Award-Winning ACT Math Tutors
serving Fort Worth, TX
Award-Winning
ACT Math
Tutors in Fort Worth
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.
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The ACT Math section covers everything from pre-algebra to trigonometry in 60 minutes, which means pacing matters as much as knowledge. Adam, who scored a 35 composite, teaches students to identify which problems deserve full work and which can be solved in under 30 seconds with the right shortcut. That strategic approach turns time pressure from an obstacle into something manageable.

Engineering coursework trains you to look at a problem and immediately identify the simplest path to the answer — and that instinct is exactly what the ACT Math section rewards across its 60 questions. Nate applies that mindset to the algebra, trig, and geometry items that make up the bulk of the test, teaching students to cut through distracting setups and zero in on what's actually being solved. His 34 ACT composite and 5.0 rating back up the approach.
I am passionate about social justice and I believe a great part of justice is education. Education is empowering and fulfilling and I am privileged enough to have experienced this. Now, I want to help others experience the life-changing power of education as well.
While Adam's primary expertise is in English and writing, his 32 ACT composite and experience tutoring across algebra, geometry, and trigonometry give him a practical handle on the math section's most common question types. He's particularly effective at translating word problems into equations — a skill that draws on the same careful reading he applies to literary texts.
The ACT Math section covers everything from pre-algebra ratios to trigonometric identities, and the real challenge is pacing — not just knowing the math but recognizing which approach gets you to the answer fastest. John earned a 36 composite and teaches students to identify problem types on sight so they can allocate time strategically across all 60 questions.
The ACT Math section rewards speed as much as knowledge, and Sugi teaches students to recognize which of the 60 questions are quick wins versus time traps. Her perfect 36 composite and strong math background — through calculus and physical chemistry at Rice — mean she can explain underlying concepts when a student needs more than just a shortcut.
Scoring high on ACT Math isn't about knowing advanced topics — it's about moving through algebra, coordinate geometry, and trigonometry questions with speed and confidence. Alyssa earned a 35 ACT composite and brings a systematic approach to identifying what each problem is really testing, so students stop second-guessing and start finishing sections with time to spare.
Scoring a 36 on the ACT required mastering every math concept the test throws at you, from coordinate geometry and matrix operations to logarithmic functions. Bidyut walks through each problem type with an emphasis on recognizing what the question is actually asking, which saves time and eliminates careless errors. He's rated 5.0 by students.
Medical school trains you to triage — figure out what matters most and act on it fast — and Jiatian applies that same instinct to ACT Math, teaching students to read a problem, identify the core concept being tested, and pick the most efficient solve path without getting tangled in extra information. Her Rice University math foundation covers the algebra, geometry, and probability spread across the section, and she's particularly sharp at showing students how to avoid the trap answers designed to catch rushed mistakes on the back half of the 60-question lineup.
I'm currently a freshman at Rice University studying applied math. I've always had a love for sharing knowledge with others, and I started tutoring when I was a junior in high school. As a former AP student and a National AP Scholar, I have the experience necessary to guide my students through challenging curriculum. Though I specialize in tutoring mathematics and physics, I am experienced with and am happy to tutor a broad range of subjects.
Most ACT Math questions reward students who can identify the shortest path to an answer — and Eisha, who scored a 36 composite, treats each problem type as a decision tree: spot the concept, pick the technique, skip the unnecessary work. Her public health training built strong habits with proportional reasoning and data interpretation, which maps directly onto the statistics and probability items that cluster in the back half of the section. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am a graduate of Texas A&M University; I received a Bachelor of Science in Biology along with being a minor in Spanish. I also studied at Plano ISD in high school. As Plano ISD is recognized for its academic achievements and competitiveness, I have always been positively challenged by my curriculum and by my peers to improve and to push myself to excel. From a young age, I have always been a part of the Gifted and Talented program. Trying to challenge myself and wanting to be different, I took a risk and joined the International Baccalaureate (IB) Program, a program that was not as well recognized at the time and was extremely difficult. Joining the IB program was the best decision I have taken thus far. I gained knowledge from all around world- different insights, different histories, different philosophies, different literature, etc.
