Award-Winning ACT Science Tutors
serving Chicago, IL
Who needs tutoring?
FEATURED BY
TUTORS FROM
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
Award-Winning ACT Science Tutors serving Chicago, IL

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Anna
The ACT Science section is really a data interpretation exam disguised as science — success depends on reading graphs, identifying trends, and evaluating conflicting hypotheses quickly and accurately. Anna scored a 36 ACT composite and, as a current MD/MBA student at Northwestern's Feinberg School o...
Northwestern University
Bachelor in Arts, Anthropology
Northwestern University
Graduated (Honors Program in Medical Education)

Certified Tutor
Asta
Most students panic when they see unfamiliar experiments on the ACT Science section, but the test barely requires scientific knowledge — it's really about reading graphs, interpreting data tables, and comparing conflicting hypotheses. Asta treats each passage as a data-literacy exercise and teaches ...
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts in Political Science
Certified Tutor
7+ years
Viktor
I'm referring to math, of course, but I didn't always like the subject. Until about age 16, I thought of math as a boring, mind-numbing process of blindly memorizing formulas and then forgetting them after the test, but a series of wonderful teachers showed me the truth. I had thought that everythin...
University of Chicago
Bachelor of Science
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Elizabeth
I'm Lizz, a middle school math teacher working in Chicago Public Schools. I love to see students go from describing themselves as "not a math person" to feeling like they meet exciting challenges in math and other parts of their lives. Even though I love working in the classroom, I feel like tutorin...
University of North Dakota
Bachelors, Aviation/Management
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Spencer
The ACT Science section isn't really a science test — it's a data interpretation test, and Spencer treats it that way. He teaches students to read graphs, compare experimental setups, and identify conflicting viewpoints without getting bogged down in content they don't need. His own 36 ACT composite...
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Bachelor of Science, Environmental Engineering
Certified Tutor
6+ years
The ACT Science section barely tests science knowledge — it tests whether you can read a graph under pressure and figure out what an experiment was actually measuring. Oliver, an industrial engineering student at Northwestern, approaches it as a data-interpretation drill: isolate the variables, trac...
Northwestern University
Engineer
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Mahalia
I am comfortable tutoring a variety of subjects, I am most passionate about writing and language, and I truly believe that strong writing skills are an asset in every area of life. Through my experience as an after-school program manager, I learned to build relationships and work well with students,...
Northwestern University
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
Jack
Most students panic when they see the ACT Science section, but it's less about knowing biology or chemistry and more about reading graphs, interpreting experimental setups, and spotting trends in data tables. Jack breaks each passage into a quick scan-and-extract routine that keeps students moving t...
Northwestern University
B.A. in Theatre and Economics
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Evan
I'm thrilled to work with anybody on any subjects of interest, reach out with any questions!
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Sociology
Harvard University
Current Grad Student, Statistics
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Blake
The ACT Science section is really a data interpretation exam disguised with scientific vocabulary, and Blake approaches it that way — teaching students to read graphs, identify trends, and compare experimental setups before even glancing at the answer choices. His 35 ACT composite and analytical tra...
Illinois Institute of Technology
Bachelor in Architecture, Architecture
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Austin
I am an MD/PhD student at Northwestern University (PhD Chemistry). I previously received my B.S. in Chemical Science from the University of Michigan in 2020, and am continuing my education both in medicine and in organic synthesis. Although I am capable of tutoring a number of academic topics, my ex...
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Bachelor of Science, Chemistry
Certified Tutor
Jacob
Most students overthink ACT Science because they assume it tests biology and chemistry content. Jacob treats it as a data-interpretation and reading exercise — extracting trends from graphs, comparing experimental setups, and evaluating conflicting viewpoints — which is exactly the analytical approa...
Vanderbilt University
Bachelors in Literature
Certified Tutor
Gabe
Most students panic when they see dense graphs and competing experiments in the ACT Science section, but the trick is that almost no outside science knowledge is required — it's a data interpretation exam in disguise. As a neuroscience graduate who scored a 35 ACT composite, Gabe teaches students to...
Wesleyan University
Bachelors, Neuroscience and Behavior
Certified Tutor
4+ years
I'm a tutor from Princeton University, studying in the School of Public and International Affairs and the Creative Writing Department. I have tutored children of all ages for the past 5 years firstly through the Latin School of Chicago's Middle School Writing Center and now through Varsity Tutors. A...
