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Certified Tutor
8+ years
Jane
I am a current student at Princeton University, obtaining a major in English with minors in Environmental Studies and Musical Theater. I graduated from Sewickley Academy in 2016 as a member of the Cum Laude Society with highest honors for all semesters. I am an AP Scholar with Honors, an Academic Al...
Princeton University
Current Undergrad Student, English

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Anna
With each of my experiences working with children my passion for education has grown. I first came to Austin to work with a Spanish literacy intervention program through Americorps called A Community for Education (ACE). After my service with ACE I taught at a dual language (Spanish-English) school ...
Oberlin College
Bachelors, Comparative American Studies
The University of Texas at Austin
Current Grad Student, Communication Sciences and Disorders

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Deborah
My MA in English with a concentration in Rhetoric and Composition, together with my MA in Adult Education and Continuing Education, qualified me to have a stellar forty-three-year career as a full-time college professor predominately in the University System of Georgia. I have successfully instructe...
Georgia State University
Master of Arts, English
University of Missouri-Kansas City
Master of Arts, Adult and Continuing Education
University of Georgia
Bachelor in Arts, Political Science and Government

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Hi. I love math and I love teaching math. I am a state certified high school math teacher. I have 31 years of classroom experience. I currently teach Pre-Calculus and AP Statistics.
Clark Atlanta University
Bachelor of Science, Mathematics

Certified Tutor
Katherine
Hi, my name is Katherine and I've been tutoring in various capacities since 2012. Although I'm currently studying Computer Science at Swarthmore College, I have expertise in a number of subject areas and I'd love to help you out.
Swarthmore College
Current Undergrad Student, Computer Science

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Samantha
I believe every student has a unique learning skill set and every teacher continues to learn from her students. To ensure every student receives the best tutoring, I strive to offer excellent communication and a diverse set of teaching skills.I obtained my Bachelor in Business Administration from th...
University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Bachelor in Business Administration, International Business/French
Vermont Law School
Juris Doctor, International Law

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Christopher
I am a current student at Rutgers University on track to major in Electrical Engineering. I tutor a wide range of math from elementary level up to high school and college. This range includes algebra, trigonometry, pre-calc and calculus. I have had many experiences through my high school and outside...
Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Bachelor of Engineering, Electrical Engineering

Certified Tutor
Jerry
Hey, I enjoy teaching math, computer science, and the SAT! Contact me if you are interested in these.
The Texas A&M University System Office
Bachelor in Arts, Political Science and Government

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Amy
I have a B.A. in French and a diploma in Business French from the Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Paris. I also speak Greek, Italian, and Spanish.I have worked as a private tutor in the area of foreign languages, essay writing, and a variety of other subjects for more than a decade. In that time...
Hofstra
Bachelor in Arts, French

