Award-Winning GRE Analytical Writing Tutors serving Boston, MA

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Award-Winning GRE Analytical Writing Tutors serving Boston, MA

Jeffrey

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Jeffrey

Doctor of Philosophy, Mechanical Engineering
Jeffrey's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Calculus
Geometry
Calculus
Algebra

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 ...

Education

University of Notre Dame

Bachelor of Science

Rice University

Doctor of Philosophy, Mechanical Engineering

Test Scores
ACT
34
Jacob

Certified Tutor

Jacob

Bachelors in Literature
Jacob's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
Quantitative Reasoning
PSAT Writing Skills

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 ...

Education

Vanderbilt University

Bachelors in Literature

Test Scores
ACT
35
Mimi

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Mimi

Masters in Education, Education
Mimi's other Tutor Subjects
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra
Elementary School Math

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...

Education

Harvard University

Masters in Education, Education

Dartmouth College

B.A.

Test Scores
SAT
1560
Sherry

Certified Tutor

10+ years

Sherry

Bachelor's degree in psychology and linguistics
Sherry's other Tutor Subjects
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra
Elementary School Math

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...

Education

University of Chicago

Bachelor's degree in psychology and linguistics

Test Scores
Perfect Score
SAT
1600
Tom

Certified Tutor

Tom

PHD, American Studies
Tom's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Geometry
Calculus

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...

Education

Boston University

PHD, American Studies

Harvard University

Bachelors

Test Scores
SAT
1520
Reid

Certified Tutor

Reid

PHD, Education
Reid's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra

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...

Education

Harvard University

PHD, Education

Wesleyan University

Bachelor in Arts, Sociology

Test Scores
ACT
32
Natasha

Certified Tutor

Natasha

Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Natasha's other Tutor Subjects
AP Calculus AB
Pre-Algebra
Finite Mathematics
College Algebra

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...

Education

Johns Hopkins University

Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Test Scores
SAT
1500
Victoria

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Victoria

Master's degree in Human Nutrition
Victoria's other Tutor Subjects
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra
Elementary School Math

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...

Education

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

Mary

Certified Tutor

Mary

PhD in Chemistry
Mary's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Calculus
Algebra

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...

Education

University of Chicago

PhD in Chemistry

Lafayette College

Bachelors, Chemistry/Phyics

Jessica

Certified Tutor

6+ years

Jessica

Bachelor in Arts, Cellular and Molecular Biology
Jessica's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
College Essays
Literature

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...

Education

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Score improvement depends on your starting point and commitment level, but most students see meaningful gains with focused instruction. The Analytical Writing section is particularly responsive to targeted practice because the two essays (Issue and Argument) follow predictable patterns that can be mastered through deliberate preparation. Tutors work with you to identify your specific weaknesses—whether that's thesis clarity, evidence development, or essay structure—and create a focused improvement plan. Many students improve by 1-2 points on the 0-6 scale within 4-8 weeks of consistent work.

Unlike the Math and Verbal sections where you select answers, the Analytical Writing section requires you to write two timed essays: one analyzing an issue and one critiquing an argument. This means there's no "right answer" to find—instead, evaluators assess your ability to construct clear arguments, support claims with evidence, and write under pressure. The biggest challenges are managing your time (30 minutes per essay), organizing complex thoughts quickly, and understanding exactly what the essay prompts are asking. Personalized tutoring helps you develop templates and strategies specific to each essay type so you can write confidently and coherently on test day.

The key is planning before you write. A strong time strategy typically looks like: spend 2-3 minutes reading and understanding the prompt, 2-3 minutes outlining your response, 20-22 minutes writing, and 2-3 minutes reviewing for obvious errors. This structure prevents you from diving in without direction, which often leads to rambling or incomplete arguments. Many students struggle with overthinking their opening sentences or trying to achieve perfection, which eats into writing time. Expert tutors can help you practice this pacing repeatedly so it becomes automatic, allowing you to focus on content quality rather than the clock on test day.

Effective practice involves writing full essays under timed conditions—not just reading sample essays or studying templates passively. Start by completing 1-2 timed essays per week using official GRE prompts, then review what you wrote against scoring rubrics to identify patterns in your weaknesses. Are your arguments underdeveloped? Is your organization unclear? Do you struggle with grammar under pressure? Once you identify specific gaps, targeted practice becomes much more efficient. Personalized tutoring accelerates this process by giving you immediate feedback on your actual writing and helping you refine your approach based on what's holding you back, rather than generic tips that may not apply to your style.

The Argument essay asks you to critique someone else's reasoning, not defend your own position. This requires identifying logical gaps, unsupported assumptions, and weak evidence in the prompt—then explaining why these weaknesses matter. A solid structure follows this pattern: introduce what the argument claims and identify its main flaw, explain 1-2 additional logical gaps or assumptions, discuss how the argument could be strengthened, and conclude. The critical skill is distinguishing between "I disagree with this conclusion" and "this reasoning is flawed." Many students struggle with this distinction initially. Working with a tutor helps you analyze arguments systematically and develop a repeatable approach so you can confidently identify and explain flaws within your 30-minute window.

The Issue essay asks for your perspective on a debatable statement, supported by relevant examples and reasoning. Strong responses include a clear thesis position, 2-3 specific, well-explained examples (from history, literature, current events, or personal experience), acknowledgment of opposing viewpoints, and a logical conclusion. The biggest mistakes are being too vague with examples, providing list-like claims without development, or taking an overly simplistic position. You don't need a controversial stance—evaluators reward thoughtful complexity and concrete support more than a particular opinion. Tutors help you develop a versatile approach for generating strong examples quickly, organizing complex positions clearly, and writing with nuance under pressure—skills that significantly boost your essay quality and score.

Test anxiety during Analytical Writing often stems from uncertainty about what evaluators want or fear of "getting it wrong." Building confidence comes from understanding that there's no single correct essay—evaluators reward clear thinking, supported reasoning, and effective communication. Practicing timed essays repeatedly reduces anxiety because you develop muscle memory for the process and prove to yourself that you can complete essays under pressure. Additionally, understanding the scoring rubric in detail helps you focus on what actually matters (clarity, development, organization) rather than perfectionism. Personalized tutoring provides the repeated practice, immediate feedback, and targeted skill-building that transform test anxiety into confidence, especially when you see tangible improvement in your own writing over time.

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