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Award-Winning College Level American History Tutors

Jessica

Certified Tutor

Jessica

PHD, Medicine
Jessica's other Tutor Subjects
College Algebra
Calculus
Algebra
Honors Chemistry

College-level American history demands more than survey-course knowledge — professors expect historiographical awareness and the ability to engage with competing scholarly interpretations. Jessica earned her history degree at Penn and was certified through its Critical Writing Department, so she's c...

Education

Nova Southeastern University

PHD, Medicine

University of Pennsylvania

Bachelors, History

University of Pennsylvania

undergraduate

Test Scores
SAT
1540
Erika

Certified Tutor

Erika

Master of Public Policy, Public Policy
Erika's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra

College-level American history demands historiographical awareness — understanding not just what happened but how different scholars have interpreted it. Erika's graduate training in public policy sharpened her ability to evaluate competing arguments and work with primary sources, skills she now app...

Education

Harvard University

Master of Public Policy, Public Policy

Test Scores
ACT
32
Molly

Certified Tutor

Molly

Master of Science in Education
Molly's other Tutor Subjects
1st-8th Grade math
1st-8th Grade Writing
1st-8th Grade Reading
Pre-Algebra

Molly earned her History degree from Columbia University, where she wrote a distinguished thesis grounded in primary source analysis and historiographical argument — exactly the skills college-level American History courses demand. She tackles everything from Reconstruction-era policy debates to Col...

Education

Northwestern University

Master of Science in Education

Columbia University in the City of New York

Bachelor in Arts, History

Test Scores
SAT
1480
Asta

Certified Tutor

Asta

Bachelor in Arts in Political Science
Asta's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
College Algebra
Arithmetic
Middle School Math

A political science degree from the University of Chicago means Asta spent four years immersed in American constitutional development, federalism debates, and the political movements that shaped U.S. policy from Reconstruction through the Civil Rights era. She breaks down historiographical arguments...

Education

University of Chicago

Bachelor in Arts in Political Science

Test Scores
SAT
1530
ACT
35
Gary

Certified Tutor

Gary

Juris Doctor, Law
Gary's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
PSAT Writing Skills
SAT Subject Test in United States History

Gary's time working on a U.S. Senate campaign and interning at a congressional office and DC think tank gave him a ground-level view of how American political institutions actually operate — context that enriches topics from the Federalist debates to post-war foreign policy. His law school training ...

Education

Brigham Young University-Provo

Bachelor in Arts, International Relations

University of Georgia

Juris Doctor, Law

Test Scores
SAT
1500
Bethany

Certified Tutor

5+ years

Bethany

Master of Arts, Religious Studies
Bethany's other Tutor Subjects
Calculus
Algebra
SAT Subject Test in World History
SAT Subject Test in United States History

Bethany earned her bachelor's in History from UC Berkeley, where she dug into the primary sources and historiographical debates that define serious American history study. She's especially effective at teaching students to unpack documents from different eras — whether it's Federalist Papers argumen...

Education

Duke University

Master of Arts, Religious Studies

University of California-Berkeley

Bachelor in Arts, History

Test Scores
SAT
1450
Laura

Certified Tutor

Laura

Bachelor of Arts in History
Laura's other Tutor Subjects
College Algebra
Pre-Calculus
Middle School Math
Elementary Math

Studying American economic history at Princeton meant Laura spent semesters buried in archival sources, crafting arguments about policy, markets, and institutional change. That research experience is exactly what college-level history demands — she breaks down how to write historiographical reviews,...

Education

Princeton University

Bachelor of Arts in History

Kevin

Certified Tutor

9+ years

Kevin

Bachelor in Arts
Kevin's other Tutor Subjects
AP Statistics
Pre-Algebra
Statistics
Geometry

College-level American history demands more than narrative recall — it requires historiographical thinking, meaning students need to evaluate competing interpretations and construct source-driven arguments. Kevin's Philosophy, Politics, and Economics major at Penn trained him to do exactly that acro...

Education

University of Pennsylvania

Bachelor in Arts

Test Scores
ACT
34
Catherine

Certified Tutor

Catherine

PHD, History
Catherine's other Tutor Subjects
Pre-Algebra
Arithmetic
Middle School Math
Elementary Math

College-level American History demands historiographical awareness that high school courses rarely touch: understanding not just what happened, but how different scholars have interpreted why it happened. As a History PhD candidate, Catherine walks students through competing frameworks — whether it'...

Education

Stanford University

PHD, History

Princeton University

Bachelor in Arts

Test Scores
SAT
1590
Claire

Certified Tutor

14+ years

Claire

Bachelor in Arts, Double Major: Spanish Literature; History
Claire's other Tutor Subjects
Arithmetic
Middle School Math
Elementary Math
Geometry

College American history courses expect students to engage with primary sources and historiographical debates, not just recount a narrative. Claire unpacks how to read a Supreme Court opinion or a political speech as a historian would — identifying audience, purpose, and context before building an a...

