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I am a licensed physician from Florida who is currently changing careers. I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2009 and have extensive tutoring and editing experience. While a student, I became a certified writing tutor through the Critical Writing Department. Since I completed my writ...
Nova Southeastern University
PHD, Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, History
University of Pennsylvania
undergraduate

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Kate
I'm available to tutor biology, chemistry, physics, math from Algebra up through AP Calculus, SAT test prep, and French. I've been tutoring students in science and math for 7 years. I also spent 8 months working and studying in France, and have tutored high school and adult students in French. When ...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Masters, Environmental Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Jai
I'm a recent Stanford graduate (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science), and have been working at a major Management Consulting firm for a few years now. I personally scored a 2360 (out of 2400) on the SAT and 35 on the ACT and was successful in gaining admission to several top universities. I'...
Stanford University
Bachelors in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Rhea
I am a current student at the University of Chicago. I am working towards a Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences, and I am on the pre-medical track. I am extremely passionate about tutoring, and I have several years of experience tutoring students in my high school's learning center in various...
University of Chicago
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General

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Erika
I am available to tutor middle and high school math, history and test prep. I have tutored math and history in the past and I previously taught a test prep course at a school in Hanoi, Vietnam. I have a lot of experience teaching all the need-to-know tricks to doing great on the SATS/ACTS! When I am...
Harvard University
Master of Public Policy, Public Policy

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Jeffrey
I am enrolled in the Mechanical Engineering PhD program at Rice University which will begin Fall 2020, and I am hoping to return to academia as a professor after earning my PhD. In the meantime, I am looking to share my passion for gaining knowledge, specifically in STEM, by educating the up and com...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science
Rice University
Doctor of Philosophy, Mechanical Engineering

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Zachary
I am passionate about teaching and tutoring and I thoroughly enjoy helping students gain an understanding and a drive for their studies. I have a long history of working with students of all grade levels and abilities (elementary school through college), and I have a good understanding of strategies...
Yale University
Bachelors, Biochemistry and Biophysics

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Annie
I am currently a second year medical student. I was a Physiological Sciences major at UCLA (class of 2015), and pursued research during my gap year between undergrad and medical school.
University of California Los Angeles
Bachelors, Physiological Sciences
Drexel University College of Medicine
Current Grad Student, MD

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Sharon
I am a graduate of the University of Chicago, and I will be starting a graduate program at Columbia in August. I am about to complete a year of service with City Year, an education non-profit that places young adults into under-served schools. As a City Year member, I worked full-time in the classro...
Columbia University in the City of New York
Master of Science, Journalism
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts

