Award-Winning ACT Math Tutors
serving Bakersfield, CA
Award-Winning
ACT Math
Tutors in Bakersfield
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.
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Zhenrui scored a 36 ACT composite, which means a perfect score on the Math section — the kind of result that comes from knowing exactly how the test frames questions on coordinate geometry, matrices, and trigonometric identities. He teaches students to spot which concept each problem is really testing, cutting through the ACT's tendency to dress up straightforward math in confusing language.

I'm an affable chemistry-loving person whose joy come from delivering knowledge :D
A 36 on the ACT Math section means Jackie has already navigated every question type the test throws — from coordinate geometry and matrix operations to probability and trigonometric identities. She breaks the section into a pacing strategy that prioritizes banking time on the first 40 questions so students have breathing room for the harder final 20. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am currently attending UCLA School of Dentistry. I have spent a big chunk of my life tutoring. I had 600 hours of volunteer experience tutoring 5th graders in language. I also was the Tutoring Head of the Science National Honor Society in high school and spent every week tutoring high school level biology and chemistry. I spent one summer working at Kumon tutoring children in basic math and reading. In college, I spent two years tutoring adults to pass their GED. I was also an Undergraduate Teaching Assistant (UTA) for a development and physiology biology class, as well as a Peer Tutor for other intro level biology classes. If you chose me as your tutor, I look forward to working with you and helping you be the best student you can be!
Covering everything from coordinate geometry to logarithms and trigonometric identities, ACT Math rewards speed as much as knowledge. Michael's 35 ACT composite means he knows the test inside out, and he zeroes in on the 10–15 high-frequency problem types that make the biggest score difference in the 50–60 question range.
The ACT Math section covers a wide spread from pre-algebra through trigonometry, and the challenge is often pacing rather than difficulty. Sarah scored a 35 composite and teaches students to quickly identify which formula or concept each question is really testing, especially on the coordinate geometry and functions problems that eat up the most time.
Scoring a 33 ACT composite, Ema knows the math section's particular rhythm — how it escalates from straightforward arithmetic to coordinate geometry and trigonometry in a tight time window. She teaches students to recognize which formula or approach a question is really testing, cutting through the ACT's tendency to disguise simple concepts in complicated wording.
I am passionate about living life to the fullest and making a difference in the lives of others.
Kevin scored a 33 on the ACT, and his approach to the Math section is built around speed and pattern recognition — knowing instantly whether a problem is testing coordinate geometry, trigonometric identities, or probability, then applying the fastest solution path. He teaches students to spot the 10-15 questions that most test-takers waste time on and develop specific strategies for each type. That kind of targeted prep turns a good math foundation into a score that actually reflects it.
Most ACT Math questions below #40 test algebra and proportional reasoning that students already know — the challenge is executing it cleanly under a one-minute-per-problem pace. Ben's 33 ACT composite and his philosophy training in structured logical thinking make him especially good at teaching students to strip away distracting language and identify exactly what each problem is asking before they start calculating.
Scoring well on ACT Math isn't just about knowing algebra and geometry — it's about recognizing which tool to reach for when a problem could be solved three different ways. Christina, who earned a 34 ACT composite and holds a computer science degree heavy in mathematics, teaches students to spot the fastest path through each question so they finish with time to spare.
I am currently a Junior at UCSB working towards a degree in Bio-psychology, following the Pre-Medical route! I have tutored both formally during high school and informally during my college years. I am comfortable teaching all ages and those who are eager to learn. I love tutoring in a more conversational matter and talking through problems rather than lecture and repeat. Each student has a different way they like to learn, so I adapt those ways and use it to the student's advantage. I love having the student be able to teach me the information we covered at the end of each session - if you can teach it, you have learned it! I am currently tutoring Middle school math, Algebra, Pre-Calculus, Biology, Chemistry, ACT Science, and writing college essays/editing papers. Although I love teaching the logistics of the sciences, especially in ACT format, I find passion in helping students perfect their writing skills and develop strong, academic papers. Outside of school, I love playing sports such as volleyball, track, basketball, and baseball as well as going on hiking trips and adventures. I am a huge traveler, love reading new books, and love meeting new people. Besides helping students learn, I want the student to have fun, enjoy the tutoring session, and actually find a love for the subject they are studying. I used to hate reading and now it is one of my favorite things to do! Let's learn!
