Award-Winning High School Chemistry Tutors
serving Albany, NY
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Award-Winning High School Chemistry Tutors serving Albany, NY

Certified Tutor
Michelle
Stoichiometry and equilibrium take on a different dimension when your tutor uses them every day — Michelle's biochemistry degree from Rice and her current medical coursework at Baylor mean she's constantly translating between chemical equations on paper and what's actually happening at the molecular...
Baylor College of Medicine
Current Grad Student, M.D.
Rice University
Bachelor's in Biochemistry and Cell Biology

Certified Tutor
Christopher
Chemistry clicked for Christopher when he stopped treating it as memorization and started seeing it as a logic puzzle — balancing equations, predicting reaction products, and connecting periodic trends to real behavior. His engineering background at Harvard reinforces that analytical approach, espec...
Harvard College
Bachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering
Certified Tutor
James
A chemistry major at Harvard who's heading to Columbia Medical School, James teaches high school chemistry with the kind of depth that makes concepts like stoichiometry and electron configurations click on a conceptual level — not just as formulas to memorize. He connects classroom topics to real-wo...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Chemistry
Certified Tutor
Asta
Chemistry can feel like learning a new language — balancing equations, interpreting the mole concept, predicting reaction types — and Asta treats it that way, breaking each topic into its own vocabulary and logic. Her experience tutoring internationally in Hong Kong gave her practice explaining scie...
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts in Political Science
Certified Tutor
13+ years
Three science bachelor's degrees — including one specifically in chemistry — mean Sung has spent serious time with everything from electron orbitals to thermochemistry, not just at the introductory level but across multiple disciplinary angles. He digs into the "why" behind concepts like periodic tr...
Yale University
Bachelor of Science
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Ellie
Stoichiometry, equilibrium, and thermodynamics tend to click faster when a student can see how the math actually maps onto what's happening at the molecular level. Ellie's pre-med and engineering background means she teaches these concepts with an eye toward why the numbers behave the way they do, n...
Yale University
Master of Arts, Biomedical Engineering
Yale University
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
5+ years
Sugi
Three-plus years of classroom instruction in advanced chemistry means Sugi has seen exactly where high school students get stuck — balancing redox equations, applying Le Chatelier's principle, or connecting molecular geometry to polarity. She teaches the underlying logic of each topic so students bu...
Rice University
Bachelor's degree in Cognitive Science and Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Baylor College of Medicine
Doctor of Medicine, Ophthalmic Technology
Certified Tutor
Most high school chemistry students hit a wall somewhere around mole conversions or balancing redox reactions — the point where the subject stops feeling like science and starts feeling like math. Jessica approaches those sticking points by explaining the underlying logic first, then layering on the...
Nova Southeastern University
PHD, Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, History
University of Pennsylvania
undergraduate
Certified Tutor
Serving as an undergraduate teaching assistant for introductory biochemistry at Cornell gave Josef a clear picture of where students first lose the thread in chemistry — usually right around stoichiometry and the mole concept, when the math suddenly feels disconnected from what's happening at the mo...
Cornell University
Bachelor of Science
Certified Tutor
4+ years
Three science bachelor's degrees plus a medical doctorate means Sydny has taken chemistry at every level — from introductory courses through the biochemistry and pharmacology that med school demands daily. She unpacks topics like stoichiometry and gas laws by connecting them to the biological and me...
Duke University
Bachelor of Science
Medical University of South Carolina
Doctor of Medicine, Premedicine
Certified Tutor
Stoichiometry and gas laws tend to feel like arbitrary math until someone connects them back to what's actually happening at the molecular level — and Nishad's pre-med training means he's spent years building that connection across chemistry, biology, and anatomy courses. He teaches students to trac...
Pennsylvania State University-Main Campus
Bachelors, Premedicine
Certified Tutor
6+ years
JF
The jump from memorizing chemical formulas to actually solving equilibrium and redox problems is where most high school chemistry students struggle. JF tackles this gap head-on, walking through dimensional analysis, electron bookkeeping, and reaction predictions with the precision his Stanford math ...
Stanford University
Bachelor of Science, Mathematics and Computer Science
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Bidyut
Stoichiometry, equilibrium, and acid-base reactions make more sense when a student can see where they lead. Bidyut ties high school chemistry concepts to biomedical applications he's encountered at Johns Hopkins, turning mole calculations and reaction balancing into something more tangible than text...
Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor of Science, Biomedical Engineering
Certified Tutor
14+ years
Balancing equations and stoichiometry trip up most high school chemistry students because the logic feels invisible at first. Garrett teaches the mole concept by tying it to tangible quantities — grams on a scale, liters of gas — so the math stops feeling arbitrary. His background in biology and phy...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts
Certified Tutor
Maggie
Balancing redox equations, predicting products, and navigating stoichiometry all become more manageable when a student understands the 'why' behind each reaction type. Maggie's molecular and cellular biology degree gave her deep fluency in chemical principles, and she applies that knowledge to demys...
Yale University
Bachelor in Arts, Economics/ Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
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Frequently Asked Questions
Your first session is focused on understanding your current level and goals. A tutor will review the topics you're studying, identify specific areas where you're struggling—whether that's balancing equations, stoichiometry, or lab concepts—and discuss your learning style. This helps create a personalized plan that targets your needs, whether you're preparing for an exam or building foundational understanding.
Balancing equations is one of the most common chemistry challenges, and it requires both systematic thinking and practice. A tutor can break down the process step-by-step, help you recognize patterns in different equation types, and give you targeted practice problems that build confidence. Rather than memorizing rules, you'll learn the logic behind balancing, which makes it easier to apply to new equations.
Yes. Tutoring covers both the theoretical concepts behind experiments and the practical skills you need for lab work. A tutor can help you understand the scientific method, predict experimental outcomes, interpret data, and connect what you observe in the lab to the chemistry concepts you're learning in class. This bridges the gap between classroom theory and hands-on application.
Chemistry involves a lot of invisible concepts—molecular structures, bonding, reaction mechanisms—that are hard to picture. Expert tutors use diagrams, models, analogies, and real-world examples to make these abstract ideas concrete. For example, they might use physical models to show how atoms bond, or connect gas laws to everyday situations like tire pressure, so you build a mental framework rather than just memorizing formulas.
Unit conversions trip up many chemistry students because they require both math skills and understanding of what the units represent. A tutor can help you master dimensional analysis—the systematic method for converting between units—and show you why it matters (like converting grams to moles). Once you understand the logic, conversions become a reliable tool rather than a source of confusion.
Understanding concepts is far more valuable than memorization. Chemistry is built on foundational principles—like the mole concept, stoichiometry, and bonding—that connect to everything else you'll learn. When you understand these core ideas, you can reason through unfamiliar problems on exams and apply chemistry to new situations. A tutor helps you build this deep understanding so you rely less on memorization and more on logical thinking.
It depends on your starting point and the exam scope, but most students benefit from starting 2-3 weeks before a major exam. Regular sessions—even weekly—help you build understanding gradually rather than cramming. For students in Albany working toward Regents exams or AP Chemistry, a tutor can help you identify weak areas early and focus your study time where it matters most, reducing test anxiety and improving performance.
Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who specialize in high school chemistry and understand the Albany curriculum. You can share your specific challenges—whether it's gas laws, organic chemistry, or lab skills—and we'll match you with someone who fits your learning style and schedule. The process is straightforward, and you can start personalized 1-on-1 instruction as soon as you're ready.
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