Education

The University of Texas at Austin

Bachelor in Arts, Double Major: Spanish Literature; History

Test Scores
SAT
1510
ACT
32

Meet Our Expert Tutors

Connect with highly-rated educators ready to help you succeed.

Patrick

Calculus Tutor • +41 Subjects

I'm a graduate of Duke University where I received a JD and an MA in History. I received my undergraduate degree from Emory University also in History. My legal experience includes working as a summer law clerk for two appellate judges and as a summer associate at a large law firm in New York City. In college and in law school I tutored for a variety of subjects and enjoy working with students one-on-one to tackle and master difficult concepts. In my spare time, I enjoy taking in all that New York has to offer including biking in the park, cooking, and golfing.

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Timothy

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects

I am one of many Varsity Tutors. I attended Jesuit High School in Carmichael, CA where I graduated with a 4.3 GPA taking multiple AP and honors courses (AP Bio, Chem, Physics B, Gov, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, English Lit, and English Lang). I also participated in several tutoring organizations throughout high school.

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Jessica

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +45 Subjects

I am currently enrolled in Vanderbilt University where I am studying Elementary Education as well as European History. I love working with students, and I intend to make a career out of it. I have experience working with students in different contexts, from the dance studio to the classroom and across age groups. I have worked in an academic setting with students age three through seventeen, and I have tutored as a volunteer and in a more formal position for a multitude of organizations.

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Richard

AP Calculus BC Tutor • +70 Subjects

I am a rising senior at Harvard College pursuing an AB in Government. Academically, I have diverse interests, including history, language, math, physics, philosophy, music, and politics. In high school, I tutored elementary, middle, and high school students in music, math, ACT and SAT prep, and Spanish. At Harvard, I spent a year as a course assistant in the math department, helping to teach introductory undergraduate calculus. Currently, I volunteer with the Leadership Institute at Harvard College (LIHC) as part of its Social Outreach Committee. This work involves teaching a weekly course called "Fundamentals of Leadership" to a class of middle school students. Overall, I have found my experiences tutoring math to be the most rewarding.

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Jonathan

Calculus Tutor • +31 Subjects

I am a recent graduate from The University of Chicago. I graduated with a degree in Political Science with much additional coursework in literature and philosophy. My favorite part about being a tutor is the moment of satisfaction that comes with seeing one of my students greatly improve after a lot of hard work. My favorite things to tutor are the GRE and the SAT, in part because I feel like a high score on these exams should be accessible for anyone if they are given the tools for success. As a former high school and college debater I enjoy having an opportunity to help students talk their way through the various logical challenges within these exams, as well as develop the kind of self-awareness and mental discipline that is essential to persevering and getting those last few questions right.

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Jake

Pre-Algebra Tutor • +49 Subjects

I am a current undergraduate student at Stanford University but am spending the summer interning in Dallas! In school, I am a Human Biology major, concentrating in Game Theory and Health Policy. I have experience tutoring in Math, Spanish, and Writing and am eager to help you achieve your goals. I am flexible, patient, and willing to go the extra mile to get the job done. Hobbies: reading, music, hiking, art, sports, books, writing

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Christopher

Calculus Tutor • +27 Subjects

I am a graduate student pursuing a Masters in Public Health at Columbia University's Mailman School. I completed a B.A. at Yale University in the History of Science & Medicine in May of 2011, and I am eager to work with Varsity Tutors in order to help other students achieve their academic goals. Hobbies: singing, art, books, photography, writing, reading, music

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Paula

8th Grade math Tutor • +123 Subjects

I am extremely passionate about academics and learning; the value of each was inculcated into me at a very young age. I tutor a variety of subjects largely because I have so many areas of interests and have been privileged enough to pursue knowledge in those areas. I even enjoy tucking away "useless facts"...in fact, those very tidbits got me past the Jeopardy! Online Test and into the Contestant Audition!

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Allen

College Algebra Tutor • +38 Subjects

I am a recent graduate of Yale University as well as of a prestigious New York City Magnet High School. I graduated with a B.A. in an interdisciplinary major focused on economics and political science (3.9 GPA and magna cum laude). I am well equipped to tutor various standardized like the SAT, PSAT, SAT IIs, GMAT, and Regents because of both my familiarity with the exams as well as my success on the exams (2330 on the SAT, 760 on the GMAT)as well as in most subject areas. I have extensive prior experience tutoring in both group and private settings and am excited to make the experience as stress-free and rewarding for my students. Beyond tutoring, I have great familiarity with the college process and have even held a position as an on campus interviewer for students applying to Ivy-league schools. Outside of academics, I enjoy exploring (and eating) at New York city restaurants as well as ballroom dancing. Look forward to working with you!

