Award-Winning ACT Reading Tutors
serving Fresno, CA
Award-Winning
ACT Reading
Tutors in Fresno
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
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Reading four dense passages in 35 minutes means students can't afford to read the way they normally do — they need a strategy. Sarah, who scored a 35 ACT composite and studies journalism at NYU, teaches active-reading techniques for each passage type, from tagging the author's argument in social science texts to isolating key data points in natural science excerpts.

The ACT Reading section isn't about being a fast reader — it's about knowing where to look and how to eliminate answer choices efficiently across four dense passages in 35 minutes. Zhenrui, who earned a 36 composite, breaks down each passage type (prose fiction, social science, humanities, natural science) and teaches the specific retrieval strategies that keep students from second-guessing themselves.
I'm an affable chemistry-loving person whose joy come from delivering knowledge :D
The ACT Reading section isn't really about reading — it's about efficiently locating evidence under a tight time constraint. Jackie scored a 35 on this section and teaches a passage-mapping technique that cuts down on re-reading and keeps students from falling into the trap of "almost right" answer choices. She knows which question stems signal inference versus detail retrieval, and drills that distinction until it becomes automatic.
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!
A drama background might seem unrelated to ACT Reading, but Michael's training at NYU's Atlantic Acting School built a habit of breaking texts apart — identifying a character's motivation, an author's argument, the shift in tone between paragraphs — that maps directly onto the prose fiction and humanities passages. With a 35 ACT composite and a 4.8 student rating, he teaches students to read passages like scripts: tracking who wants what and why, which makes inference and tone questions click faster.
Christina's computer science training built a habit of reading precisely — catching the difference between what a specification actually says versus what you assume it says — which is the same skill that separates correct and tempting-but-wrong answers on ACT Reading inference questions. With a 34 composite and broad experience across both English and science subjects, she teaches students to isolate the exact sentence or phrase that justifies an answer choice, especially on the natural science and social science passages where technical language can make everything sound equally plausible.
I am passionate about living life to the fullest and making a difference in the lives of others.
Most ACT Reading mistakes happen not because students can't comprehend the passage but because they spend too long on it and rush the questions. Ben's English and philosophy background trained him to extract an author's argument and tone quickly — a skill he now breaks down into a repeatable method for tackling each passage type, from prose fiction to natural science. He scored a 33 composite on the ACT.
I am a recent graduate of Harvard University, where I received my Bachelor of Arts in English Literature with an emphasis on screenwriting. Although I love literature and writing, I am most passionate about tutoring math. I have five years of experience as a math tutor, during which time I helped students ages 3-17 with math ranging from basic arithmetic to pre-calculus. My favorite math topic is algebra, particularly because of its usefulness in solving real-world word problems. In addition to mathematics, I find joy in teaching/elucidating Shakespeare to high-school students. As a classically trained actor, I find it fun to tackle Shakespeare’s dense texts from a performance and character-driven perspective. In my spare time, I enjoy vegan baking and roller-blading.
I am a 2018 graduate of University of California Santa Barbara, with a B.S. degree in Biological Sciences through the Honors Program. I consider education to be tremendously important not just during development, but also throughout life. I believe it's critical to establish the right attitude toward learning; a feat that once accomplished can improve a student's long-term output in school. Education is an integral part of my career choice: I aspire to become a physician, a career intertwined with knowledge and education. However, teaching and learning are present in every career, and every part of life for that matter.
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!
I am a current undergraduate student at Occidental College, where I am majoring in Chemistry. I have a passion for teaching and engaging students with their education. There is little that is more rewarding than aiding a struggling student successfully. In high school, I was a member of the National Honors Society and relished the opportunities that organization provided me to tutor others. I love learning, and I love sharing that with others. What better way to engage others learning than tutoring?I enjoy video games and other computer related tasks, baseball, basketball, and I love to read.
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.
Travis scored a 33 ACT composite and teaches across both English and social studies subjects, which means he's comfortable with every passage type the Reading section throws at students — from prose fiction to natural science. His approach zeroes in on answer elimination: identifying why three choices are wrong rather than hunting for the one that feels right, a mental shift that turns ambiguous questions into manageable ones.
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.
