Award-Winning ACT Tutors
serving Flint, MI
Award-Winning
ACT
Tutors in Flint
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
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Eric's business administration background might seem unusual for ACT prep, but it gave him exactly the kind of cross-disciplinary fluency the test rewards — reading dense passages quickly, interpreting data under pressure, and writing structured arguments for the optional Writing section. He earned a perfect 36 composite and uses that score to reverse-engineer each section, showing students which question types are worth slowing down for and which ones reward a confident first instinct.

Most ACT prep treats every section the same way — Nikhil doesn't. His biomedical engineering training at Michigan means the Math and Science sections are second nature, and his writing and literature tutoring experience gives him genuine fluency on English and Reading, so students get a tutor who actually understands the content behind all four sections rather than just recycling generic strategies. He earned a perfect 36 composite and holds a 5.0 rating.
Having just gone through the ACT herself — earning a perfect 36 composite — Sreya knows which moments in each section actually cost students points, from the tricky pronoun-antecedent questions buried in English to the time crunch on Science's conflicting-viewpoints passages. Her chemistry and computer science coursework at Michigan means the Math and Science content is second nature, freeing her to zero in on the reading speed and strategic elimination skills that push scores from the low 30s into the mid-30s. Rated 5.0 by students.
Yale's English program trains students to read fast and argue precisely — two skills Sophia applies directly to the ACT's Reading and English sections, where she teaches students to dissect passage structure and spot the grammar patterns the test recycles every administration. Her perfect 36 composite means she's mastered the Math and Science sides too, and her approach leans on building section-specific timing plans rather than generic content review. Students preparing college applications get an added bonus: Sophia also coaches essays, so she understands the bigger picture her ACT students are working toward.
A perfect 36 composite speaks for itself, but what sets Krisha apart is her section-by-section approach — she breaks the ACT into its specific pain points, whether that's pacing on the Science passages, comma rules on English, or translating word problems into equations on Math. She earned that score as a student at Northville High and now teaches the exact timing strategies and question-type patterns she used to get there. Rated 5.0 by students.
Two years teaching 9th and 10th graders in a real classroom gave Mathew something most ACT tutors lack — an instinct for where students silently get lost, whether it's misreading a Science graph's axis labels or second-guessing comma placement on English. His neuroscience degree and medical school acceptance mean the content across all four sections is second nature, and his 35 composite shows he knows how to execute under the test's time constraints. He builds section-specific plans around each student's weak spots rather than running a one-size-fits-all review.
Scoring a 35 composite means Phil knows how to manage time and strategy across all four ACT sections, not just the ones that come naturally. He treats the Science section as a data-reading exercise and breaks the Math section into the specific concept clusters — logarithms, trigonometry, coordinate geometry — that account for the hardest points. His background in both chemistry and advanced math means he can coach the content and the test-taking approach simultaneously.
Biology coursework at Michigan keeps Samantha sharp on the Science section's dense research summaries, but her real strength is the full-exam coverage that comes from tutoring everything from calculus and physics to literature and essay editing — there's no section she has to hand-wave through. She earned a 35 composite and builds each student's prep around the specific question types draining their score, whether that's the Math section's later-problem difficulty jump or the rhetorical strategy questions buried in English passages.
A 35 ACT composite means Megan knows what it takes to perform at the top across all four sections — but what sets her apart is how she breaks the test into repeatable strategies, particularly for the Science and Math sections where time pressure trips up even strong students. Her engineering coursework at Yale keeps her sharp on data interpretation and quantitative reasoning, the exact skills the ACT rewards. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 35 composite on the ACT gave Anusha firsthand knowledge of what each section actually tests — and where most students lose points they shouldn't. She breaks the exam into repeatable strategies, from pacing on the Science section's conflicting viewpoints passages to spotting the grammar patterns that ACT English recycles every administration. Her cognitive science background also means she understands how memory and focus work under timed pressure, which she builds directly into her prep approach.
Being in an 8-year direct medical program at VCU means Raveena juggles heavy science, math, and writing workloads simultaneously — the exact combination the ACT tests across all four sections. She earned a 35 composite and uses her bioinformatics training to approach prep analytically, diagnosing which question types drain each student's time and building targeted drills around those specific weak spots. Rated 4.9 by students.
Pre-med coursework at Cornell means Pratik juggles biology, chemistry, and analytical writing daily — the exact mix the ACT tests across all four sections, and his 35 composite proves he knows how to perform under that pressure. He zeroes in on the timing traps most students don't notice until test day, particularly the Science section's dense figure-based passages where slow reading eats the clock.
Dual-degree coursework in computer science and business at the University of Michigan means Nishika's prep covers the full ACT — the analytical reasoning that drives Math and Science plus the reading and writing fluency that the English and Reading sections demand. She earned a 35 composite and builds each student's study plan around their weakest question types first, so practice hours translate directly into point gains.
