Award-Winning ACT Math Tutors
serving York, PA
Award-Winning
ACT Math
Tutors in York
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.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
UniversitiesSchools & Universities
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Elliot's neuroscience PhD required heavy quantitative work — experimental design, statistical modeling, data analysis — which keeps the algebra, probability, and graph-reading skills central to ACT Math sharp and automatic. He scored a 36 ACT composite and uses that familiarity with the test's structure to teach students how to quickly classify each of the 60 questions by type and apply the most efficient solution path. Rated 5.0 by students.

I am currently a resident physician at Northwestern Hospital.
I am in my second year at MIT studying mathematics, and I am currently doing a research project in Spectral Graph Theory. I have been a tutor since my junior year in high school, and I enjoy teaching all levels of math; everything from pre-algebra through calculus and linear algebra! I focus primarily on making sure that the definitions and processes given in class make intuitive sense, so that math can begin to feel like second nature.
Scoring well on ACT Math means handling everything from basic proportions to matrices and logarithms within a single 60-minute sprint, so pacing strategy matters as much as content knowledge. Danielle's 36 ACT composite and her science-heavy coursework at Tufts give her fluency across the full range of topics the test covers. She zeroes in on the specific question types — coordinate geometry, probability, trigonometric identities — where each student is losing the most points.
Scoring high on ACT Math means handling everything from coordinate geometry to logarithms and matrices under serious time pressure — roughly one minute per question. Olivia's engineering math background means she tackles these topics daily, and she teaches students to identify which formula a problem is really testing before they start calculating. Her 34 ACT composite speaks to how well that approach works.
The ACT Math section covers everything from pre-algebra ratios to trigonometric identities in 60 rapid-fire questions, and pacing is where most students lose points. Mary scored a 35 composite and teaches students to triage problems by difficulty so they lock in easy points first and spend remaining time on coordinate geometry and matrix questions that reward careful setup.
Medical school admissions forced Amanda to master the ACT inside out — her 34 composite came from treating the math section like a diagnostic problem, identifying exactly which concept each question tests before choosing an approach. Her biology degree at Alabama was math-intensive enough (biostatistics, quantitative analysis) that the algebra, probability, and trig on the ACT feel like familiar territory, and she teaches students to work those 60 questions with the same systematic efficiency she applies to clinical reasoning.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite means Zora performed at an elite level across every section, math included. She zeroes in on the algebra, geometry, and coordinate-plane questions that make up the bulk of ACT Math, teaching students to identify which formula or approach a problem is actually testing before they start calculating.
Naomi scored a 35 ACT composite and uses that experience to pinpoint exactly where students lose points on the Math section, whether it's coordinate geometry, trigonometric identities, or the word problems that appear in the final ten questions. She emphasizes recognizing which formula a problem is really testing, since the ACT rewards speed as much as accuracy.
Jennifer scored a 33 ACT and tackles the Math section by sorting its 60 questions into the skill clusters that matter most: coordinate geometry shortcuts, trigonometric identities, and the probability questions students tend to skip. Her engineering training means she can explain not just which formula applies but why it works, which makes the logic stick under time pressure.
I am most passionate about music, French, and English. I love the potential for communication and creativity that languages and the arts provide.
I am a rising sophomore studying civil engineering at Cornell University. I enjoy tutoring math (algebra-calculus 3), high school and college physics, Spanish, and writing. I have experience tutoring throughout high school, where I was the head of a peer-tutoring program. I have continued tutoring in college as well.
I am here to help with pre-med coursework, MCAT prep, and many other classes. I am frequently available for online tutoring.
Most ACT Math questions below #40 are testing algebra and proportional reasoning skills students already have — the trick is recognizing them under time pressure and in unfamiliar packaging. Cindy, who scored a 35 ACT composite, teaches students to read each problem for its underlying structure so they stop overthinking straightforward questions and save mental energy for the trig and matrix items near the end. Rated 5.0 by students.
Zach scored a 35 ACT composite and knows exactly where the Math section tries to trip students up — especially on coordinate geometry, matrices, and the handful of trigonometry questions that separate a 30 from a 34+. He teaches efficient problem setups that shave seconds off each question, leaving time to double-check the tricky ones. Rated 5.0 by students.
A biomedical engineering student who scored a 35 ACT, Spencer tackles the Math section's later questions — coordinate geometry, matrices, and logarithm properties — with the fluency that comes from using those tools daily in his coursework. He pinpoints the specific content gaps costing students points rather than reworking material they already know.