Reading four dense passages in 35 minutes means students can't afford to read passively — they need a method. Nicholas teaches an active annotation approach tailored to each ACT Reading passage type, from the prose fiction opening to the natural science closer, so students know what kind of questions to expect before they even start reading. He scored a 33 ACT composite and treats the Reading section as a skills problem, not a luck problem.
Most ACT Reading mistakes come from running out of time, not from a lack of comprehension. Valerie teaches a structured passage-attack strategy — how to identify the question type, locate evidence efficiently, and avoid trap answers that sound right but distort the passage's actual claims. Her 32 ACT composite reflects the disciplined, methodical reading habits she passes on to her students.
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!
A self-described voracious reader of everything from science fiction to literary classics, Gabriel brings genuine enthusiasm for close reading to ACT Reading prep. He teaches students to identify passage structure — how a narrative builds, where an argument pivots — so they can locate evidence-based answers quickly across all four passage types. That combination of speed and comprehension is why his students have rated him 5.0.
Luke's decade of college-level teaching across subjects from sculpture to philosophy means he's assigned, graded, and dissected the same kinds of dense argumentative and narrative texts that show up in ACT Reading passages — and he knows where students lose the thread. He teaches a purpose-first strategy: nail down what the author wants you to believe in the opening lines, then use that as a filter so detail and inference questions become quick confirmations rather than full-passage scavenger hunts. His 32 ACT composite and 4.9 rating back up an approach built on real reading volume, not test-prep shortcuts.
Speed and precision define the ACT Reading section: four passages, 35 minutes, and questions designed to punish skimming. Patrick teaches students to identify passage structure quickly — how a narrative builds, where a scientist's argument pivots, what a social science author concedes — so they can answer with confidence instead of re-reading. With a 32 ACT composite and graduate-level training in literary analysis, he knows exactly what these passages demand.
Most students treat ACT Reading as a speed test, but Ilesh reframes it as a precision exercise: knowing what the question actually asks before hunting for evidence in the passage. His 36 composite came partly from a disciplined passage-mapping strategy that he now teaches students to replicate across all four prose genres the section throws at them.
Reading four dense passages in 35 minutes requires a method, not just speed. John breaks the ACT Reading section into a decision-making process: how to skim for structure, when to go back to the text versus trusting your first read, and how to eliminate answer choices that sound right but distort the passage. His 36 composite and background in literature make him especially sharp on the prose fiction and humanities passages.
Most ACT Reading mistakes come from time pressure, not comprehension — students understand passages but can't consistently answer 40 questions in 35 minutes. Elliot teaches a triage strategy: how to identify question types, when to skim versus close-read, and how to eliminate answer choices that paraphrase the passage just enough to seem right. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am currently a resident physician at Northwestern Hospital.
Medical school at the University of Arizona means Alex reads hundreds of pages of dense, unfamiliar material every week — the same core skill the ACT Reading section tests under a 35-minute clock. With a perfect 36 ACT composite, he teaches students to attack the paired viewpoints and natural science passages by isolating each author's claim before looking at answer choices, which eliminates the subtle scope-shift traps that cost most test-takers points. Rated 4.8 by students.
Reading four dense passages in 35 minutes forces a different kind of reading than most students are used to. Sugi's cognitive science training at Rice gives her a framework for teaching active reading strategies — how to map an argument's structure on a first pass so that inference and tone questions become straightforward rather than agonizing. She holds a perfect 36 ACT composite and a 5.0 tutoring rating.
After scoring a perfect 36 ACT composite, Anna developed a question-first approach to the Reading section — previewing what each question demands before touching the passage, so every line read serves a purpose. Her medical education background means she's used to processing dense, unfamiliar material quickly and extracting exactly what matters, a skill that translates directly to the natural science and social science passages. Rated 5.0 by students.
Most ACT Reading mistakes come from spending too long on passages and rushing through questions — or the reverse. Logan, who earned a 36 composite, teaches a deliberate passage-mapping technique that lets students locate evidence for inference and detail questions without rereading entire paragraphs. His communication background also sharpens how students interpret tone and author's-purpose questions.
Mechanical engineering coursework at Harvard means Christopher reads the way the ACT Reading section rewards — extracting key claims from dense technical material fast and ignoring everything that doesn't answer the question in front of him. He applies that same efficiency to all four passage types, teaching students to map an author's argument structure in the first read so that inference and detail questions become quick lookups rather than guesswork. His 35 ACT composite and 4.8 student rating back up the approach.
