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Award-Winning MCAT 10-Week Prep Class Tutors serving Detroit, MI

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Jon
I am a graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). I received my Bachelor of Arts in Asian American Studies with a pre-med track. I am currently a grad student at the Yale School of Public Health.
Yale University
Master of Public Policy, Public Health
University of California Los Angeles
Bachelor in Arts, Asian American Studies

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Kaitlyn
I am a medical student committed to helping your student succeed. I have been a tutor for 5+ years, and have experience teaching Math, Science, Spanish and Test Prep to students of all ages and ability. I believe every child has the potential to learn with positive one on one attention and I am comm...
Fairfield University
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Sophie
I'm Sophie, and I'm a medical student with a passion for teaching. I want to work with patients, but my other goal is to go into academic medicine. I can't picture my present or future without education in it. I began tutoring for my little sister when both of us were in high school, helping her wit...
Drexel University
Bachelor of Science, Biological and Physical Sciences

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Ana
I have been in the teaching field for over seven years, in person and online, and I have come to appreciate how important it is to combine good methods of teaching with the right attitude and motivation toward your students such as being patient, enthusiastic and encouraging. I think it is also impo...
Technological Institute of Santo Domingo
Bachelor of Science, Industrial Engineering

Certified Tutor
Michael
I'm a graduate of many institutions of higher learning, both in the academic community as well as the military. I have graduate degrees from the University of Maryland and Suffolk University (Boston, MA), and a Bachelor's degree from the University of Central Florida. Recently I went back to school ...
University of Maryland global campus
Master of Science, Ecommerce
University of Central Florida
Bachelor of Science, Liberal Arts and Sciences

Certified Tutor
Nina
I am a first-year student at Columbia University in the City of New York with a prospective major in economics-political science. I am a native New Yorker, having attended the Brearley School for grades 9-12. Having experienced the college process firsthand, I am passionate about tutoring students i...
Columbia University in the City of New York
Current Undergrad, Economics-Political Science

Certified Tutor
Maggie
I first discovered tutoring in high school when I worked as a peer mentor for freshmen, helping them with geometry and physics while developing studying and test-taking techniques to help them gain confidence and comfort with learning the material. This position was tutoring + mentoring, and I have ...
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts, Human Development and Family Studies

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Sarah
Hello, there!My name is Sarah Manns, and I am a 19-year-old Sophomore at the University of Texas at Dallas. I’m currently working towards a Bachelor's Degree in Literary Studies, minoring in Psychology, and am working towards teaching certification. Afterwards, I intend to work towards my Masters De...
The University of Texas at Dallas
Bachelors, Literary Studies with minor in Psychology

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Cathey
I am a graduate of Mississippi State University, Freed Hardeman University, Mississippi Valley State University, and NOVA Southeastern University. I also, received an undergraduate degree in Home Teaching, Curriculum and Instructional Design, and Curriculum and Instructional Management and Administr...
Mississippi Valley State University
Master of Arts Teaching, Education
Nova Southeastern University
Doctor of Education, Curriculum and Instruction

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Shannon
I am an International Studies and South Asian Studies student at Emory University, but I'm starting to wonder if I should have been an Education major! I've been tutoring students of all ages for the past four years, and I truly enjoy it. I'm happy to say that my students have taught me as much as I...
Emory University
Bachelor in Arts, International Studies
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Frequently Asked Questions
Ten weeks can be an effective MCAT prep timeline, especially if you're already strong in science fundamentals and can dedicate significant study hours. The key is structured, focused preparation rather than casual review. A typical 10-week plan involves 300-400 hours of study time, which breaks down to 30-40 hours per week—manageable alongside other commitments when you have a clear strategy.
Many students see meaningful score improvements in this timeframe by concentrating on their weakest areas first, taking full-length practice tests weekly, and refining test-taking strategies. Working with expert tutors for personalized 1-on-1 instruction helps you identify gaps quickly and avoid wasting time on concepts you've already mastered.
Score improvement depends on your starting point and study effort, but students typically see gains of 3-8 points on the 230-300 MCAT scale with consistent, targeted preparation. If you're starting around a 490-500 and aiming for 510+, that improvement is realistic with 10 weeks of dedicated work.
The biggest score jumps usually come from mastering test-specific strategies rather than just content knowledge—learning how to manage timing, eliminate wrong answers efficiently, and handle test anxiety. Tutors experienced with MCAT prep can pinpoint exactly where you're leaving points on the table and help you recover them through practice and strategy refinement.
The Chemical and Physical Foundations section challenges many students because it requires both conceptual understanding and calculation speed under time pressure. The Biological and Biochemical Foundations section demands extensive content knowledge, while the Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations section trips up students who haven't prioritized these less familiar topics.
The Reading Comprehension section is deceptive—many students underestimate it—because it requires not just reading speed but careful analysis of complex scientific passages. Working with tutors helps you develop section-specific strategies: for sciences, it's about efficient problem-solving; for reading, it's about active annotation and question prediction.
Most MCAT prep plans include 8-12 full-length practice tests over 10 weeks, typically taking 2-3 each week starting around week 3 or 4. This spacing allows you to build content knowledge first, then apply it under realistic test conditions. Each practice test should be followed by thorough review—not just checking answers, but understanding why you missed each question and what strategy or concept gap led to that mistake.
Quality of review matters more than quantity of tests. Taking a practice test without detailed analysis wastes the opportunity. Tutors can help you streamline this review process by highlighting patterns in your mistakes and focusing your study time on the highest-impact improvements.
The MCAT gives you roughly 1.5-2 minutes per question depending on the section, which means you can't afford to spend 5 minutes on a single problem. Effective pacing requires practice and strategy: on sciences, you might quickly identify which questions you can answer fast and which need more time, then come back to tough ones. On reading comprehension, many students benefit from skimming strategically rather than reading every word.
The biggest timing mistake is getting stuck on one question. Setting personal time limits during practice (e.g., no more than 90 seconds on a science question) trains your brain to move forward and guess intelligently when needed. Tutors experienced with MCAT test-taking can teach you timing strategies specific to your working style and help you practice them until they become automatic.
Your first full-length practice test is your diagnostic—take it early in your prep and review every single question, not just the ones you missed. Sort your mistakes into categories: content gaps (you didn't know the material), careless errors (you knew it but made a mistake), timing issues (you ran out of time), or strategy errors (you misunderstood the question). This sorting reveals whether you need more content study, more practice, or strategy coaching.
Once you've identified patterns, focus the bulk of your remaining prep time there. If biochemistry accounts for 30% of your mistakes but only 15% of your study time, you know where to concentrate. Regular mini-quizzes and section-specific practice tests let you track improvement week-to-week. Tutors can accelerate this process by analyzing your practice tests with you and creating a targeted remediation plan.
Test anxiety often stems from uncertainty—not knowing exactly what to expect or doubting your preparation. Combat this by practicing under realistic conditions: take full-length tests at the same time of day as your actual exam, in a quiet space, without interruptions. Familiarity with the testing format and experience with timing builds genuine confidence, not false reassurance.
Building a strong foundation also matters. When you've practiced a skill hundreds of times, your brain handles it automatically under stress. Knowing your weak areas and having a plan to address them reduces anxiety because you've taken control of the process. Many students benefit from working with tutors who can provide encouragement, help you track tangible progress, and teach stress-management strategies specific to standardized testing for students in Detroit.
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