Award-Winning Middle School Math Tutors
serving Brooklyn, NY
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Award-Winning Middle School Math Tutors serving Brooklyn, NY

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Daniel
Fractions, ratios, and proportions tend to be the concepts where middle schoolers either build momentum or start to lose confidence. Daniel breaks these topics into concrete, visual steps — connecting abstract operations to real scenarios so students actually internalize the reasoning. Rated 4.9 by ...
Northwestern University
Bachelors, Sociology and Theatre
Northwestern University
Studied sociology, theatre, and legal studies

Certified Tutor
Getting a PhD in Education at Harvard means Reid studies how learning actually works — and he brings that lens to the specific moment middle schoolers start struggling with the jump from straightforward arithmetic into algebraic thinking, variables, and multi-step problem solving. His sociology back...
Harvard University
PHD, Education
Wesleyan University
Bachelor in Arts, Sociology

Certified Tutor
Allen
The jump from arithmetic to pre-algebra is where a lot of middle schoolers start feeling lost — variables show up, fractions get more complex, and word problems demand new problem-solving strategies. Allen makes that transition smoother by building each new idea off what a student already knows, whe...
Yale University
B.A. in an interdisciplinary major focused on economics and political science

Certified Tutor
7+ years
Kevin
Ratios, proportions, integer operations, and early equation work can either build real mathematical confidence or quietly create gaps that show up years later. Kevin started tutoring peers back in high school and brings that same approachable style to middle schoolers tackling these foundational con...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry

Certified Tutor
Colin
The jump from arithmetic to pre-algebra trips up a lot of students — suddenly there are variables, negative numbers, and coordinate planes where there used to be straightforward computation. Colin's years teaching elementary and middle grades mean he knows exactly where those conceptual gaps form an...
Johns Hopkins University
Masters, Education

Certified Tutor
Julia
The jump from elementary to middle school math introduces proportional reasoning, negative numbers, and basic equation-solving all at once. Julia has been tutoring math since her high school years and knows how to slow down at the exact moments students tend to lose the thread — particularly when va...
Brown University
Bachelor in Arts, Environmental Studies

Certified Tutor
10+ years
The jump from elementary math to middle school math means juggling ratios, proportions, and introductory geometry all at once. Daniel keeps each topic grounded in practical scenarios — splitting a bill, scaling a recipe, measuring a room — so the reasoning clicks before the formulas pile up.
Brown University
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
Duncan
The jump from arithmetic to algebraic thinking is one of the biggest cognitive shifts in a student's math life — variables, proportional reasoning, and negative numbers all become real obstacles around middle school. Duncan breaks these concepts down with patience and structure, rated 5.0 by the stu...
University of British Columbia
Master of Arts, Geography
University of Chicago
Bachelor of Arts in Human Geography

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Fractions, ratios, and early algebraic thinking can feel like a maze when the underlying logic isn't clicking. Anna breaks these concepts down to their core so students actually understand why a method works — not just how to get through the worksheet. Rated 5.0 by students, she builds the kind of n...
Brown University
Bachelor of Science

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Sabira
Fractions, ratios, and proportional reasoning click differently when a student sees how each concept builds on the last — and Sabira's Applied Mathematics training at Johns Hopkins gives her multiple ways to explain that progression. She's taught students of all ages since her years as a taekwondo i...
Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor of Science, Applied Mathematics
Nearby Middle School Math Tutors
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Frequently Asked Questions
Middle school math in Brooklyn schools follows the Common Core State Standards, but implementation varies by district and textbook series. When connecting with a tutor, ask about their experience with your student's specific curriculum—whether it's using resources like Eureka Math, Big Ideas, or other programs your school uses. Expert tutors for students in Brooklyn understand the progression from procedural fluency (the "how") to conceptual understanding (the "why"), which is key to Common Core-aligned instruction. They can also help bridge gaps if your student has struggled with foundational concepts in previous grades.
Word problems require students to translate real-world scenarios into mathematical models—a skill that builds on reading comprehension, visualization, and strategic thinking. Many students focus on finding the "right" answer without understanding what the problem is asking, or they don't know where to start. A tutor can help your student develop problem-solving strategies: reading carefully, identifying key information, choosing appropriate operations, and checking whether their answer makes sense in context. Working through word problems with expert support teaches transferable skills that strengthen both math confidence and critical thinking.
Showing work is essential in middle school math—it's not just about the final answer. Teachers use it to understand your student's reasoning, spot misconceptions early, and assign partial credit. More importantly, writing out steps helps students catch their own errors and deepens their understanding of why a solution works. If your student struggles to organize their work or explain their thinking, a tutor can teach strategies for clear mathematical communication: using labels, writing equations, and explaining each step. This habit builds problem-solving skills that become critical in high school algebra and beyond.
Yes. Math anxiety often stems from feeling lost, rushed, or embarrassed—which 1-on-1 personalized instruction directly addresses. A supportive tutor creates a judgment-free space where your student can ask questions, work through problems at their own pace, and build confidence through small wins. Rather than memorizing procedures, tutoring helps students see patterns and connections in math, shifting their perspective from "I can't do this" to "I understand how this works." Over time, this foundation reduces anxiety and transforms math from a source of stress into something manageable—even enjoyable.
Equations and graphing represent the shift from concrete arithmetic to abstract algebraic thinking—a major milestone in middle school. Many students memorize steps (like slope-intercept form) without understanding what the graph actually represents. Expert tutors help students see the connection: an equation is a rule, the graph is a picture of that rule, and variables represent changing quantities. Using multiple representations—equations, graphs, tables, and real-world contexts—helps students build a stronger conceptual foundation. This approach makes multi-step equations less intimidating and prepares them for success in high school algebra.
Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who understand Brooklyn's school environment and middle school math standards. When you reach out, share details about your student's current grade level, specific challenges (word problems, equations, confidence), and preferred learning style. Tutors can then customize their approach—whether that's breaking down complex concepts, building test-taking strategies, or creating engaging practice routines. The match matters: a good tutor listens to what your student needs and adjusts their teaching accordingly, making math feel less overwhelming and more achievable.
The most powerful thing you can do is normalize struggle and celebrate effort over speed. Ask your student to explain their thinking ("How did you get that answer?") rather than checking if they're right. Encourage them to show their work and ask questions when something doesn't make sense. For practical support: help them organize their notes, create a consistent homework space, and connect math to real life (cooking, shopping, sports). A tutor can also suggest specific practice strategies between sessions. When parents, teachers, and tutors work together, students make faster progress and develop stronger problem-solving skills.
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