Most ACT Reading mistakes come from spending too long on one passage or second-guessing answers that felt right the first time. Edward teaches a timing strategy that allocates minutes by passage type — prose fiction, social science, humanities, natural science — and shows students how to locate textual evidence quickly instead of re-reading entire paragraphs. His 36 composite reflects command of every section, not just the math side.
Reading dense, unfamiliar passages under time pressure is where most ACT Reading scores stall out. Austin's background in Classics and Philosophy means he spent years doing exactly that — pulling arguments from ancient texts and evaluating how authors build their claims. He teaches students to map passage structure before touching the questions, turning a 35-minute sprint into a manageable process.
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!
The ACT Reading section isn't really about comprehension — it's about extracting specific evidence under a brutal time constraint. Benjamin scored a 36 composite and applies the close-reading skills from his Columbia English program to teach students how to identify what each question is actually asking, locate proof in the passage quickly, and eliminate trap answers with confidence.
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.
I am available to tutor a range of middle school and high school subjects, but I am most excited about tutoring test prep. I remember how stressful preparing for college can be and I am eager to do my part in helping students fulfill their college goals. I believe that learning is a collaborative process and I am committed to being as actively involved in the student's learning as I can. In my spare time, I enjoy reading, going to the movies (I try to see each Oscar nominee before the ceremony every year.), and am a huge Michigan sports fan.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and commitment level, but students typically see gains of 2-5 points on the ACT Reading section with focused tutoring and consistent practice. The key is identifying your specific weaknesses—whether that's pacing, vocabulary, inference questions, or understanding main ideas—and targeting those areas systematically. A tutor can help you develop a personalized study plan and track progress through practice tests to ensure you're moving in the right direction.
Timing is one of the most common challenges on ACT Reading, where you have 35 minutes to read four passages and answer 40 questions. The solution isn't to read faster—it's to read smarter and develop a strategic approach. Tutors can teach you techniques like skimming for main ideas, identifying question patterns, and prioritizing which passages to tackle first based on difficulty. With practice, you'll learn to allocate your time more effectively and avoid getting stuck on difficult questions.
ACT Reading includes questions about main ideas, supporting details, vocabulary in context, inference, author's tone, and structure. Many students find inference and tone questions most challenging because they require deeper comprehension beyond what's explicitly stated in the text. A tutor can help you understand the subtle differences between question types, teach you how to spot clues in the passage, and practice strategies for each format so you answer with confidence.
Your first session is focused on assessment and planning. A tutor will likely have you take a practice ACT Reading section or review a recent official test to identify your strengths and specific problem areas—whether that's comprehension, pacing, question types, or test anxiety. From there, they'll work with you to create a customized study plan that fits your timeline and goals, and you'll start working on targeted strategies right away.
Practice tests are essential because they help you build stamina, identify patterns in your mistakes, and get comfortable with the actual test format and timing. Taking full practice sections under timed conditions is much more valuable than studying in isolation. A tutor can help you analyze your practice test results to pinpoint whether you're missing questions due to comprehension, misreading, rushing, or unfamiliar question types—then target those specific issues in your study plan.
While ACT Reading does test vocabulary, you don't need to memorize thousands of words. Instead, focus on understanding words in context, which is how they appear on the test. Most vocabulary questions provide clues within the passage itself, and a tutor can teach you strategies for using surrounding sentences to figure out word meanings. Building a stronger vocabulary over time certainly helps with overall comprehension, but context clues and strategic reading are more important than rote memorization.
Test anxiety on ACT Reading often stems from time pressure and fear of difficult passages, which can make you rush or second-guess yourself. A tutor can help you build confidence through repeated practice, teach you breathing and mental strategies to stay calm, and remind you that you don't need a perfect score—many students get into great colleges with a 28-30 on ACT Reading. Having a solid strategy and knowing you've practiced extensively goes a long way toward reducing anxiety on test day.
Most students benefit from 2-3 months of focused preparation, with tutoring sessions 1-2 times per week depending on your starting point and test date. Between sessions, you'll want to practice independently with timed sections and full practice tests. A tutor can help you create a realistic study schedule that balances tutoring, independent practice, and review so you're making steady progress without burning out.
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