debited or credited, not just *how* to do it, prepares you for the reasoning-based questions on the CPA exam and the professional judgment required in actual accounting roles.
Bank reconciliations and adjusting entries trip up many students because they require understanding timing differences and recognizing that the company's books may not match reality or GAAP requirements. Bank reconciliations involve identifying why your cash balance differs from the bank's (outstanding checks, deposits in transit, bank errors, service charges) and adjusting your records accordingly. Adjusting entries are more conceptual: they capture economic activity that hasn't been recorded yet—accrued salaries, depreciation, prepaid insurance expiration—to ensure your financial statements reflect the true period's activity under accrual accounting. A tutor helps by teaching you to systematically work through reconciliations (starting with the bank statement balance and working toward your book balance) and to think of adjusting entries as "closing the gap" between what you've recorded and what actually happened. Practice with realistic scenarios builds the muscle memory and confidence needed to handle these tasks quickly and accurately on exams and in practice.
College Accounting isn't just about following rules—it's about understanding how accounting information drives business decisions. For instance, understanding the matching principle helps you see why a company might choose straight-line versus accelerated depreciation (affecting reported profitability), or why revenue recognition policies matter for loan covenants and investor perception. Learning to prepare and analyze financial statements connects to real decisions: a manager reviewing the cash flow statement might discover the company is profitable but running out of cash, signaling a need to accelerate collections or reduce inventory. A tutor can help you bridge classroom theory and business reality by discussing how different accounting choices affect stakeholders (investors, creditors, management), and by analyzing real financial statements from companies you know. This perspective transforms College Accounting from a compliance exercise into a tool for understanding business performance and strategy.
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