Rosemarie scored a 33 ACT composite and knows exactly where the math section tries to trip students up — especially on coordinate geometry, matrices, and trigonometry questions that look harder than they are. She breaks each problem type into a quick decision framework so students can identify the fastest path to the answer under time pressure.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite means Harsh knows how to move quickly through the math section's progression from pre-algebra to trigonometry without losing points on the early questions. He breaks down time management strategies for the 60-question, 60-minute format and teaches students to recognize which problems deserve full work and which can be solved by back-plugging answer choices.
Scoring a 36 ACT composite means Raj didn't just survive the Math section's 60-minute pace — he mastered it. He teaches students to sort the 60 questions by type (coordinate geometry, matrices, trigonometric identities) and apply targeted strategies for each, so time pressure shrinks instead of builds. That kind of structured drill is what turns a 28 into a 33.
Scoring well on ACT Math means handling 60 questions that jump from basic algebra to trigonometric identities and matrix operations, all in 60 minutes. Rakhi's applied math degree and 32 ACT composite mean she can quickly pinpoint where a student's gaps are — whether it's coordinate geometry, logarithm properties, or probability — and close them efficiently.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite means Vy knows how the Math section tests familiar algebra and geometry concepts in unfamiliar ways — and she teaches students to spot those patterns instead of panicking. She breaks down each problem type, from coordinate geometry to probability, into a decision tree so students spend less time figuring out what to do and more time doing it. Rated 5.0 by students.
While Chaya's primary expertise is in English and writing, her coursework at Michigan's Ross School of Business means she's comfortable with the quantitative reasoning and data interpretation that appear throughout the ACT Math section. She takes a strategic approach, teaching students to identify which of the 60 questions to prioritize and which formulas — from coordinate geometry to basic trigonometry — show up most frequently.
Rice's pre-med track keeps Sajel deep in the quantitative coursework — biochemistry, statistics, research methods — that reinforces the algebra and data-interpretation skills covering most of the ACT Math section. She scored a 35 ACT composite and has spent four years tutoring, including prepping her own sibling for standardized tests, so she knows how to break down the 60-question pacing challenge for students who understand the math but struggle to finish on time.
Scoring high on ACT Math isn't about knowing advanced calculus — it's about executing algebra, coordinate geometry, and trigonometry quickly and without careless errors. Whitney earned a 35 ACT composite and approaches math prep by identifying which problem types a student consistently loses time on, then building speed through targeted practice. Her engineering coursework means she can also clarify the underlying concepts behind tricky function and matrix questions.
The ACT Math section covers everything from pre-algebra ratios to trigonometric identities, but the real challenge is switching between difficulty levels every few questions without losing momentum. Miguel maps out which of the 60 questions are high-value targets for each student's current score range, so practice time goes where it actually moves the needle. His Computer Science background is especially useful for the coordinate geometry and function problems that reward systematic thinking over memorization.
Scoring a 34 ACT composite means Meghana knows how the math section escalates — from straightforward algebra and coordinate geometry early on to tricky logarithm and trigonometry problems near the end. She teaches students to recognize which questions deserve full work and which can be solved by back-substitution or estimation, a pacing skill that often matters more than raw math ability on this test.
I am a prematriculant student at the University of Chicago. In high school I took advanced STEM courses at the University of North Texas through a high school program called the Texas Academy of Math and Science. I love taking high level math courses, but I get even more excited when I can help friends and classmates in courses I have already taken. I believe that having a solid understanding of math concepts builds you up for success in any field. I have experience as a teaching assistant in pre-calculus and calculus and have experience tutoring and assisting students in high school math, calculus, and differential equations. When preparing students for standardized tests like the ACT and SAT, I focus on filling any gaps in material and teaching new techniques for making the test easier and quicker to take. I have used and perfected these techniques while taking the ACT and SAT myself and have had success on both tests. I am also a National Merit Finalist.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite, Rishi knows the math section inside out — from the coordinate geometry and trigonometry questions that trip up most students to the time-management strategies that keep you from getting stuck. He treats ACT Math as a pattern-recognition exercise, teaching students to identify what each question is really testing before they start calculating. That efficiency matters when you have 60 questions in 60 minutes.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite means Tim 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. His electrical engineering background makes him particularly sharp on the algebra and functions problems that dominate the test. Rated 5.0 by students.