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Jennifer

AP Calculus AB Tutor • +39 Subjects

I am also available to tutor for the SAT and ACT. I love passing on the little tips and tricks I have learned through the years, not only for the math sections but also the reading and writing portions. As an avid reader in my downtime and having done a lot of critical reading for my scientific career, I have mastered various strategies for analytical reading that I love passing on.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Students often struggle with synthesizing broad historical narratives across multiple time periods—understanding how events like Reconstruction connect to Civil Rights, or how economic policies from the 1920s influenced the Great Depression. Many also find it challenging to move beyond memorizing dates and names to analyzing causation: distinguishing between what caused a historical event versus what merely correlated with it, or recognizing how competing interpretations of the same event (like the American Revolution or Civil War) reflect different historical perspectives. Writing analytical essays that weave primary sources, historiography, and evidence-based arguments into coherent arguments is another common pain point, especially when professors expect students to engage with conflicting scholarly viewpoints rather than simply stating facts.

Tutors teach students to interrogate primary sources systematically—asking not just what a document says, but who created it, when, for what audience, and what biases or limitations shaped it. For example, a tutor might guide a student through analyzing a 1950s political speech by examining its rhetorical choices and what it reveals about Cold War anxieties, rather than simply accepting its claims as historical fact. This skill is essential for college-level work, where professors expect students to recognize that primary sources are evidence to be interpreted, not transparent windows into the past. Tutors also help students identify patterns across multiple sources and use them as building blocks for evidence-based arguments in research papers.

Historiography—the study of how historians interpret and debate the past—is central to college-level work. Students must understand that historical events are understood through competing frameworks: for instance, the Industrial Revolution can be analyzed through lenses of economic progress, labor exploitation, environmental impact, or technological innovation, and different historians emphasize different aspects. Tutors help students navigate historiographical debates by teaching them to identify an author's thesis, recognize the evidence they prioritize, and understand how their interpretation fits into broader scholarly conversations. This skill transforms history from a fixed set of facts into an active intellectual practice where students develop their own evidence-based interpretations rather than simply absorbing established narratives.

College-level history essays require more than summary—they demand a clear thesis that makes an argument about causation, significance, or interpretation, supported by specific evidence from primary and secondary sources. Tutors help students move from thesis statements like "the Civil Rights Movement was important" to nuanced arguments like "the shift from legal segregation to de facto segregation in Northern cities after 1965 reveals how formal legal victories did not automatically translate to economic or social equality." Tutors also coach students on integrating quotes effectively (showing why specific evidence matters rather than just inserting it), engaging with historiographical counterarguments, and structuring essays so each paragraph advances the central argument rather than simply listing facts. This approach develops the critical thinking skills that college professors prioritize.

Students often assume that because two events happened close together in time, one caused the other—for example, believing that the stock market crash directly caused the Great Depression without understanding the underlying economic vulnerabilities, speculation, and policy failures that made the crash so devastating. Tutors teach students to ask critical questions: What evidence shows a causal relationship rather than coincidence? What alternative explanations exist? What conditions had to be in place for this cause to produce this effect? This analytical framework helps students avoid oversimplification and recognize that historical causation is often complex, involving multiple factors, competing interests, and unintended consequences. Developing this skill transforms how students read historical arguments and construct their own.

Beyond traditional library research, college-level history increasingly expects students to understand how historians gather and interpret evidence—including how to evaluate the reliability of sources, recognize bias and perspective, and understand the limitations of different types of evidence (diaries versus government records, for example, reveal different truths). Students also need to navigate historiographical debates by reading scholarly articles critically, identifying an author's argument and evidence, and understanding how that work fits into broader conversations about a topic. Tutors help students develop these skills by teaching them to approach research as an active process of building an argument rather than simply collecting facts, and by coaching them on how to synthesize multiple sources into a coherent, evidence-based interpretation that demonstrates genuine historical thinking.

College-level American History requires students to recognize that major events—like the founding, westward expansion, or the Civil War—have been interpreted very differently depending on whose perspective is centered and what questions historians ask. A tutor helps students understand that the "winners' narrative" (often emphasizing progress and American exceptionalism) differs significantly from narratives that center Indigenous peoples, enslaved African Americans, or working-class experiences. Rather than treating these as competing "sides," tutors teach students to see different interpretations as evidence of how historical understanding evolves as new sources emerge and new questions are asked. This develops intellectual maturity: students learn to evaluate which interpretations are supported by stronger evidence, recognize legitimate historical debate, and construct their own arguments within these conversations rather than simply accepting one "correct" version of history.

The analytical skills students develop in college-level history—evaluating evidence, recognizing bias and perspective, distinguishing correlation from causation, and constructing evidence-based arguments—transfer directly to other disciplines and to informed citizenship. Tutors help students practice these skills by asking them to interrogate claims in any context: What evidence supports this? Whose perspective is represented, and whose is missing? What alternative explanations exist? These habits of mind prepare students not just for history papers but for engaging critically with media, policy debates, and complex social issues throughout their lives. College-level history, when taught well, becomes training in how to think rigorously about the world.

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