Award-Winning SAT Tutors
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Award-Winning SAT Tutors serving Queens, NY

Certified Tutor
Julia
Most SAT prep treats the verbal and math sections as separate worlds, but Julia's English and Linguistics degree — paired with her genuine strength in math — lets her teach the whole exam as one coherent skill set: precise reading, logical elimination, and structured problem-solving. She scored a pe...
The College of William & Mary
Bachelors, English & Linguistics

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Conor
Medical school trains you to process dense, unfamiliar material under pressure — which is essentially what the SAT Reading section demands. Conor pairs that skill with a 1560 SAT score and an engineer's approach to the Math section, where he teaches students to spot the underlying structure of multi...
Stony Brook University
Bachelor of Engineering, Biomedical Engineering
Drexel University
Doctor of Medicine, Biomedical Sciences

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Arthur
What separates a good SAT score from a great one is often section-level strategy — knowing when to skip and return, how to eliminate two answers fast on evidence-based reading pairs, and where the math section rewards algebraic setup over calculation. Arthur scored a 1490 and teaches the exam as a s...
Middlebury College
Bachelor in Arts, Economics

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Vansh
Scoring a 1520 on the SAT takes more than content knowledge — it requires knowing when to slow down on tricky evidence-based reading questions and when to trust your instincts on the math no-calculator section. Vansh pairs that firsthand experience with an aerospace engineering background at Georgia...
Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
Bachelor of Science, Aerospace Engineering

Certified Tutor
Max
Computational biology PhD applicant by day, Max approaches the SAT the way he approaches research — systematically breaking the exam into its component patterns and drilling the highest-yield strategies for each. His 1580 SAT score came from treating the math section as applied logic and the reading...
Ball State University
Bachelors, Biology, General

Certified Tutor
16+ years
John
What makes John effective for SAT prep is that he teaches both halves of the exam with equal fluency — his English and drama training sharpens his approach to passage analysis and evidence-based reading, while his math and physics background means he handles the algebra, data interpretation, and pro...
University of St Thomas
Bachelor of Fine Arts, English/Drama
American Academy of Dramatic Arts
Associates, Acting

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Emily
Having worked for both the math and Spanish departments at Indiana University while maintaining a 4.0, Emily developed the kind of cross-disciplinary precision that pays off on the SAT — she's equally comfortable unpacking tricky algebra and data questions as she is teaching students to navigate evi...
Indiana University-Bloomington
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
Indiana University-Purdue University-Indianapolis
Doctor of Medicine, Community Health and Preventive Medicine

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Rhea
Having recently taken the SAT herself and scored a 1550, Rhea knows exactly where the exam tries to trip students up — the no-calculator algebra traps, the evidence-pair questions designed to punish rushed reading, and the grammar rules that sound right but aren't. Her pre-med coursework at the Univ...
University of Chicago
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General

Certified Tutor
Ken
Ken scored a 1570 on the SAT and teaches both sides of the exam — the algebra, data analysis, and problem-solving on the Math section alongside the evidence-based reading and grammar patterns on the verbal side. His psychology degree from Wake Forest sharpened the kind of analytical reading that pay...
Wake Forest University
Bachelors, Psychology
Stony Brook University
Current Grad, Physical Therapy

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Chelain
Scoring a 1550 on the SAT while juggling a dual PhD/MD track at Northwestern says something about efficiency under pressure — Chelain knows how to maximize points per minute on both the math and evidence-based reading sections. She breaks down SAT questions by what they're actually testing (inferenc...
Thomas Jefferson University
PHD, PhD: Molecular Pharmacology and Structural Biology; MD: Medicine. Currently a Resident in Radiation Oncology at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. C
Swarthmore College
Bachelors, Biology, Psychology
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Frequently Asked Questions
Ivy League schools typically expect SAT scores in the 1500-1580 range, with most admitted students scoring at the 99th percentile. For schools like Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, scores below 1500 put you at a significant disadvantage. If you're targeting other competitive universities in the Northeast like NYU (1390-1530) or Penn State (1210-1390), your target score will vary, but aiming for 1350+ positions you in the top 10% nationally and makes you a strong candidate for selective institutions.
Most students see 100-200 point improvements with focused, personalized instruction—though gains depend on your starting score and how much you practice. Students starting around the national average (1050) often reach 1200-1300 with consistent effort, while those already scoring 1300+ may gain 50-150 points by targeting specific weak areas. The key is identifying which sections need work (Reading, Writing, or Math) and developing targeted strategies rather than generic test prep.
Most students benefit from starting SAT prep in the spring of junior year, giving you time to take the test in the fall of senior year and retake if needed. If you're aiming for highly selective schools, starting earlier (winter of junior year) allows for more focused preparation and multiple test attempts. Starting too late limits your options for retesting and rushing through prep often leads to lower scores, so giving yourself 4-6 months of consistent preparation is ideal.
The SAT Reading section (65 minutes, 52 questions) challenges many students because it requires both speed and comprehension. Effective strategies include reading the questions first to know what to look for, practicing active annotation, and using process of elimination to narrow choices quickly. Personalized tutoring can help you identify which question types slow you down most—whether it's vocabulary in context, evidence-based reasoning, or paired passages—and develop targeted techniques to work through them efficiently.
The SAT has two Math sections: a 25-minute no-calculator section (20 questions focused on algebra and problem-solving) and a 55-minute calculator section (38 questions covering advanced math, data analysis, and graphs). The no-calculator section requires strong foundational skills and mental math, while the calculator section tests your ability to interpret complex data and multi-step problems. Many students struggle more with the calculator section because it combines conceptual understanding with graph interpretation, so targeted practice on data analysis and real-world applications is especially valuable.
The SAT is historically more popular in the Northeast and is the default choice for most Queens students applying to regional universities. However, some students perform better on the ACT depending on their strengths—the ACT emphasizes speed and straightforward questions, while the SAT requires deeper reading comprehension and evidence-based reasoning. If you're unsure, taking a practice test for each can reveal which format plays to your strengths, but most competitive Northeast colleges view SAT and ACT scores equally, so choosing the test that matches your skills is more important than the test itself.
Most students benefit from taking the SAT twice—once in the fall of senior year and again in the winter if needed—giving you time to improve before spring college application deadlines. Colleges using score choice (which most do) only see your highest score, so retaking doesn't hurt you. However, taking the test more than twice often yields diminishing returns unless you've identified specific weak areas and done targeted practice between attempts. The key is using your first test as a diagnostic to pinpoint exactly what needs improvement, then focusing your prep accordingly.
The SAT Writing & Language section (35 minutes, 44 questions) tests grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, and rhetorical skills—areas where many students lose points unnecessarily. Success requires understanding the most commonly tested grammar rules and learning to spot errors quickly. Personalized tutoring can help you master the specific grammar concepts the SAT prioritizes, develop a systematic approach to reading passages efficiently, and practice timing so you complete all questions without rushing through the final ones.
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