Scoring high on ACT Math means moving fast through 60 questions that jump between coordinate geometry, trigonometry, matrices, and probability without warning. Chandler earned a 34 ACT composite and uses his chemistry-trained quantitative instincts to teach strategic shortcuts — like recognizing which problems to set up algebraically versus which to back-solve. He emphasizes pacing drills alongside content review so students don't run out of time on the harder back-half questions.
I am a graduate of Southern Methodist University. I received my Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theatre Studies, with a focus on acting and directing. Since beginning high school, I have spent much of my extracurricular and summer time tutoring, mentoring, and counseling students elementary though high school age. While a tutor a fair amount of subjects, I sincerely enjoy exploring English, Literature, and French. I love the English and Literatue because both subjects connect deeply to my love for theatre, and I love French because I have lived in France twice; once when I was 7 in Paris, and again when I was 16 in the Nord Pas-de-Calais region. I would say my teaching style depends directly on the student, but generally, I love acting like I'm a student too and find fun ways to address the issues they're facing in practical ways. I always try to get my students to appreciate the skills they develop by showing them how they're useful in everyday life. When I'm not tutoring, I enjoy trying new restaurants, going for a swim, practicing my singing, and going to acting class.
I'm particularly passionate about chemistry, and am excited to share my enthusiasm for science with others. With the life sciences, I emphasize overall understanding in place of rote memorization. With math, I stress practice to best develop critical thinking and problem solving techniques. These are general strategies that can be adapted to meet the unique learning style of each student.
Most ACT Math questions aren't hard individually — the challenge is covering algebra, coordinate geometry, and trigonometry across 60 questions in 60 minutes without losing focus. Nicholas approaches the section strategically, teaching students which problem types to attack first and where to apply shortcuts on topics like systems of equations and logarithms. His 33 composite score came from exactly this kind of systematic preparation.
I am a certified ESL instructor with bachelor's and master's degrees in linguistics. I received my Bachelor of Arts from the University of Illinois in 2006, and my Master of Arts from the Graduate University of Applied Linguistics in Dallas, Texas in 2012. My teaching experience includes one year of teaching elementary classes in South Korea (2009-2010), one year of teaching all ages at a private school in Japan (2013-2014), and one year of teaching adult classes in Pasadena, California (2014-present). I have also tutored students in a variety of subjects and grade levels. In addition to ESL, I offer tutoring in reading, writing, grammar, and test prep for the ACT, SAT, and TOEFL. I love teaching because it allows me to use my passion for language to help other people. I believe that we should always be learning, and that learning should be wonderful and exciting. I strive to inspire my students to curiosity and guide them towards independence in their education. In my free time, I enjoy reading, going out for coffee with friends, and occasionally going dancing.
I am confident that by tailoring personalized learning sessions to individual student needs and giving students the resources and skills they need to succeed, any student can ace their next exam, get the best grade, or get into the college of their dreams.
I am currently a student at Ithaca College pursuing a degree in physics. I am very passionate about math and science especially, and I have found that teaching students is another passion. I have experience tutoring high school students in areas including algebra, algebra 2 and AP Physics 1. I love working with students to help them achieve their goals, and finding exactly what teaching style works best for which students.
Scoring well on ACT Math means handling everything from pre-algebra ratios to trigonometric identities under serious time pressure — 60 questions in 60 minutes leaves no room for second-guessing. Gabriel's approach zeroes in on the 15–20 question types that appear most frequently and teaches efficient solution paths for each, so students spend their energy on strategy rather than panic. His own 34 composite reflects that systematic mindset.
I am able to tutor in multiple science subjects, standardized tests (SAT, ACT) and social sciences (public health, political science). I would be happy to help with any age. I help students by getting to know their background and understanding of the subject and helping them build upon that knowledge base through the sessions.
I'm Katrina--a recent transplant to LA and also a recent grad of Yale University! Reading and writing have been integral to my life over the past few years as a Film and Media Studies and Sociology double major. I believe that crafting text can be a fun hobby and a very useful skill. Yet, it can often be challenging. I know what it is like to need help with schoolwork, and I know what it is like to provide that help for others. I believe that with patience and effort, we can solve any problem!