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Gabrielle
I am recent graduate of Binghamton University, with a Bachelor of Sciences in Biology. I am deeply committed to the value of education, and believe that learning is a gift and an opportunity for growth that should be available to everyone. For this reason, I am passionate about tutoring and helping ...
SUNY at Binghamton
Bachelor in Arts, Biology, General
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Julie
Languages Tutor • +4 Subjects
I am a graduate of LaSalle University in Mexico City. I received my Bachelor of Science degree inBusiness Administration with a focus on management. I am also a certifiedteacher of Spanish. Since graduation I have worked in Human Resources and I havealso been tutoring children and adults in private and public schools, as wellas online. I am very enthusiastic about teaching my native language because Ifeel that in that way I am enriching my students' education and experiences inlearning aspects of another culture. One area where we seem to have the mostfun is prepping for exams and writing assignments. I am a firm proponent ofeducation, and as a tutor, my approach is based on each of my students'level of proficiency, their goals, and their learning pace. I focus on providinga pleasant and safe experience for my students. I prepare lesson plans that arecreative and introduce new topics in a fun way, spending enough time reviewingthe material. Afterwards, I allow students time to practice on their own. I encourage you to contact me to schedule so togetherwe can start achieving your goals
Anna
ACT Writing Tutor • +27 Subjects
I honestly love tutoring. While working in finance and publishing over the past decade, I have independently tutored students from many premiere NY and NJ high schools and universities. I continued tutoring even after joining a major private equity firm because of how much I enjoy working one-on-one with students. Breaking down seemingly complex subjects is one of my favorite pastimes--it's part of the reason I also enjoy writing about arcane financial topics like quanto spreads on sovereign CDS. I've also developed a newfound respect for the challenges students face when undergoing years of testing after developing my own study plan to pass the first two CFA exams (I'm taking the third exam in June). This experience has shaped how I work with students to tackle test-taking anxiety and master difficult material quickly.I have both a BA and MA in English from New York University.
Catherine
Algebra Tutor • +15 Subjects
Hello! My name is Catherine Raj and I am a second-year medical student at Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine. I graduated from The Ohio State University with a Bachelor's of Science in Neuroscience in 2022. Since 2015, I have tutored children from ages 3-16 in areas of math and reading, as well as their school curriculum. Apart from tutoring here, I have worked for the Kumon Learning Center as a teaching instructor for 5 years. While I am certified to tutor a broad range of subjects, I have years of experience with tutoring young children in math and reading, such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, phonics, reading comprehension, and much more. I connect with elementary and middle school students very well, as I believe in understanding children in order to give them a fulfilling tutoring experience. I also very much enjoy tutoring pre-algebra and algebra as those are my favorite math subjects, as well as my best! My students and I have always had a deeper level of understanding beyond the books and I pride my style of teaching on that aspect.
Grace
ACCUPLACER Arithmetic Tutor • +22 Subjects
I am a graduate of Harvard Graduate School of Education (3.95 GPA) and New York University (3.98 GPA). I have worked with students of all ages. I love adapting my teaching style to the individual needs of each student to help them fulfill their greatest potentials.
Sarah
Elementary School Math Tutor • +20 Subjects
I have been a special education teacher in Somerset County for the last 5 years. I have worked in self-contained classrooms and am currently working as a 4th grade resource room Reading and Math teacher. Next spring, I will graduate from Rutgers University's Graduate School of Education with an Ed.M in Reading Education. I will be a certified Reading Specialist as well as a certified supervisor. I am currently a certified Literacy Specialist.
Chester
Creative Writing Tutor • +18 Subjects
I love English, and good writing. Since I like working one-or-one or with a small group, tutoring is a great way for me to help young people communicate more effectively in writing. As a social scientist, I also like to talking about statistics and social science. I like to teach by example and ask lots of questions so students can discover answers themselves. When not working, I like to watch movies, exercise, and write science fiction.
Maria
ACT Prep Tutor • +15 Subjects
I received my Bachelor of Science degree in Biochemistry from Denison University. I am currently pursuing an M.D. at Case Western Reserve University. I've been a college-level teaching assistant for both introductory biology and general chemistry. Besides chemistry, I really enjoy tutoring for test prep (ACT and MCAT) because I view these types of tests to be a collection of puzzles to solve. It's a lot of fun helping students to figure out the logic behind these puzzles and apply it broadly, and it's incredibly rewarding to see this integration of knowledge translate to a high score. When working with students, I like to challenge them to identify the purpose of the problem or question and what underlying reasoning can be applied broadly in future questions. In doing so, students gain more long-term usable skills and the ability to think independently.
Juliet
Adult Literacy Tutor • +12 Subjects
Passionate social justice advocate eager to serve as a mentor to the youth. Sociologist at heart. I am the rose that grew from the concrete.
Theo
ACT Prep Tutor • +25 Subjects
I am a current undergraduate student at Columbia University in New York City, pursuing a Bachelors of Arts in History and Economics. These are two of the subjects that I enjoy tutoring the most, but I also have a penchant for tutoring and learning about math and literature. I am passionate about tutoring because I benefited from the personalized guidance of great tutors in my past and I really enjoy seeing students push themselves and develop an appreciation for subject areas or even the mental exercise of test-taking thanks to tutoring. I also believe that tutoring a subject area is the greatest way to maintain and develop understanding of its material for both the student and the tutor. I was an active tutor in high school in mathematics and history and as I take more classes in college, I look forward to tutoring students in those in which I understood the material really well. In my spare time, I enjoy reading about history, camping, biking, and traveling when I can (or exploring the incredible city of New York)!
Qin
Conversational Mandarin Tutor • +14 Subjects
Living in Great New York Area since 2008. Graduate student at Columbia University.Major in Finance + Economics (Undergraduate Program), and Public Administration (Graduate Program), Average GPA is 3.65.Speak Mandarin, English and Japanese.Subjects cover East Asian History (China & Japan), International Relation, Public sector (NPO related).
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Frequently Asked Questions
Students often find it challenging to distinguish between overlapping developmental theories—particularly understanding when to apply Piaget's cognitive stages versus Vygotsky's sociocultural approach, or differentiating Erikson's psychosocial stages from Freud's psychosexual ones. Another common struggle is grasping attachment theory (Bowlby, Ainsworth) and interpreting Strange Situation results, which requires understanding both the behavioral observations and their theoretical implications. Many students also struggle with the nature-nurture debate as it applies to specific domains like language acquisition, moral development, or temperament, especially when research shows gene-environment interactions rather than clear-cut answers. Additionally, students frequently misunderstand developmental trajectories—assuming linear progression when development is actually uneven across domains, or confusing correlation with causation when interpreting longitudinal studies.
