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Award-Winning ACT Tutors serving Jacksonville, FL

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Priya
Priya's Burnett Medical Scholars coursework at UCF means she's actively using the biology, chemistry, and quantitative reasoning that show up across the ACT's Math and Science sections — and her biotechnology training sharpens the analytical reading that drives the trickiest English and Reading ques...
University of Central Florida
Bachelor of Science, Biotechnology

Certified Tutor
Emily
As a visual artist and political science grad, Emily approaches ACT prep from an unusual angle — she teaches students to read Science passages the way you'd read a photograph, pulling key data from figures before touching the questions, and applies the same argument-dissection skills from her poli-s...
Savannah College of Art and Design
Master of Fine Arts, Photography
New College of Florida
Bachelor in Arts, Political Science and Government
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Samantha
Scoring a 32 on the ACT herself, Samantha knows the pacing traps and question patterns that trip students up across all four sections — especially the Science reasoning portion, where her biology background lets her quickly decode dense data passages. As a working educator, she builds prep plans aro...
Queens University of Charlotte
Bachelors, Biology, General
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Vansh
Going through the IB program and then into aerospace engineering at Georgia Tech gave Vansh a rare combination — the verbal rigor to dissect Reading and English passages plus the quantitative instincts to fly through Math and Science under pressure. He earned a perfect 36 composite and builds his pr...
Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Bachelor of Science, Aerospace Engineering
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Yash
A perfect 36 composite wasn't an accident — Yash developed specific timing strategies and question-recognition patterns across all four sections that he now breaks down for his students. His engineering background at Georgia Tech means the Math and Science sections get especially detailed treatment,...
Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Bachelor of Science, Computer Engineering, General
Certified Tutor
9+ years
A 36 composite score means Michael didn't just do well on the ACT — he maxed it out across every section, from the science data interpretation to the English rhetorical skills questions. That range mirrors his own academic background spanning fine arts, languages, and quantitative subjects, so he ca...
NYU Shanghai
BFA
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Veena
Scoring a 35 composite on the ACT gave Veena firsthand insight into how each section works, but it's her science background that really sets her apart on the Science reasoning portion — she teaches students to read data displays and conflicting viewpoints passages like a researcher would. Her dual f...
University of Miami
Bachelor of Science, Microbiology and Immunology
Certified Tutor
Anthony
Scoring a 34 on the ACT himself, Anthony knows the specific pacing traps and question structures that trip students up — especially on the Math and Science sections where time pressure does more damage than content gaps. His background in math education means he teaches the underlying reasoning behi...
Florida International University
Masters, Mathematics Education
University of Miami
Bachelor of Science, Psychology, Philosophy
Certified Tutor
Parker
Dual-majoring in computer science and studio art means Parker's brain toggles between algorithmic precision and creative problem-solving — a combination that translates to ACT prep covering every section without defaulting to a one-size-fits-all playbook. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses th...
University of Miami
Current Undergrad, Computer Science, Studio Art
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Scoring a 34 composite on the ACT gave Lia firsthand insight into pacing strategies across all four sections — especially the math, where jumping between algebra, geometry, and trigonometry under time pressure trips up even strong students. Her certified math teaching background means she can quickl...
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Gabriel
Founding and running his high school's Mu Alpha Theta chapter for four years gave Gabriel a habit of explaining math concepts on the spot — a skill that translates directly to ACT prep, where he covers not just the Math section but also the data-heavy reasoning the Science section demands. His 35 co...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of Science, Economics
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Harrison
Nanotechnology research and an interdisciplinary science degree mean Harrison doesn't just know the ACT's content — he's actively working in the kind of quantitative and analytical reasoning the test measures across Math, Science, and Reading. His 35 composite came from treating each section as a di...
University of Central Florida
Bachelor of Science, Multi-/Interdisciplinary Studies, General
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Brandon
Computer science trained Brandon to debug systematically — isolate the problem, test a fix, move on — and that's exactly how he approaches ACT prep, diagnosing which question types are costing a student the most points before drilling targeted strategies section by section. His 33 composite and brea...