I'm currently a Masters student in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania. I also have a Bachelor's degree in Physics from Haverford College.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite means William didn't leave math behind — he tackles the ACT Math section by identifying which of the 60 questions deserve careful algebra and which can be solved faster through estimation or back-solving. He zeroes in on the concepts that appear most often in the upper question range, like coordinate geometry transformations, logarithmic properties, and matrix operations. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring a 34 ACT composite while pursuing biomedical engineering at Cornell, Annie lives in math daily — from calculus to statistical modeling. She teaches ACT Math by sorting its 60 questions into the handful of concept buckets that actually repeat (coordinate geometry, proportional reasoning, trigonometric identities) so students spend their prep time on the patterns that move scores fastest.
Scoring well on ACT Math means moving quickly and confidently through 60 questions that span pre-algebra to trigonometry, and Hailey's approach zeroes in on the specific question types where each student loses points. She identifies whether the gap is in coordinate geometry, logarithm properties, or probability and builds targeted practice around it. Her 34 ACT composite and 5.0 tutoring rating back up the strategy.
I am pursuing degrees in Bioengineering and Economics. I am currently taking some time off from my studies to learn the ins and outs of the biomedical industry by working a Co-op in pharmaceutical engineering. While I have held several tutoring positions, my favorite experience was when I designed an interactive obstacle course demonstrating the functions of the adaptive immune system as part of the Pitt Tissue Engineering Summer Camps Initiative. The obstacle course contained everything from NERF guns to secret handshakes and is emblematic of my tutoring philosophy: I always encourage my students to visualize the course material in creative ways that stretch beyond the classroom. While I tutor numerous subjects, my personal favorites are Economics and Physiology. In my free time you'll find me running, playing soccer, reading (everything from Harry Potter to Khalil Gibran), or shooting hoops on the basketball court. One of my future goals is to ride my bike across the USA from my hometown of Cleveland, Ohio to the Pacific Ocean.
I am a current Sophomore Mechanical Engineering student at Messiah College in Mechanicsburg, PA. I graduated Upper St. Clair High School in 2018, and took just about every AP math and science course there is. I have extensive knowledge in these subjects, and enjoy helping others to understand them! In my free time, I enjoy running cross country and track, playing percussion, and hanging out with my friends!
Scoring a 35 ACT composite, Sidharth knows the math section inside out — particularly the coordinate geometry and trigonometry questions that cluster in the final 20 problems where most points are lost. He teaches students to recognize problem types on sight so they spend their limited time on execution, not figuring out what's being asked.
I am currently a rising Junior at the University of Pennsylvania, majoring in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics and minoring in Science, Technology, and Society. From early on, the intellectual development of others has been very important to me. In high school, I developed my school's first summer tutoring program to ensure that students retained information and were prepared for the upcoming year. I am most passionate about tutoring Political Science, History, and Math, with significant experience in helping students in each of these subject areas. In my spare time, I enjoy reading and playing the bass.
The ACT Math section covers everything from pre-algebra ratios to trigonometric identities, but roughly 60% of the questions sit in the algebra and coordinate geometry range. Mark zeroes in on the concepts a student actually needs to drill, building speed on the straightforward problems so there's more time left for the harder ones. His 34 composite reflects comfort across the full spread of topics.
Steven's favorite part of tutoring is the ACT Math section — and a 34 composite score means he's walking students through the same algebra, trig, and geometry problems he recently crushed himself. His biology degree from Drexel kept him neck-deep in quantitative coursework, so he treats each of the 60 questions as a pattern-recognition exercise: identify the concept, pick the fastest solve path, move on. Rated 5.0 by students.
Scoring well on ACT Math means moving efficiently through 60 questions that range from pre-algebra to trigonometry, and knowing when to set up an equation versus when to back-solve. Jean is a certified math teacher who scored a 34 ACT composite, and she pinpoints exactly where a student's time is being wasted. Her approach zeroes in on the mid-range and upper-range questions — coordinate geometry, matrices, logarithms — where the biggest score jumps happen.
Speed matters as much as accuracy on ACT Math, where 60 questions in 60 minutes leaves no room for second-guessing. Zachary teaches students to recognize which problems — coordinate geometry, matrix operations, logarithmic expressions — can be solved in under 30 seconds with the right shortcut, freeing up time for the harder items at the end. His 33 ACT composite backs up an approach built on strategic pacing.
Sarah majored in mathematics at Penn, which means the algebra, geometry, and trigonometry on the ACT Math section are deeply familiar territory for her. She teaches students to identify which problems can be solved in under 30 seconds with the right shortcut and which ones require careful setup — a time-management skill that makes a real difference on a 60-question, 60-minute test. Her own 35 ACT composite backs up that approach.
I am a third year student at Georgia Institute of Technology studying Biomedical Engineering with a minor in Computer Science. I love teaching STEM classes. I have experience teaching elementary, middle, high school, and college students. I love getting to know my students, learning their learning style, and making the course content fun and engaging.
Scoring a 34 ACT composite, Matthew knows exactly where the math section tries to trip students up — especially on coordinate geometry, logarithm properties, and matrix questions that appear in the final ten problems. He teaches specific time-management strategies for the 60-question, 60-minute format so that pacing becomes a skill rather than a source of panic.