I am most passionate about biology and chemistry. I am a firm proponent of education, believing it to be absolutely necessary for an improved quality of life, and I try to impart this appreciation to all of my students.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite, Mackenzie knows the math section's pacing demands inside and out — 60 questions in 60 minutes means recognizing which problems to solve algebraically and which to shortcut through estimation or back-solving. She digs into the specific content areas that trip students up most, from trigonometric identities to probability and matrix questions that appear in the final stretch.
Brett scored a 35 ACT composite and tackles the Math section by teaching students which concepts the ACT recycles most heavily — coordinate geometry, trigonometric identities, and logarithm properties show up with surprising regularity. He shows students how to identify what each problem is testing within seconds, saving time for the harder questions at the end.
Scoring a 36 composite on the ACT means Lila knows how to navigate the Math section's time crunch, where 60 questions in 60 minutes leaves no room for getting stuck on coordinate geometry or probability problems. She teaches students to recognize which formula or shortcut each question is really testing, so they move through the easier questions fast and save time for the harder ones.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite, Don knows that ACT Math is less about advanced concepts and more about executing algebra, coordinate geometry, and trigonometry under a brutal 60-minute clock. He teaches students to triage the 60 questions by difficulty, lock in the first 40 quickly, and apply strategic elimination on the harder problems that test logarithms, matrices, and complex numbers.
I am currently a student at the University of Texas-Austin, and in the Honors Biomedical Engineering Program. Throughout high school and into college, I have tutored students of all ages; anywhere from my employment at a mathematics tutoring center to private lessons for students my age. Other parts of my life include playing sports (tennis, soccer, ping pong, basketball), jamming on the piano, and doing extracurriculars at school.
Scoring well on ACT Math isn't about knowing advanced topics — it's about moving quickly through algebra, geometry, and coordinate plane questions without getting bogged down. Paul earned a 34 ACT composite and teaches students to identify which formula or shortcut each question is really testing, cutting wasted time on the problems that look harder than they are.
I'm a senior at UT Austin studying biology pre-med with a certificate in business foundations. I remember high school being tough and teachers couldn't really help me one-on-one, so I'm here to help you with anything you may be struggling with!
I am a graduate of the Johns Hopkins University with a major in Behavioral Biology. I am seeking admission to MD/PhD programs so a lot of my time has been spent in the lab, from a computational neuroscience lab at Hopkins to a genome editing lab at Rice. That being said, I have extensive experience tutoring for the ACT (35) and MCAT (516), both privately and contractually. I aim to get students the score of their dreams. With a solid plan of action and dedication YOU can get there.
I am a third year student at The University of Texas at Austin studying Biomedical Engineering and Computer Science. I have 3 months of online tutoring experience, tutoring both computer science and chemistry. I like the students I tutor to have a hands on approach to learning. The easiest and most fun way to learn is to do. I love watching students use what they've learned to solve real problems.
Biomedical engineering at Rice means Aurnab applies algebra, trigonometry, and statistics daily in contexts where getting the math wrong isn't an option — that precision carries over to how he teaches the 60-question ACT Math sprint. He scored a 36 ACT composite and breaks down each problem type by identifying the single fastest solving strategy, so students spend less time deliberating and more time banking points.
Scoring a 34 ACT composite means Snipta knows how the Math section escalates — the first 30 questions test pre-algebra and basic geometry, but the final 20 demand fluency with logarithms, matrices, and trigonometric identities under serious time pressure. She teaches specific strategies for pacing and for identifying what each problem is actually asking, which is often the difference between a 28 and a 32+.