Rochester Institute of Technology
Master of Science, Computer Science
Rochester Institute of Technology
Bachelor of Science, Computer Science
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Olivia
An American Studies degree means Olivia spent years doing exactly what the ACT Reading and English sections demand — pulling arguments out of dense texts and writing precisely under pressure. She scored a 34 composite and uses her cross-disciplinary background to cover the full exam, including the M...
Yale University
Bachelors, American Studies
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Destiny
Destiny's human biology training at Harvard means the ACT Science section reads like familiar territory — interpreting experimental designs, extracting trends from data tables, parsing conflicting viewpoints — while her 35 composite proves she's just as sharp on the English, Reading, and Math sectio...
Harvard University
Bachelor of Science, Human Biology
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Frequently Asked Questions
The University of Florida typically admits students with ACT scores between 29-33, with most admitted students scoring in the 30-32 range. To be competitive for UF's most selective programs, aiming for a 32+ gives you a strong position. Keep in mind that UF also considers GPA, essays, and extracurriculars, so a strong ACT score combined with a solid GPA significantly improves your chances of admission.
Florida's Bright Futures Scholarship program has specific ACT score requirements that vary by scholarship level—the most competitive awards typically require scores of 28 or higher. Beyond Bright Futures, many Florida universities offer merit-based scholarships tied to test scores; for example, FSU and UF both use ACT scores as a key factor in awarding academic scholarships. A score of 28+ can open doors to significant scholarship opportunities, potentially saving thousands in college costs.
The ACT Science section tests data interpretation and scientific reasoning rather than memorized science facts—you're reading graphs, tables, and experimental descriptions to answer questions in just 35 minutes. Many students struggle with this section because it's unique to the ACT and requires speed; you have roughly 52 seconds per question to understand complex visuals and extract key information. Focusing on efficient reading strategies and practice with timed passages can significantly improve performance here.
The ACT is faster-paced than the SAT—you have roughly 1 minute per question across all sections, with the Science section being particularly tight at 52 seconds per question. A smart strategy is to work through easier questions first to build momentum and secure points, then return to harder ones if time allows. Practicing with timed sections regularly helps you develop a sustainable pace; many students benefit from learning section-specific timing strategies, like spending 8-9 minutes per Reading passage rather than trying to read everything carefully.
Most students see a 2-4 point composite improvement with consistent, targeted prep over 8-12 weeks—and students who work with personalized instruction often see gains in the 4-6 point range. The amount of improvement depends on your starting score; students starting at 20 typically have more room to grow than those already at 30+. With focused work on your weakest sections and strategic practice, improvements of 5+ points are achievable, especially if you address specific challenges like pacing on the Science section or algebra gaps in Math.
Both tests are widely accepted at Florida universities, though the SAT has become slightly more common nationally in recent years. However, many Florida students and families still prefer the ACT because its structure and content align well with how many high schools teach—particularly for students strong in science and math who can manage the faster pace. The best choice depends on your strengths: if you excel with data interpretation and work quickly, the ACT may be your better fit; if you prefer deeper reading passages and more time per question, the SAT might suit you better.
Most juniors benefit from starting ACT prep in the fall or early spring, giving 3-4 months before taking the test in April or June—this timeline allows for diagnostic testing, targeted skill-building, and multiple practice tests. If you're a senior just getting started, you can still make meaningful progress with 6-8 weeks of focused preparation, though starting earlier reduces stress and allows for retesting if needed. Many Jacksonville students take the ACT multiple times; starting early gives you flexibility to improve and submit your best score.
The ACT Math section includes some trigonometry questions (roughly 5-10% of the section), but they focus on basic concepts like sine, cosine, and tangent rather than advanced applications. If you haven't taken precalculus, you can still score well by learning foundational trig concepts and focusing on the algebra, geometry, and other topics that make up the bulk of the section. Personalized instruction can help you quickly master trig essentials and build confidence in these questions without needing a full precalc course.
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