I am working toward a double English and Dance major at Muhlenberg College. I am currently earning my Secondary Teacher's certification. My passion is to help students find their own passion and identity in the world, and to help them how to think critically. I tutor in a variety of English subjects, ACT prep, ukulele, and songwriting! I have experience in both outdoor and museum science education, and I have tutored students in science, English, writing, and music. When I'm not pursuing academics, you can find me riding my horse, playing guitar with my friends, or teaching dance classes! I look forward to speaking with you!
Ade's 34 ACT composite reflects serious math-section skill, and he applies that to the concepts students most often lose time on: coordinate geometry shortcuts, logarithm properties, and matrix questions that appear in the final ten problems. He walks through pacing strategies that ensure students bank enough time for the harder back-end questions without rushing the earlier ones.
Scoring well on ACT Math isn't about knowing advanced topics — it's about solving familiar concepts under serious time pressure. Eliza, who earned a 34 ACT composite, teaches students to recognize problem types quickly and pick the fastest solution path, especially on coordinate geometry and word problems that eat up the clock. She drills pacing strategies alongside content so that students finish the section instead of running out of time on questions they actually know how to solve.
Most ACT Math questions test concepts students already know — the challenge is executing them cleanly under a one-minute-per-problem pace. Addie, who scored a 34 ACT composite, treats the section as a strategy game: identifying which problems to solve immediately, which to sketch out, and which to flag and revisit. Her background in music education makes her unusually good at breaking a big performance into small, repeatable steps.
I'm currently in a General Practice Residency in Washington, DC.
Scoring a 33 ACT composite required Bradley to perform well across every section, including the Math portion's mix of algebra, geometry, and trigonometry under tight time constraints. He teaches students to identify what each question is actually asking — a skill that eliminates careless errors and speeds up problem-solving on the 60-question, 60-minute sprint.
I am a third-year undergraduate student at Carnegie Mellon University studying Voice and Opera Performance with minors in Music Education and French and Francophone Studies. My ultimate goal is to become a teacher because I love working with students to help them achieve mastery of their subject(s)!
I am a recent graduate of Wagner College who received a Bachelor of Science in Nursing with a minor in French. I am currently a RN at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in the Pediatric ICU and come with fresh experience in NCLEX/TEAS test prep and clinical fieldwork. I have tutored students in the past with Kumon, in private, and while in university, so I'm very familiar working with students of all ages (children and adults alike), and very excited to begin work with Varsity Tutors! I always make sure to have fun and involve students in lessons so that the subjects are more relatable to students and they can find personal ways to engage with the topics taught. Although I tutor a broad range of subjects, I am most passionate about French language and culture, particularly francophone tradition, food, and celebration. My trips to France really kept my French knowledge and interests alive.
The ACT Math section covers everything from pre-algebra to trigonometry in 60 minutes, which means pacing matters as much as knowledge. Noelle, who scored a 32 composite, teaches students to quickly identify problem type and difficulty so they spend their time where it actually moves their score. Her approach emphasizes recognizing patterns in how the ACT frames coordinate geometry and function questions.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Varsity Tutors matches York students with expert ACT Math tutors for 1-on-1 instruction. We pair each student with a tutor based on their specific needs, learning style, and goals.
Whether you need homework help, exam prep, or want to get ahead, our ACT Math tutors are ready to help.
Common challenges include gaps from earlier material, difficulty with specific concepts, and trouble applying learning to new problems. These issues can snowball quickly in ACT Math.
A tutor identifies where you're stuck, fills in gaps, and provides targeted practice. The 1-on-1 format means you get help exactly where you need it.
Tutors work with your student's actual coursework—homework assignments, class notes, and upcoming tests. This keeps tutoring directly relevant to what's happening in the classroom.
When you share information about your student's school and curriculum, we can match you with a tutor who has relevant experience.
All tutors complete background checks, credential verification, and teaching evaluation. Many of our ACT Math tutors hold advanced degrees or have years of teaching experience.
You can review tutor profiles to find someone with the right background for your student's level and needs.
Many students see improved grades within a few weeks, along with better understanding of ACT Math concepts and more confidence tackling challenging material.
Tutors track progress and adjust their approach to ensure continued improvement.
Most students benefit from 1-2 sessions per week. More frequent sessions help if your student is significantly behind or has an important exam coming up.
Your tutor can recommend a schedule based on your student's specific situation and goals.
Tutoring is purchased in packages of hours, with rates varying by tutor experience. Varsity Tutors offers several options to fit different budgets and needs.
You can discuss pricing during your consultation to find what works best.
Your tutor will assess where your student is, discuss goals, and start working on priority areas. Most students bring current homework or upcoming test material to focus on.
By the end, you'll have a clear sense of how the tutor can help and a plan for moving forward.
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