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Matthew
I'm a highly creative person who works best with visual thinkers. Very recently graduated from Stanford University, I majored in Human Biology with a concentration in Bioinformatics and Stem Cell Science. Technical though my background may be, I am currently gigging as a singer/songwriter/composer i...
Stanford University
Bachelors in Human Biology (concentration in Bioinformatics and Stem Cell Science)
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I'm a first-year medical student and recent graduate from Duke University, where I studied Global Health Determinants, Behaviors, and Interventions. From running a piano program at a nonprofit children's theatre to private tutoring in math, science, and standardized test prep, I enjoy helping my students become confident and self-sufficient learners! Hobbies: photography, travel, reading, music, writing, running, art, books, traveling
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I am a freshman at Caltech majoring in Applied and Computational Mathematics. My favorite subject to tutor is math because I find it very rewarding to simplify complex topics to aid in understanding. I have lots of tutoring experience. In high school, I ran and taught an SAT prep class and was vice president of my school's NHS chapter where I ran our tutoring program, and I, myself, tutored. I also was a teaching assistant in the summer of 2020 for a class in discrete mathematics through a program called PACT (Program in Algorithmic and Combinatorial Thinking). I love learning and hope to make the process enjoyable for you!
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Calculus Tutor • +28 Subjects
I am a recent graduate of Yale University and incoming first year medical student at Columbia University. Originally from the DC area, I have always had a passion for science and medicine and pursued a degree in Biology while at Yale. During the 2008-2009 academic year, I tutored science, math, English, history, and Mandarin Chinese part-time with a DC-based tutoring company. At Yale, I worked as a freshman counselor to provide academic and career advice to incoming freshmen. I have taken both SAT and MCAT test prep classes and am familiar with both tests as well as the preparation necessary to score well. My personal career goals include attending medical school to pursue either immunology/infectious diseases or psych/neurology, teaching biology at the university level, and working in public/global health with either the CDC or the WHO.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Students often find the Safavid period challenging due to its religious and political complexity—understanding how Shi'ism became institutionalized while managing Ottoman and Uzbek threats requires holding multiple threads simultaneously. The Constitutional Revolution (1905-1911) also trips up many students because it involves competing visions of modernization, constitutional monarchy, and foreign interference that don't fit neat narratives. Additionally, the 1953 coup and its aftermath demand careful analysis of how Cold War geopolitics, oil nationalism, and internal power struggles intersected—students frequently oversimplify this as purely about external intervention or purely about internal politics, missing the nuanced interplay. A tutor can help you develop frameworks for analyzing these layered historical moments rather than memorizing isolated facts.
Rather than treating each dynasty (Achaemenid, Sassanid, Safavid, Qajar, Pahlavi) as separate units, strong historical analysis looks at underlying patterns: how Persian administrative systems, cultural practices, and concepts of kingship persisted across conquests and transitions. For instance, the idea of the shah as a divinely-sanctioned ruler appears across centuries, yet manifests differently depending on whether the state is Zoroastrian, Islamic, or secular. A tutor can help you construct comparative frameworks—analyzing how each dynasty adapted or rejected previous models, how religious authority shifted, and how foreign influence (Arab, Mongol, Turkish, European) was integrated into Persian governance. This analytical approach transforms memorization into genuine understanding of historical causation.
Iranian history offers rich primary sources—from Sassanid inscriptions and Safavid court chronicles to 20th-century political speeches and memoirs—but they require careful contextualization. You need to understand who wrote the source, what biases or purposes shaped it, and what it reveals versus what it obscures. For example, a Safavid court historian's account of a military campaign tells you about official ideology and royal power but may downplay dissent or military failures. A tutor experienced in Iranian history can teach you how to read these sources critically: asking what audience they addressed, what political or religious agendas they served, and how to corroborate claims with other evidence. This skill is essential for writing evidence-based essays that move beyond surface-level quotation.
Students often fall into the trap of attributing Iran's modern history to a single cause—either "Western imperialism caused all problems" or "Iran failed to modernize internally"—when the reality involves competing pressures, agency, and unintended consequences. The Tobacco Protest (1891-92), for instance, wasn't simply anti-Western; it involved religious leaders, merchants, and ordinary people asserting power against both foreign concessions and centralized state authority. Similarly, the 1979 Revolution resulted from decades of modernization policies, oil wealth distribution, religious revival, and Cold War positioning—no single factor explains it. A tutor can help you develop causal reasoning skills: identifying multiple contributing factors, understanding how they reinforced each other, recognizing contingency (what could have gone differently), and avoiding teleological thinking (the assumption that outcomes were inevitable). This analytical rigor is what distinguishes strong historical writing.
This is a core tension that runs through modern Iranian history: how did a multi-ethnic empire (Safavid, Qajar, early Pahlavi) transform into a nation-state? Understanding this requires examining how Persian identity, Shi'ite Islam, and territorial nationalism became linked—not inevitably, but through specific political choices and cultural movements. The Constitutional Revolution and subsequent reforms attempted to create a modern nation-state, yet regional and ethnic identities (Kurdish, Azerbaijani, Arab, Baloch) remained powerful. A tutor can help you analyze how nationalism was constructed: through education policy, language standardization, historiography, and state institutions. You'll learn to ask critical questions: Whose nationalism was being promoted? Who resisted it and why? How did oil wealth and geopolitics shape these processes? This framework helps you write sophisticated essays that move beyond treating nationalism as a natural or inevitable development.
Iran's geography—positioned between the Ottoman Empire, Central Asia, the Indian subcontinent, and the Persian Gulf—has made it strategically significant across centuries, yet students often underweight or overweight external pressure. The key is understanding Iran's agency alongside constraints: the Safavids deliberately positioned Shi'ism as a distinguishing feature against Ottoman Sunni power; the Qajars negotiated (sometimes poorly) between Russian and British interests; the Pahlavis aligned with the West during the Cold War for specific strategic and economic reasons. Rather than viewing Iran as passively buffeted by great powers, analyze how rulers made choices within constrained circumstances. A tutor can help you develop frameworks for geopolitical analysis: mapping trade routes, understanding resource competition, examining alliance patterns, and recognizing how international events (world wars, oil discoveries, Cold War shifts) created opportunities and pressures that Iranian leaders responded to in different ways. This transforms geopolitics from background noise into a central analytical tool.
Unlike many histories where religion and politics can be somewhat separated, Iranian history is fundamentally shaped by their integration: Zoroastrianism legitimated Sassanid kingship, Islam transformed the political structure after the Arab conquest, Shi'ism became institutionalized under the Safavids as a state religion, and religious authority (the ulama) remained a powerful political force through the modern period, culminating in the 1979 Revolution's theocratic system. Students often struggle because they try to analyze these as separate domains when they're deeply intertwined. A tutor can help you develop analytical tools for understanding religious-political dynamics: How did rulers use religion to legitimize power? How did religious scholars gain or lose political influence? What happens when religious and political authority conflict? How did modernization attempts challenge traditional religious-political arrangements? These questions help you write nuanced essays that recognize religion not as a static backdrop but as an active force shaping political choices, institutions, and social movements throughout Iranian history.
Periods like the 1953 coup, the Shah's modernization policies, and the lead-up to the 1979 Revolution generate competing interpretations—some emphasize external intervention, others stress internal dynamics, still others focus on economic grievances or ideological movements. Rather than picking a side, strong historical writing acknowledges the evidence for multiple factors while making a reasoned argument about their relative weight and interaction. For example, you might argue that while the CIA-backed coup was significant, understanding why it succeeded requires examining the Shah's unpopularity, the Tudeh Party's weakness, and the clerical establishment's concerns—each contributed to the outcome. A tutor can teach you how to: identify reliable sources and scholarly consensus, recognize where legitimate disagreement exists, weigh evidence critically, and construct arguments that engage with counterarguments rather than ignoring them. This approach transforms essays from "here's what happened" into "here's why historians interpret it this way, and here's my evidence-based analysis."
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