Dual degrees in mathematics and biomedical engineering mean Taylor can genuinely teach the content behind every ACT section — not just coach test-taking tricks — from the algebra and trigonometry that dominate the Math section's second half to the experimental design logic buried in Science passages. She earned a 34 composite and builds her prep around diagnosing exactly which question types are costing a student the most time, then replacing guesswork with repeatable decision-making strategies.
Philosophy and biochemistry make an unusual combination — but on the ACT, it means Ajay reads Science passages like a researcher and dissects English and Reading questions with the argumentative precision his philosophy training demands. He scored a 34 composite and uses that cross-disciplinary instinct to show students how each section rewards a different kind of thinking, then drills the specific shifts in approach that keep timing tight across all four parts of the test.
Scoring a 35 composite on the ACT gave Audrey sharp insight into the pacing traps and question patterns that trip students up across all four sections — especially the Science reasoning passages, where knowing how to read figures quickly matters more than knowing actual science. Her psychology background also comes in handy for managing test-day anxiety and building the kind of disciplined practice habits that translate directly into score gains.
What separates a 30 from a 35 on the ACT often isn't content knowledge — it's knowing when to skip, when to eliminate, and how to read Science passages without actually understanding the experiment. Joyce earned her 35 composite by treating each section as its own game with distinct rules, an approach she now teaches alongside the math and grammar content her Columbia biomedical engineering coursework keeps razor-sharp. Rated 5.0 by students.
Michigan Ross's fast-paced business curriculum demands the same kind of quick analytical reading and data synthesis that the ACT rewards — and Myna brings that mindset to all four sections, backed by a 34 composite. She's especially sharp on the English and Reading sides, where her background tutoring literature, grammar, and essay writing translates into concrete strategies for the passage-based questions that eat up most students' time.
Dual-degree work in Movement Science and Neuroscience at Michigan means Vikhyathi juggles heavy science, reading, and writing demands every semester — exactly the mix the ACT tests across all four sections. She earned a 35 composite and uses her cross-disciplinary study habits to teach students how to switch gears between the English section's grammar patterns and the Science section's graph-reading speed traps without losing momentum.
Neuroscience at Michigan means Anya spends her days parsing dense research and experimental data — the exact skill set the ACT Science section quietly demands, and one she pairs with strong Spanish, writing, and math coverage to prep students across all four sections without blind spots. Her perfect 36 composite isn't just a number; it means she's navigated every section at ceiling level and can show students precisely where the test tries to steal time, from the Reading section's paired passages to the Math section's final ten questions where difficulty spikes hardest.
Scoring a 33 on the ACT while juggling a demanding course load at Michigan's Ross School of Business, Kerry developed section-by-section pacing strategies that keep test anxiety from eating into performance. He's especially sharp on the Science section — teaching students to treat it as a data-interpretation exercise rather than a content test — and on the English section's rhetoric questions, where knowing what the passage needs matters more than grammar rules alone.
Tara scored a 33 ACT composite and now breaks the test down section by section — from pacing strategies on the Science passages to grammar rule recognition on English and building a tight thesis under time pressure on the Writing portion. Her MBA training sharpened the kind of data interpretation and logical reasoning that the ACT rewards, especially in the Math and Science sections. Rated 4.9 by students, she tailors prep around each test-taker's weakest section rather than running a one-size-fits-all review.
Most ACT prep treats all four sections as separate worlds, but Jack's biomedical engineering training at Michigan means the Math, Science, and English sections share a common thread for him — precise reading, logical structure, and pattern recognition. He scored a 33 composite and uses his experience tutoring across nearly 40 subjects to diagnose exactly which section-specific habits are costing a student points, then builds targeted drills around those gaps. Rated 4.9 by students.
Chemical engineering at Michigan means Alec spends his weeks solving problems that blend math, science, and precise technical reading — the exact skill mix the ACT demands across all four sections. He earned a 34 composite and uses that cross-disciplinary fluency to show students how the Science section is really a reading exercise and how the Math section's trickiest questions often hinge on careful interpretation rather than advanced formulas. Rated 5.0 by students.
Alexandra scored a 33 ACT composite and tutors all four sections — English, Math, Reading, and Science — which means students get a single tutor who can diagnose weaknesses across the entire exam instead of piecing together advice from multiple sources. She teaches concrete timing strategies for each section, like how to triage Science passages by graph complexity and when to skip to the questions before finishing a Reading passage. Rated 5.0 by students.
Tackling the ACT means juggling four sections that each reward different skills — pacing on Math, grammar rules on English, data interpretation on Science, and inference on Reading. Goutham studied Biomolecular Science and Economics at the University of Michigan, so he's comfortable switching between quantitative reasoning and close reading in a way that mirrors what the ACT actually demands. He teaches students to identify question types quickly and allocate their time where it'll move their score the most.
