Award-Winning GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment Tutors
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Award-Winning GMAT Analytical Writing Assessment Tutors serving San Francisco, CA

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 AWA section scores on a scale of 0-6, and most test-takers score between 3.5-4.5. With focused tutoring, students typically see improvements of 0.5-1.5 points within 4-8 weeks, depending on their starting point and practice frequency. The key is understanding the specific rubric—essay quality, argument analysis, and structure matter more than length or writing perfection.
Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who can identify exactly what's holding back your score, whether that's recognizing logical fallacies, organizing your essay effectively, or managing your 30-minute time constraint.
Most successful test-takers spend 3-5 minutes planning their essay, 20-22 minutes writing, and 2-3 minutes reviewing. The planning phase is critical—mapping out your argument analysis and identifying 2-3 key weaknesses in the prompt prevents rambling and keeps your essay focused.
A tutor can help you develop a repeatable planning template and practice under timed conditions so 30 minutes feels manageable rather than stressful. For students in San Francisco preparing for business school, this disciplined approach often transfers to stronger time management throughout the entire GMAT.
The AWA isn't about persuasive or creative writing—it's about analytical critique. You're given an argument and must identify logical flaws, unsupported assumptions, and weak evidence, not argue your own position. The GMAC graders care about clear reasoning and structured analysis, not eloquent prose.
Many students struggle initially because this format feels unfamiliar. Tutors can show you the exact framework test-makers reward: state the argument, identify specific weaknesses with concrete examples, and explain why each weakness matters. This analytical approach is learnable with targeted practice.
The biggest mistakes are: (1) summarizing the argument instead of critiquing it, (2) pointing out weak points without explaining why they're logically problematic, (3) using vague language like "this is wrong" instead of precise analysis, and (4) running out of time and submitting incomplete essays.
Other frequent issues include failing to identify assumptions the argument relies on, not connecting weaknesses to the conclusion, and writing off-topic content. Expert tutors can spot your personal patterns through practice essays and help you avoid these pitfalls before test day.
Most test-takers benefit from writing 8-15 full timed essays under realistic conditions. This gives you enough repetitions to internalize the format, identify your weak areas, and build confidence. Quality matters more than quantity—writing 15 essays without feedback is less valuable than writing 6 essays and getting detailed analysis on each.
Varsity Tutors connects you with tutors who review your practice essays, mark specific weaknesses, and provide concrete feedback on argument analysis and structure. For students in San Francisco with busy schedules, tutors can also customize a focused practice plan that fits your timeline.
Identifying logical weaknesses is a skill that improves with targeted practice. Start by learning to spot common fallacies: overgeneralization, assuming causation from correlation, circular reasoning, and unsupported leaps in logic. Then practice labeling them in real GMAT prompts.
A tutor can teach you a systematic approach: first identify the argument's conclusion, then trace backward to find every assumption it relies on, then ask "what would need to be true for this assumption to be valid?" This method works consistently across all AWA prompts and helps you write more confident, precise critiques.
Look for someone with strong GMAT experience who understands the specific rubric used to score the AWA section. They should be able to explain why certain essays score higher, provide detailed feedback on your practice work beyond just grammar, and help you develop your own consistent approach to analyzing arguments.
Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors experienced in GMAT preparation for students in San Francisco. The best tutors combine knowledge of test strategy with the ability to teach you the reasoning skills that transfer beyond the test itself—skills valuable for business school coursework.
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