Award-Winning GRE Tutors
serving Queens, NY
Award-Winning
GRE
Tutors in Queens
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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Elizabeth scored 730 Verbal and 770 Quantitative on the GRE and teaches exclusively from ETS materials, since those mirror test-day question styles more closely than third-party prep books. She built ...

Thomas
Thomas covers both the quantitative and verbal sides of the GRE, drawing on a math-heavy science background that spans calculus through statistics and a graduate education built on reading and writing...
Ruth has taken the GRE from both sides — as a test-taker entering her PhD program in Criminology and as someone who now teaches all three sections. Her doctoral training sharpens the Analytical Writin...
Preparing for the GRE as a whole means juggling Verbal, Quantitative, and Analytical Writing — three sections that reward very different skills but share a common thread of logical reasoning. Irina's ...
I am a graduate of Grinnell College, a private liberal arts college located in Grinnell, Iowa. I have a Bachelor of the Arts in Computer Science from Grinnell's Department of Math and Computer Scienc...
Scoring 5s on both AP English exams and the AP Psychology exam, Destiny knows how to dissect reading passages under pressure and construct tight analytical arguments — two skills that drive GRE Verbal...
Reviews from students: "I loved how you explained math. You were able to explain formulas so they made sense and it was engaging. Thank you for making math interesting." - Ferol Conklin "I have pub...
Mimi
I am an interdisciplinary educator with an Ed.M. from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a B.A. from Dartmouth College. My background is primarily in integrated arts learning and museum educ...
Aaron
I'm not tutoring or buried in my textbooks, you will either find me rock climbing at the Triangle Rock Club, playing Ultimate Frisbee, working on my car, or enjoying the great outdoors (beaches, mount...
Nina
I am a recent graduate from a masters program in biostatistics at Columbia University. I received my Bachelor of Arts in biological sciences, with a focus in neurobiology at Northwestern University. I...
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and study commitment, but most students see meaningful gains within 3-6 months of focused preparation. Students who work with tutors typically improve 5-15 percentile points on average, with larger jumps possible if you're addressing specific weak areas like quantitative reasoning or analytical writing.
The key is identifying which sections need the most work. Many students are surprised to find that targeted practice on question types they struggle with—like data interpretation or argument analysis—yields faster improvement than general studying.
Pacing is one of the most common challenges on the GRE. With only 1 minute 30 seconds per verbal question and about 2 minutes per quant question (accounting for the adaptive format), strategic time management matters. The trick is knowing when to skip a difficult question and come back to it rather than spending 3-4 minutes getting stuck.
A tutor can help you develop a personalized pacing strategy based on your test-taking patterns. They'll also teach you to recognize question types quickly and practice under timed conditions, which builds both speed and confidence on test day.
You should spend more time on weaker sections, but don't neglect your stronger ones. For example, if quantitative reasoning is challenging but verbal is solid, allocate 60-70% of study time to quant. However, keep practicing verbal to maintain your performance—atrophy is real with standardized test prep.
The GRE's adaptive format means your performance on early questions determines question difficulty for later sections, so having a baseline competency across all three sections (Verbal Reasoning, Quantitative Reasoning, and Analytical Writing) helps you stay competitive throughout the test.
Most students benefit from taking 4-6 full-length practice tests under timed conditions during their preparation. The first 1-2 tests are diagnostic—they help identify your weaknesses and show you where to focus. The remaining tests let you practice strategies, build stamina, and track improvement over time.
Equally important is reviewing what you got wrong. Many students skip the review and miss the chance to learn. A tutor can help you analyze your performance patterns and determine whether mistakes stem from timing pressure, conceptual gaps, or test anxiety—then develop targeted solutions.
The Analytical Writing section intimidates many test-takers, but it follows predictable patterns. You'll encounter two essays: Analyze an Issue and Analyze an Argument. Success comes from understanding the rubric (the GRE evaluates organization, evidence, and reasoning) and practicing the template approach—structure beats spontaneity here.
Most students benefit from writing 8-12 timed essays before test day to internalize the format and develop automatic transitions and structures. A tutor can provide feedback on your reasoning clarity and help you spot weaknesses in arguments quickly, which is especially useful for the Analyze an Argument prompt.
Data interpretation questions reward pattern recognition and estimation over calculation. Instead of computing exact answers, skilled test-takers learn to compare graphs, identify relationships, and estimate percentages—skills that feel slow at first but become automatic with practice.
The secret is practicing with intentional focus. Work through problems and ask: What's the fastest way to solve this? Can I estimate instead of calculate? What trap answer is the test-maker expecting? A tutor can expose you to the full range of question types and help you build a personal toolkit of shortcuts for queens students preparing for graduate programs.
Test anxiety often stems from unfamiliarity with the test format and time pressure. The antidote is exposure—taking practice tests under authentic conditions builds confidence and reduces anxiety significantly. When you know what to expect and trust your skills, the pressure decreases naturally.
Tutors also help by teaching you practical calming strategies (like strategic breaks and breathing techniques) and building your confidence through positive experiences with difficult material. Many students find that working through challenging problems with a tutor and succeeding reduces anxiety because you realize you're more capable than you thought.
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