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Benjamin
The ACT Science section isn't really a science test — it's a data interpretation sprint, and Benjamin treats it that way. With a 35 ACT composite and a strong math and science background at the University of Chicago, he teaches students to read graphs, compare experimental designs, and eliminate ans...
University of Chicago
Current Undergrad Student, Economics
Practice ACT Science
Free practice tests, flashcards, and AI tutoring for ACT Science
Nearby ACT Science Tutors
Other Chicago Tutors
Related Test Prep Tutors in Chicago
Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and how consistently you apply strategies. Students typically see gains of 2-4 points within 8-12 weeks of focused preparation, though some improve faster. The ACT Science section rewards strategic thinking and time management as much as content knowledge, so tutoring that targets your specific weaknesses—whether that's reading dense passages quickly, interpreting graphs, or understanding experimental design—can lead to meaningful score jumps.
Working with an expert tutor helps you identify which of the three question types (Data Representation, Research Summaries, or Conflicting Viewpoints) slow you down most, then builds targeted practice around those areas.
The 40-minute ACT Science section gives you roughly 5 minutes per passage—a tight constraint that trips up many students. The key is knowing what to read carefully and what to skim. You don't need to understand all the science content deeply; you need to locate and interpret data quickly.
Expert tutors teach you to: scan passage introductions for the experiment setup, identify what each graph or table shows, then jump directly to questions and use the visuals to find answers. Many students waste time reading every detail; instead, treat the passage as a reference tool. Practice tests are essential for building this speed without sacrificing accuracy.
The three question types—Data Representation, Research Summaries, and Conflicting Viewpoints—have different challenges. Data Representation typically feels most manageable since you're mostly reading graphs and tables. Research Summaries require understanding experimental design and variables. Conflicting Viewpoints passages are often hardest because they demand reading comprehension and the ability to compare competing explanations.
Most students find one type significantly easier than the others. A tutor can assess which formats work against you and build targeted strategies—for instance, if Conflicting Viewpoints is your weak spot, you'll practice identifying the key difference between viewpoints before getting tangled in details.
ACT Science doesn't require deep science background—you won't need to memorize the periodic table or biology formulas. The test assumes basic high school science knowledge but focuses more on your ability to read data, understand experimental logic, and interpret graphs. That said, familiarity with how scientists present information (variables, hypotheses, controls) helps you move faster through passages.
Tutors often help students bridge gaps in scientific literacy—understanding what a control group is, how to read error bars, or what it means when two variables are inversely related. Building these foundational concepts alongside test strategy makes a real difference in both speed and accuracy.
Consistent, focused practice beats sporadic cramming. Most students benefit from 2-3 ACT Science practice sessions per week, each 45-90 minutes long, for 8-12 weeks before test day. The goal isn't just volume—it's deliberate practice targeting specific weaknesses, plus full practice tests under timed conditions to build stamina and refine pacing.
A tutor helps you structure this practice efficiently. Rather than working through dozens of random passages, you'll focus on the question types and science topics where you struggle most, track your progress across timed sections, and adjust your strategy as you improve.
Start with a full-length ACT practice test taken under timed conditions. Then review your wrong answers carefully—don't just note that you got it wrong, but understand why. Did you misread the graph? Run out of time? Misunderstand what the question asked? These patterns reveal whether your challenge is reading speed, interpretation skills, time management, or content gaps.
Expert tutors analyze your practice test results to pinpoint these patterns and build a plan around them. For Chicago students juggling coursework and other standardized tests, this targeted approach saves time and focuses effort where it matters most.
Test anxiety on ACT Science often stems from feeling rushed or overwhelmed by dense passages. Building confidence through timed practice helps—the more comfortable you are with the pacing and question formats, the less panic kicks in during the actual test. Tutors also teach breathing and mental strategies: slowing down on your first read, talking yourself through confusing visuals, and giving yourself permission to skip a tough passage and return to it if time allows.
Additionally, knowing your score goal and understanding that you don't need to answer every question perfectly reduces pressure. If you're aiming for a 26 on Science, you can miss several questions and still hit your target—a mindset shift that calm, strategic tutoring helps reinforce.
Connect with ACT Science Tutors in Chicago
Get matched with local expert tutors