Sixty questions in 60 minutes means ACT Math rewards pattern recognition and strategic shortcuts as much as raw calculation. Luke's approach leans into that — he identifies which algebra, geometry, and trigonometry concepts appear most frequently and drills the fastest paths to answers. With a 32 ACT composite and over a decade of teaching experience, he knows how to turn a student's existing math knowledge into a higher score on test day.
I am a graduate of the University of Miami, where I received my Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing. I also earned a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of California Irvine. In my eight years of tutoring and teaching, I have worked with teens and adults across the United States, as well as two years teaching young children in Japan. My tutoring specialty is in Verbal, Writing, and Critical Reading for the GRE, SAT, and ACT, but I have an overall passion for English language and literature. I believe that the best teaching is usually calm and fun, which springs from a personal relationship based on care and trust for one another. When I'm not teaching, I enjoy writing, cooking (especially vegetarian and gluten-free/allergen-free cuisines), running, and traveling to new cities.
The ACT Math section covers everything from pre-algebra ratios to trigonometric identities, and the real challenge is pacing — not just knowing the math but recognizing which approach gets you to the answer fastest. John earned a 36 composite and teaches students to identify problem types on sight so they can allocate time strategically across all 60 questions.
Industrial engineering at Georgia Tech is essentially applied math under pressure — optimization, probability, statistical modeling — which maps neatly onto the algebra, functions, and data questions that fill the ACT Math section. Ilesh pairs that quantitative training with a perfect 36 ACT composite and a pacing approach built around identifying which of the 60 problems deserve full attention and which can be solved in under 30 seconds. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring high on ACT Math means handling 60 questions in 60 minutes, which leaves no room for getting stuck on coordinate geometry or probability problems. Anna earned a perfect 36 ACT composite and teaches a triage strategy — identifying which questions to solve immediately, which to set up and return to, and which to skip strategically. That pacing discipline is often the difference between a 30 and a 34+.
A chemical engineering degree means Alex didn't just memorize formulas — he used trigonometry, coordinate geometry, and logarithms daily in coursework at Washington and Lee. On the ACT Math section, he teaches students to recognize which of the 60 questions are designed to waste time and which reward a quick conceptual shortcut. His perfect 36 ACT composite came partly from that kind of strategic pacing.
Elliot's neuroscience PhD required heavy quantitative work — experimental design, statistical modeling, data analysis — which keeps the algebra, probability, and graph-reading skills central to ACT Math sharp and automatic. He scored a 36 ACT composite and uses that familiarity with the test's structure to teach students how to quickly classify each of the 60 questions by type and apply the most efficient solution path. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am currently a resident physician at Northwestern Hospital.
The ACT Math section rewards speed as much as knowledge, and Sugi teaches students to recognize which of the 60 questions are quick wins versus time traps. Her perfect 36 composite and strong math background — through calculus and physical chemistry at Rice — mean she can explain underlying concepts when a student needs more than just a shortcut.
Most ACT Math questions below #40 test algebra and proportional reasoning that Austin, with a 33 composite and 1570 SAT, can break down into repeatable two- or three-step routines — the kind of efficiency that turns a rushed 60-minute sprint into a manageable pace. His classics and philosophy training also sharpened his ability to parse tricky word problems, pulling the actual mathematical question out of deliberately confusing setups.
Earning a 36 ACT composite, Eric approaches the Math section as a pacing and pattern-recognition challenge as much as a content test. The first 40 questions reward speed and accuracy on pre-algebra through coordinate geometry, while the final 20 demand quick thinking on trigonometry and matrices — and he teaches students to shift gears between those two phases deliberately. His method turns the 60-minute time crunch from a source of panic into a manageable strategy.
I am a Yale graduate with over 8 years experience tutoring students from a variety of backgrounds. I recently graduated from the Yale School of Public Health with a MPH concentrating in Epidemiology and Global Health. I also received my B.S. from Yale with a double major in Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology and French. I have experience both leading group classes and working with students one on one. I will respond to a student's strengths, weaknesses, and learning style in order to help them succeed and make the most of our time together. I earned a perfect score of 36 on the ACT, 2280 on the SAT, and qualified as a National Merit Scholar on the PSAT. I look forward to working with you!