A tutor can break down why developmental psychologists use specific methods for different questions—explaining why cross-sectional designs are quick but can't track individual change, why longitudinal studies reveal development but take years, and why cohort effects complicate interpretation. They can help you critically read empirical studies by identifying confounding variables, understanding how researchers operationalize constructs (like measuring attachment or cognitive ability), and recognizing limitations in design. For example, a tutor can walk you through a classic study like Ainsworth's Strange Situation, explaining the experimental procedure, behavioral coding, and how findings support or challenge attachment theory. They can also help you design your own mini-studies or critiques, asking questions like: "What would you need to measure to test whether early intervention improves language development?" This builds the analytical thinking needed for research papers and exams.
Strong application requires moving beyond naming a theory to explaining the mechanism—not just "Vygotsky's zone of proximal development" but "how scaffolding by a more knowledgeable peer specifically supports a child's learning of a new skill." A tutor can teach you to structure answers using a framework: identify the developmental question or observation, select the most relevant theory, explain why that theory applies, and discuss evidence or limitations. For instance, if asked about toddler tantrums, you'd explain temperament theory and self-regulation development, cite research on prefrontal cortex maturation, and discuss how parenting responses either support or hinder emotional development. Tutors can also help you recognize when multiple theories apply and how to weigh them—understanding that attachment AND temperament AND parenting style all influence social-emotional outcomes requires integrating frameworks rather than applying them in isolation.
Developmental psychology is full of correlational findings that students misinterpret as causal—for example, studies show that children with secure attachment have better social skills, but this doesn't prove attachment causes social competence (parenting quality might influence both, or temperament might affect both attachment and social outcomes). A tutor helps you ask the right questions: "Is this from an experiment with random assignment, or an observational study?" "What alternative explanations exist?" "Did researchers control for confounds?" Understanding this distinction is especially important for controversial topics like screen time and development, or parenting styles and outcomes, where media often oversimplifies correlational findings into causal claims. On exams and papers, this skill lets you critique research critically—acknowledging what studies actually show versus what people claim they show—which demonstrates sophisticated thinking that separates strong responses from weak ones.
Strong developmental psychology papers move beyond summarizing theories to building arguments supported by specific research. Rather than writing "Attachment is important," you'd write "Bowlby's attachment theory predicts that early caregiver relationships shape internal working models, and longitudinal studies (cite specific studies) show that securely attached infants display greater emotional regulation and peer competence in elementary school, suggesting early attachment has lasting developmental consequences." A tutor helps you select studies strategically—choosing research that directly supports your claim, understanding the study design well enough to cite its strengths and limitations, and synthesizing multiple sources to build a nuanced argument. They also help you avoid common pitfalls: overgeneralizing from small samples, ignoring cultural differences in development, or treating Western developmental norms as universal. This means learning to discuss how socioeconomic status, cultural values, or historical context shape developmental pathways—adding depth that shows you understand development as complex and contextual, not one-size-fits-all.
A tutor teaches you to question assumptions embedded in developmental research and popular claims. For example, when learning about sensitive periods in language acquisition, you'd explore: "What counts as evidence of a sensitive period? Are there alternative explanations for why children learn languages faster than adults?" or "How do we know critical periods exist for attachment if we can't ethically deprive children of caregivers?" This critical lens applies to hot-button topics like screen time, parenting styles, or early childhood education, where research is often misrepresented. Tutors help you recognize bias in study design—who was studied (mostly Western, educated, industrialized samples?), who funded the research, and what assumptions underlie the questions being asked. You'll learn to evaluate competing theories not by memorizing which one is "right," but by understanding what evidence would support each and what their limitations are. This transforms you from a passive consumer of developmental "facts" into someone who can read research skeptically, communicate nuance, and recognize that development is far more complex than headlines suggest.
Developmental psychology covers cognitive, social-emotional, physical, and moral development across infancy through adulthood—and students often struggle to see how these domains interact or remember which milestones apply to which ages. A tutor can help you build organizational frameworks: creating timelines that show parallel development (e.g., what's happening cognitively, socially, and physically during early childhood), or organizing by domain with age markers. More importantly, they help you understand that domains are interconnected—a child's cognitive advances (concrete operational thinking) enable moral development (understanding fairness beyond punishment), which influences social relationships. For example, understanding Piaget's preoperational stage isn't just about egocentrism; it explains why young children struggle with perspective-taking in social situations and why moral reasoning is limited to consequences rather than intentions. A tutor helps you see these connections so that when you encounter a scenario on an exam, you can draw on multiple domains to build a complete picture of development rather than treating cognition, emotion, and social development as separate silos.
AP Psychology's developmental unit emphasizes not just knowing theories but understanding their empirical support and limitations. Students need to move beyond "Erikson has 8 stages" to understanding the evidence for psychosocial development, critiquing his framework (is it culturally universal? what research supports it?), and comparing it to competing theories. The attachment unit is particularly demanding—you need to understand Bowlby's evolutionary perspective, Ainsworth's attachment styles and Strange Situation methodology, and how attachment research informs real-world applications while recognizing its limitations (cultural differences in caregiving, the debate over daycare effects). Cognitive development requires grasping not just Piaget's stages but information-processing and sociocultural alternatives, understanding what each explains well and where each falls short. Finally, the parenting and socialization section demands critical thinking about correlational research—understanding why we can't conclude that authoritative parenting causes better outcomes, and recognizing how SES, culture, and child temperament complicate simple parenting-outcome relationships. A tutor helps you develop this depth so you're not just memorizing facts but thinking like a developmental psychologist.
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