Award-Winning GRE Analytical Writing Tutors
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Award-Winning GRE Analytical Writing Tutors serving Chicago, IL

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jeffrey
Most GRE Analytical Writing prep overemphasizes vocabulary and polish, but the real challenge is spotting logical gaps in an argument prompt and responding with structured reasoning in 30 minutes flat. Jeffrey's PhD training in mechanical engineering at Rice means he dissects assumptions and builds ...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science
Rice University
Doctor of Philosophy, Mechanical Engineering

Certified Tutor
Jacob
A literature degree from Vanderbilt means Jacob spent years doing exactly what the GRE Analytical Writing section tests — building thesis-driven arguments from textual evidence and defending them in polished academic prose. He teaches students to spot the logical gaps buried in Argument prompts and ...
Vanderbilt University
Bachelors in Literature

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Mimi
Museum education — Mimi's specialty — is essentially applied argumentation: every exhibit label and gallery talk requires building a concise interpretive claim, supporting it with specific visual evidence, and making it persuasive to a skeptical audience in limited space. That discipline maps surpri...
Harvard University
Masters in Education, Education
Dartmouth College
B.A.

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Sherry
Sherry's dual training in psychology and linguistics at UChicago — plus her current speech-language pathology work at Columbia — means she thinks about argument structure the way most people think about grammar: instinctively. For the Argument task, she teaches students to spot hidden assumptions an...
University of Chicago
Bachelor's degree in psychology and linguistics

Certified Tutor
A PhD in American Studies means Tom has spent years doing exactly what the GRE Analytical Writing section tests — pulling apart arguments, exposing unstated assumptions, and defending a thesis with precise evidence. He teaches students to treat the Argument task like a close reading exercise, mappin...
Boston University
PHD, American Studies
Harvard University
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
Evaluating assumptions and crafting persuasive counterarguments are skills Reid sharpened across two disciplines — a sociology honors thesis at Wesleyan and doctoral work in Education at Harvard. For the GRE's Argument task, he teaches students to map an author's reasoning chain and pinpoint where u...
Harvard University
PHD, Education
Wesleyan University
Bachelor in Arts, Sociology

Certified Tutor
Natasha
Engineering training at MIT means writing constantly — defending design choices, critiquing experimental assumptions, translating dense technical reasoning into clear prose on deadline. Natasha applies that same discipline to GRE Analytical Writing, teaching students how to dissect an Argument promp...
Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Victoria
Graduate-level writing across two master's programs — one in nutrition at Columbia, one in PA studies at Rutgers — trained Victoria to do exactly what the GRE Analytical Writing section demands: stake out a position, support it with precise reasoning, and do it all under a tight clock. She teaches s...
Columbia University
Master's degree in Human Nutrition
Columbia University in the City of New York
Master of Science, Human Nutrition
Rutgers University (New Brunswick)
Bachelor in Arts, Biological and Physical Sciences

Certified Tutor
Years of writing research papers and grant proposals as a PhD chemist at the University of Chicago taught Mary to do exactly what GRE Analytical Writing scores depend on: build a precise argument, anticipate objections, and communicate complex reasoning in clear prose. She applies that scientific ri...
University of Chicago
PhD in Chemistry
Lafayette College
Bachelors, Chemistry/Phyics

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jessica
Earning two doctoral degrees required Jessica to write — and defend — hundreds of pages of analytical prose, from grant proposals to dissertation chapters. She applies that experience to the GRE's Argument task by teaching students to isolate flawed reasoning the way a researcher critiques a study's...
Vanderbilt University
Bachelor in Arts, Cellular and Molecular Biology
Northwestern University
Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT)
Vanderbilt University
Undergraduate degree in Molecular and Cellular Biology
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Frequently Asked Questions
Most students see meaningful improvement within 4-8 weeks of focused preparation. The Analytical Writing section is scored on a 0-6 scale, and improvement depends on your starting point and effort. Students who work with tutors typically gain 0.5-1.5 points by refining their essay structure, argument analysis, and time management. The key is identifying your specific weaknesses—whether that's recognizing logical flaws, organizing complex ideas quickly, or managing the 30-minute time constraint—and addressing them systematically.
The two Analytical Writing tasks—the Issue essay and the Argument essay—require different skills that don't always come naturally together. Students often struggle with time pressure (30 minutes per essay), distinguishing between stating opinions and building logically sound arguments, and recognizing logical fallacies in the Argument task. Another common challenge is understanding what scorers actually want: a clear thesis, specific reasoning, and evidence of critical thinking—not just eloquent writing. Tutors can help you develop efficient strategies for planning, writing, and revising under tight time constraints.
Effective preparation combines learning strategies with timed practice. Start by understanding the scoring rubric and analyzing high-scoring sample essays to see what works. Then practice individual tasks under timed conditions (30 minutes per essay) regularly—aim for 2-3 practice essays per week. Between timed attempts, work on specific skills like identifying argument flaws, brainstorming thesis statements quickly, or improving your editing speed. A tutor can review your practice essays, pinpoint patterns in your mistakes, and help you develop a personalized study schedule that builds both skills and confidence before test day.
The Analytical Writing section measures a distinct skill: your ability to construct and evaluate arguments in writing. While GRE Verbal tests reading comprehension and critical reasoning, Analytical Writing requires you to produce your own organized, evidence-based arguments under time pressure. Some graduate programs weight this section heavily because it reflects skills crucial for academic writing and research. Understanding this distinction matters for your prep strategy—you may need different tutoring approaches for Analytical Writing than for other GRE sections, especially if you're strong in reading but struggle with writing under time constraints.
Look for tutors with specific GRE expertise who understand the scoring rubric and can provide detailed feedback on your essays. Ideally, they've helped multiple students prepare for this section and can diagnose whether your challenges are conceptual (understanding what strong arguments look like), strategic (time management), or execution-based (organization and clarity). A good tutor will review your practice essays with the same rigor as official scorers, help you identify recurring weaknesses, and teach you strategies for planning and revising efficiently within 30 minutes. Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors for students in Chicago who can tailor their approach to your specific needs.
The 30-minute constraint requires a deliberate strategy. Most effective test-takers spend about 5 minutes planning (reading carefully and outlining your argument), 20 minutes drafting, and 5 minutes revising and proofreading. For the Issue essay, plan which side you'll argue and gather 2-3 supporting points. For the Argument essay, identify logical flaws and plan your critique before writing. The challenge for many students is resisting the urge to write immediately without planning, which usually leads to disorganized or weak arguments. A tutor can help you practice this timing strategy on sample essays until it becomes automatic, so you're not scrambling during the actual test.
The Issue task asks you to take a stance on a debatable topic and support it with reasoned examples. You're expressing your own perspective and building an argument for it. The Argument task is different—you're analyzing someone else's argument, identifying logical flaws, and explaining why their reasoning is weak. This requires a critical, analytical mindset rather than a persuasive one. Many students excel at one but struggle with the other. For instance, strong writers might find the Issue essay natural but miss subtle logical fallacies in the Argument essay. Understanding these distinct demands helps you practice each task more effectively and adjust your approach accordingly.
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