Medical school trains you to process dense information fast and make decisions under pressure — skills Gurbani applies directly to ACT prep, especially the Science section's graph-heavy passages and the Reading section's tight time constraints. Her 34 composite and economics background mean she's equally comfortable coaching the quantitative and verbal halves of the test, building section-specific strategies rather than one-size-fits-all review. Rated 5.0 by students.
Eva's English and journalism background at Harvard means she naturally dominates the ACT's Reading and English sections — but her 35 composite proves she's just as dangerous on Math and Science, where she teaches students to strip passages down to their data and ignore the intimidating jargon. Her 5.0 rating comes from a prep style rooted in close reading and argument analysis, skills that quietly power every section of the test.
Economics training sharpened Rae's ability to read dense data sets and build logical arguments under pressure — two skills that map directly onto the ACT's Science and Reading sections, where most students burn time second-guessing their answers. She scored a 33 composite and draws on her writing and grammar teaching background to cover the English section with equal confidence, building section-by-section plans that zero in on each student's weakest scoring areas.
Cognitive science trained Peter to understand how people process information under pressure — which is half the battle on a timed exam like the ACT, where knowing the content and executing it in 60 minutes per section are very different skills. He scored a 33 composite and draws on his cross-disciplinary background in math, science, writing, and Spanish to cover all four sections plus the optional Writing test without outsourcing any of it.
Computer science at Michigan trained Maansi to think in logic and systems — she applies that same structured approach to the ACT, building section-by-section plans that zero in on each student's weakest question types rather than re-teaching content they already know. Her 33 composite and experience across all five sections (including Writing) mean she can diagnose whether lost points come from pacing, misreading answer choices, or genuine content gaps, then drill accordingly. Rated 4.8 by students.
Reed College's demanding seminar-style curriculum — where every class involves close reading, argument construction, and thinking on your feet — gave Aiden exactly the analytical toolkit the ACT rewards across English, Reading, and Science passages. He earned a 33 composite and leans on his political science training to teach students how to dissect passage structure and eliminate wrong answers quickly, especially on the Reading section's social science and humanities passages.
Griffin scored a 33 ACT composite and breaks the test into manageable strategies across all four sections — from pacing on Science passages to spotting rhetorical patterns in English. As a first-generation college student who navigated the testing process independently, he knows how to build a study plan that actually targets weak spots instead of re-drilling what students already know.
Shreeman scored a 33 ACT composite, which means he knows what it takes to perform in the top percentile across all four sections — English, Math, Reading, and Science. His biomedical engineering background gives him a natural edge on the Science and Math portions, while his love of reading and writing keeps his verbal strategies sharp. He breaks the test into repeatable patterns so students can recognize question types quickly and manage their time section by section.
Scoring a 34 composite on the ACT gave Miral firsthand insight into pacing strategies across all four sections, especially the math portion where her financial mathematics background lets her spot the fastest path to an answer. She teaches students to recognize question patterns — like when the ACT disguises a straightforward algebra problem inside a word-heavy setup — so they stop burning time on misdirection. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 33 on the ACT gave Sarnath firsthand insight into the pacing strategies and question patterns that separate a good score from a great one — especially on the Math and Science sections, where time management matters as much as content knowledge. As a business student at the University of Michigan, he breaks each section down into repeatable techniques so students know exactly how to approach reading passages, data interpretation, and the grammar rules the English section tests most heavily.
Scoring a 34 ACT composite means Jason knows what it takes to perform across all four sections — but his real strength is showing students how to manage pacing and eliminate answer choices under time pressure. His physics background makes him especially effective on the Science section, where he teaches students to read data displays and conflicting viewpoints passages like a scientist would. Rated 5.0 by students.
Biochemistry at Michigan means Kirby genuinely understands the science content behind ACT Science passages — she's not just teaching graph-reading tricks but explaining why an enzyme kinetics curve behaves the way it does, which builds the kind of confidence that speeds students up across the whole section. Her 32 composite and range across math, chemistry, and writing let her diagnose where points are slipping in any section and build a targeted plan around those gaps. Rated 4.9 by students.
A 33 ACT composite gives Nicholas credibility across all four sections, but his real strength is the Science reasoning portion — his biochemistry background at the University of Michigan means he can teach students to parse dense data tables and conflicting viewpoints passages quickly and accurately. He also tackles the English and Reading sections by breaking down how ACT questions are structured, so students learn to eliminate wrong answers efficiently rather than second-guessing themselves.
I am a recent University of Michigan graduate with a Bachelor's in Industrial and Operations Engineering. I enjoy teaching people of all ages, and am particularly strong within SAT/ACT test prep, algebra/geometry/pre-calc, calculus 1, and reading/writing.
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Varsity Tutors matches Flint students with expert ACT tutors for 1-on-1 instruction. We pair each student with a tutor based on their specific needs, learning style, and goals.
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