Scoring a 35 ACT composite, Wendy knows the Math section inside out — including the handful of pre-calculus and trigonometry questions near the end that separate a 30 from a 34. She teaches pacing strategies alongside the actual math, showing students how to recognize which problems deserve full effort and which ones to flag and revisit.
I am a rising sophomore in Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service. I am majoring in security studies thinking about working in counterterrorism. As far as tutoring style, I think it is really important not to give the student the answers but to ask them questions and help them come up with strategies to get to the answer for themselves; the goal is to make myself unnecessary in a way. My strengths (in school and tutoring) are in foreign languages including Latin and humanitiesexpect a very enthusiastic tutor especially if we are talking about Shakespeare! I also think it is important to try and frame things in a context students are used to, so if that means watching She's the Man in order to understand Twelfth Night, then that's what we will do (although we do have to read the actual play as well). If that sounds like something you could use, get in touch!
Speed matters as much as accuracy on ACT Math — 60 questions in 60 minutes means there's no time to second-guess a coordinate geometry problem or fumble through a probability question. Austin earned a 34 composite and approaches the math section by teaching students to recognize problem types instantly and apply the fastest solution path for each. His 5.0 rating speaks to how well that method clicks.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and commitment level, but students typically see gains of 2-5 points on the ACT Math section (which ranges from 1-36) with focused, personalized instruction. The key is identifying your specific weak areas—whether that's algebra, geometry, or test-taking strategy—and targeting those gaps systematically. A tutor can help you understand not just the math concepts, but the unique ways ACT Math questions are formatted and timed.
The ACT Math section gives you 60 minutes for 60 questions, so pacing is critical. A smart approach is to do easier questions first (usually the earlier ones) to build confidence, then tackle harder problems—skipping ones that seem too time-consuming and returning to them if you have time left. Expert tutors can teach you to recognize question types quickly, estimate which problems are worth your time, and practice this strategy repeatedly so it becomes automatic on test day.
Fort Worth students typically struggle with three main areas: pacing (running out of time before finishing), understanding the specific wording of ACT questions (which can be tricky even when you know the math), and gaps in foundational skills like algebra or geometry. Many students also underestimate how much they need to practice—ACT Math requires both conceptual understanding and familiarity with test patterns. Personalized tutoring helps you identify which of these is holding you back and address it directly.
Practice tests are essential—they're the best way to identify your weak areas, get used to the timing pressure, and track progress over time. Taking full, timed practice tests under realistic conditions helps you build stamina and reveals patterns in the types of questions you miss. A tutor can review your practice test results with you, pinpoint exactly where you're losing points, and create a focused study plan to address those gaps before test day.
Your first session is typically a diagnostic conversation where a tutor learns about your current score, goals, and specific challenges. They'll likely review some of your recent practice test results or problem sets to understand your strengths and weaknesses. From there, you'll work together to create a personalized study plan with realistic timelines and focus areas—whether that's mastering specific math topics, improving your pacing, or building test-taking confidence.
Test anxiety often stems from feeling unprepared or uncertain about what to expect. Personalized tutoring builds confidence through repeated practice with actual ACT-style questions, so you'll feel more familiar and in control on test day. Tutors can also teach you specific strategies for managing stress—like which problems to skip, how to pace yourself, and how to refocus when you feel panicked. The more prepared you are, the calmer you'll feel when it matters.
Most students benefit from 2-3 months of focused preparation, though this varies based on your starting score and target score. If you're aiming for a significant improvement, starting earlier gives you time to build foundational skills and practice extensively. A tutor can help you create a realistic study schedule that fits your other commitments and builds momentum toward test day without overwhelming you.
Look for tutors with strong math backgrounds and specific experience preparing students for the ACT—they should understand the test's unique format, question styles, and timing demands. It's also valuable to find someone who can explain concepts clearly and adapt their teaching to your learning style. Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors in Fort Worth who have proven success helping students improve their ACT Math scores and can provide references and credentials.
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