Most ACT Math questions reward quick recognition over deep calculation — knowing instantly whether a problem is testing coordinate geometry, function behavior, or a ratio setup. Logan's 36 ACT composite came from exactly that kind of systematic categorization, and he teaches students to classify each of the 60 questions within seconds so they spend their time solving, not figuring out what's being asked. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite while pursuing mechanical engineering at Harvard, Christopher brings genuine mathematical fluency to ACT Math prep. He zeroes in on the topics that appear most frequently — logarithms, trigonometric identities, coordinate geometry — and teaches time-saving shortcuts so students aren't scrambling in the final ten questions.
Scoring a 36 composite on the ACT required Benjamin to move through the Math section's 60 questions with speed and precision, from basic proportions all the way to matrices and trigonometric identities. He teaches the pacing strategies and pattern-recognition shortcuts that let students avoid getting bogged down on mid-section problems and still reach the harder questions with time to spare.
Chemical engineering at Michigan means Edward solves problems daily where algebra, trig, and unit conversions aren't textbook exercises — they're how you size a heat exchanger or model fluid flow. That applied math instinct, paired with a 36 ACT composite, lets him show students the fastest way to decode each of the 60 questions rather than grinding through every calculation from scratch. Rated 4.8 by students.
I am a Neuroscience and Behavior major at Columbia University. Although my major is centered in the STEM field, I am also passionate about human rights work, global engagement, and local outreach. While my future plans are subject to change, I see myself continuing in academia, going to medical school, and becoming a physician.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and commitment level, but most students see meaningful gains within 8-12 weeks of consistent practice. Students who work with a tutor typically improve by 2-4 points on the composite ACT (which includes Math), though some see larger jumps by identifying and targeting specific weak areas like algebra, geometry, or trigonometry. The key is focusing on your personal trouble spots rather than reviewing material you already understand well.
The ACT Math section gives you 60 minutes for 60 questions—just one minute per question on average—which creates pressure for students who work methodically or second-guess themselves. Many students rush through easier problems to save time for harder ones, then make careless mistakes. A tutor can help you develop a personalized pacing strategy, learn which question types to tackle first, and practice test-taking techniques that let you work efficiently without sacrificing accuracy.
The best way is to take a full practice test under timed conditions and review your results by topic—algebra, geometry, trigonometry, and data analysis each appear throughout the test. Look for patterns: Are you missing questions because you don't know the concept, or because you're running out of time? A tutor can analyze your practice tests to pinpoint exactly which topics and question types are costing you points, then build a focused study plan around those areas rather than reviewing everything.
Confidence comes from knowing you can handle the material and the format, which is exactly what targeted tutoring builds. By practicing with real ACT problems, learning proven test-taking strategies, and working through timed sections repeatedly, you'll feel more prepared and less panicked on test day. A tutor can also teach you mental strategies to manage anxiety in the moment—like which problems to skip, how to reset after a tough question, and why staying calm actually improves your score.
Your first session focuses on understanding where you're starting from and what you need to improve. Expect to discuss your current score (if you've taken the test), which topics feel weakest, your target score, and when you're taking the ACT. Many tutors will have you work through a few ACT Math problems to see your approach and identify patterns in your mistakes. From there, you'll build a personalized study plan that targets your specific gaps and fits your timeline.
Full practice tests are most valuable every 2-3 weeks so you can track progress and identify remaining weak areas without overloading yourself. Between full tests, focus on targeted practice with specific question types and topics—this is where most improvement happens. Your tutor can help you balance full-length practice with focused drills, and review your results to adjust your study plan based on what's actually working.
Look for someone with strong ACT Math knowledge who understands both the content and the test format—they should be able to explain why answer choices are tricky and teach you strategies specific to how the ACT is structured. Experience working with students at your level matters too; a tutor who's helped students improve from a 24 to a 28 might approach things differently than one focused on pushing 32+ scorers. Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who have proven track records helping students in Bakersfield improve their ACT Math scores.
Most students benefit from 3-5 hours per week of focused ACT Math practice, split between tutoring sessions and independent work—though this varies based on your starting score and timeline. If you're aiming for a significant improvement and have 8-12 weeks before test day, you might invest more time upfront. A tutor can help you create a realistic schedule that fits your other commitments and maximizes your improvement without burning out.
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