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Award-Winning AP United States History Tutors serving Los Angeles, CA

Certified Tutor
The APUSH exam tests whether students can do what historians do: analyze sources, weigh competing interpretations, and build a thesis under a ticking clock. Jessica's Penn history degree and her certification as a writing tutor through the university's Critical Writing Department mean she can sharpe...
Nova Southeastern University
PHD, Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelors, History
University of Pennsylvania
undergraduate

Certified Tutor
Erika
The AP United States History exam rewards students who can think in terms of historical causation and continuity, not just recall dates. Erika tackles each period by anchoring it to a few key turning points — the Constitutional Convention, Reconstruction, the New Deal — and teaching students to trac...
Harvard University
Master of Public Policy, Public Policy

Certified Tutor
Molly
Molly earned her history degree from Columbia, where she wrote two distinguished theses that required the same kind of evidence-based argumentation the AP United States History exam tests. She unpacks complex periods — from Reconstruction to the New Deal — by teaching students to identify causation,...
Northwestern University
Master of Science in Education
Columbia University in the City of New York
Bachelor in Arts, History

Certified Tutor
Asta
The APUSH exam tests historical thinking skills — causation, continuity and change, comparison — not just recall of dates and names. Asta, who holds a political science degree from the University of Chicago and has passed the CLEP US History exam, tackles each period by connecting political developm...
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts in Political Science

Certified Tutor
Ethan
Studying public policy means tracing how ideas become laws and how laws reshape societies — exactly the kind of causal thinking APUSH demands. Ethan tackles each period by connecting policy decisions to their social consequences, whether it's Reconstruction-era amendments or New Deal legislation. He...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Environmental Science and Public Policy

Certified Tutor
Periodization is where most AP United States History students struggle — not memorizing events, but explaining why 1848 or 1877 or 1945 marks a turning point. Tom's PhD in American Studies means he thinks in exactly these terms, connecting economic, cultural, and political threads across eras. He al...
Boston University
PHD, American Studies
Harvard University
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
Catherine
Catherine is finishing a PhD in History, which means she doesn't just know the APUSH content — she thinks like the historians who write the exam. She unpacks periodization and causation as thinking tools, showing students how to trace threads like westward expansion or evolving conceptions of libert...
Stanford University
PHD, History
Princeton University
Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor
Patrick
Scoring well on AP United States History means mastering a specific skill: turning raw historical evidence into a coherent, thesis-driven argument under time pressure. Patrick's MA in History and legal training at Duke gave him years of practice doing exactly that — synthesizing sources, identifying...
Emory University
Bachelor in Arts, History
Duke University
JD
Duke University
MA in History

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Deirdre
APUSH asks students to do something most find uncomfortable: argue with history rather than just memorize it. Deirdre earned her BA in History of Science from Harvard, where analyzing primary sources and constructing document-based arguments was daily practice. She walks students through periodizati...
Harvard University
Bachelors, History and Science, Pre-Medical Studies
Harvard University
BA in History of Science

Certified Tutor
Richard
Scoring well on AP United States History means writing persuasive, evidence-rich essays under serious time constraints. Richard's Government concentration at Harvard keeps him deep in primary sources and historical argumentation daily, and he walks students through how to dissect a document set, ide...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Government
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Frequently Asked Questions
AP United States History spans from pre-Columbian America through the present day, organized into nine thematic learning objectives. The course emphasizes historical thinking skills like analyzing primary sources, understanding causation, and evaluating multiple perspectives. Students study major periods including colonial America, the Revolutionary era, westward expansion, the Civil War and Reconstruction, industrialization, the Progressive Era, America's rise as a global power, and modern America through the present.
The AP exam consists of two sections: a 55-minute multiple-choice and short-answer section (40% of your score) and a 100-minute free-response section with document-based questions and long essays (60% of your score). The multiple-choice section tests your ability to identify key concepts and analyze sources quickly, while the essay sections require you to construct arguments supported by specific historical evidence. Strong time management is essential—many students struggle with pacing, so practicing full-length exams under timed conditions is crucial for success.
Students often struggle with three main areas: memorizing vast amounts of content across nearly 500 years of history, analyzing primary sources under time pressure, and constructing well-supported arguments in essays. Many find it difficult to move beyond simple fact recall to the higher-order thinking the AP exam demands—connecting events, understanding causation, and evaluating historical significance. Additionally, distinguishing between similar time periods or understanding how different themes intersect across eras can be confusing without structured guidance.
A tutor can help you build a strategic study plan that covers all nine thematic learning objectives while identifying your specific weak areas through practice tests. They can teach you effective strategies for analyzing documents quickly, constructing thesis statements that earn maximum points, and managing your time across multiple essay sections. Tutors also provide personalized feedback on your essays and help you develop the historical thinking skills that distinguish high-scoring responses from average ones.
Score improvement depends on your starting point and how consistently you engage with tutoring and practice. Students who work with a tutor typically see meaningful gains—often 2-4 points on the AP scale—when they commit to regular sessions and complete assigned practice work between meetings. The key is starting early enough (ideally by junior year or early senior year) to allow time for deep content review and multiple full-length practice exams with feedback.
Practice tests are essential—they're the best way to identify content gaps, understand question formats, and build test-taking stamina. Taking full-length exams under timed conditions helps you develop realistic pacing strategies and reveals which thematic areas or question types give you trouble. Most successful students complete at least 4-6 full-length practice exams before test day, analyzing their mistakes carefully to avoid repeating them.
Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who specialize in AP United States History and understand the specific demands of the exam. When you work with Varsity Tutors, you'll be matched with a tutor based on your goals, learning style, and schedule. The matching process considers factors like the tutor's experience with AP exam preparation and their ability to teach the historical thinking skills that earn top scores.
Test anxiety is common, but it's manageable through preparation and strategy. Taking multiple practice exams under timed conditions desensitizes you to the pressure and builds confidence in your knowledge. A tutor can also teach you specific techniques like breaking down complex questions into manageable parts, reviewing your essays before submitting, and managing your energy across the long exam. Knowing that you've thoroughly prepared and practiced is one of the most powerful anxiety-reduction tools available.
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