Award-Winning African-American History
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Award-Winning African-American History Tutors

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Jennifer
I am a graduate of Dartmouth College where I majored in History. I also received my M.Ed. from Boston College so that I could become a middle school and high school social studies teacher. Currently, I am working concurrently on my JD (at Duke University) and my Ph.D. in Education (at Boston College...
Boston College
Masters in Education, Curriculum and Instruction
Dartmouth College
B.A. in History
Duke University
Juris Doctor, Prelaw Studies

Certified Tutor
Sarah
I am a graduate of Oberlin College and Wesleyan University and I am currently a PhD student at Harvard University. I received my BA in English, my BM in Jazz Studies, and my MA in Ethnomusicology. My PhD research is in West African music. I have many years of experience as a tutor, beginning as a wr...
Harvard University
PHD, Ethnomusicology
Oberlin College
Bachelors, English and Jazz studies

Certified Tutor
10+ years
Stephanie
I am a recent graduate of Cornell University with a bachelors degree in both English and History and am currently pursuing my Masters degree in History at the University of Pennsylvania. My long-term goals include enrolling in a Phd program in the History department and becoming a form of history or...
Cornell University
Bachelors in English and History
University of Pennsylvania
Current Grad Student, History

Certified Tutor
Peter
I'm looking forward to helping your student find personal success in their academic lives!
Ohio State
Masters in Education, English Education
Syracuse University
Bachelor of Science, Journalism

Certified Tutor
I am an accomplished musician (trumpet, jazz improvisation) and college instructor (history, humanities, music) who is experienced with students at all levels and from a variety of backgrounds. I enjoy hands-on, one-to-one interactions with my students and use an approach based on mutual respect and...
University of California Los Angeles
Masters, African Area Studies
University of California Los Angeles
Bachelors

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Patrick
I am a recent graduate of the University of Chicago, where I received Bachelor of Arts degrees in English Literature and Linguistics. I have been able to pursue my passion for languages and literature in my career as well as my studies. I have taught English as a second language, critical reading, g...
University of Chicago
Bachelor of Arts in English Literature and Linguistics

Certified Tutor
4+ years
I am currently an English, Social Studies, and Spanish I Instructor at a 1:1 school for middle school and high school students with learning differences. I was previously a college advisor for a nonprofit organization that assists college students from low-income backgrounds. I've been tutoring writ...
University of Chicago
Master of Arts
Augustana University
Bachelor in Arts, English

Certified Tutor
I am a dynamic, recent Harvard PhD graduate seeking to enrich the lives of others through increasing knowledge, growth, and confidence. I currently reside in Austin, TX, but I am originally from New York City. I attended a private New England boarding school called the Hotchkiss school for high scho...
Harvard University
PhD
Brown University
Bachelor in Arts, Development Studies
Brown University
BA in International Studies

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Asha
I am committed to meeting students at their unique starting points and collaboratively exploring innovative solutions that cater to their individual learning styles.
Columbia University in the City of New York
Master of Science, Actuarial Science
Spelman College
Bachelor in Arts, Political Science and Government
Rice University
Doctor of Philosophy, Political Science and Government

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Julia
I am an experienced tutor and an aspiring historian. I hope to pursue graduate school in the next couple years, but I also love children. I've tutored children in both elementary school and high school, and love connecting curriculum to their experiences and current events. My hobbies are vegan cook...
Bryn Mawr College
Bachelor in Arts, History
Top 20 Social Studies Subjects
Meet Our Expert Tutors
Connect with highly-rated educators ready to help you succeed.
Sarah
Calculus Tutor • +28 Subjects
I'm excited to work with you or your child either on standardized test preparation or on generally improving performance in history, English, and social studies!
Arianna
12th Grade math Tutor • +277 Subjects
I am a Dartmouth graduate. I am currently working on my med and business endeavors. I have not only an interest, but a motivation to help others. I have helped students get into Ivy League schools as well as other top universities across the country with top scholarships. I tutor in all subjects from French to Essay Writing and Algebra to Chemistry! I want my students and tutees to see the value in themselves and know that they can accomplish anything with determination and hard work! Realizing you can do it is half the battle and working hard to bring that dream to fruition is the other half! Hobbies: reading, music, writing, painting, art, books, photography
Anniessa
Middle School Math Tutor • +46 Subjects
I am an educator and artist with a passion for languages. I have experience teaching in both Minneapolis and Paris, and I have tutored in K-12 core subject matters - math, science, language arts, and social studies. I have my Master's of Education from the University of Minnesota in Second Languages and Cultures with a narrow focus on English as a Second Language. I am fluent in French and have an intermediate level in Spanish and Arabic. My main goals when working with students is to meet them where they are at in their learning, as well as use creative ways to make knowledge accessible. When I'm not teaching, I am spending time outside, reading up and working on anti-oppression, and watching movies. I am also a novice herbalist and astrologer, and hope to dedicate more time in learning about our plan(t)cestors and how they help with healing. Hobbies: art, movies, books, reading, music, writing
Gabriela
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +47 Subjects
I'm a rising junior at Harvard College. I study African American Studies with a secondary in Women's Studies and I am pursuing a language citation in Spanish. I aspire to one day go to business school. When I am not doing work, I can typically be found reading, writing, or dancing. Hobbies: baking, art, books, writing, reading, cooking, music, dancing
Emmaline
Calculus Tutor • +28 Subjects
I'm a former high school world history teacher, and a graduate of Columbia Teachers College, where I received a Master's in Social Studies Education and my initial teaching certification for Social Studies in New York State (grades 7-12). Before that, I received Bachelor's degrees in History and Comparative Literature & Society at Columbia University (2020).
Jennifer
Middle School Math Tutor • +93 Subjects
I am a recent graduate of the University of Alabama, where I got my Bachelor of Arts in Communications, and majored in public relations and English. I recently moved to the Atlanta area to begin an exciting job as a digital media specialist! I have six years of tutoring experience, especially in English, grammar, writing, general study skills, and essay planning.
Breond
Calculus Tutor • +25 Subjects
I am a recent PhD graduate in African-American Studies & Philosophy from Harvard University. I also earned MA's in both Philosophy and African-American Studies, respectively. My areas of specialization at the graduate level are in ethics, moral thought, philosophy of law, political theory, Africana philosophy, and criminology. I also earned my BA from the University of Southern California where I triple majored in Sociology, Religion, and American Studies & Ethnicity. Hobbies: reading, music, art, books, swimming, writing
Zachary
Calculus Tutor • +34 Subjects
I'm an English professor and author of two novels based out of New York. I've earned my Masters from Columbia University in Writing and my Bachelors from Emory University in Comparative Literature and Creative Writing. I specialize in technical writing, creative writing, literature and test-taking.
Michael
Calculus Tutor • +73 Subjects
I am a member of the Teach For America Corps and will be teaching Spanish in the Baltimore City Public Schools this fall. I am passionate about and love teaching/tutoring anything related to Spanish, Reading, Writing, English and Marketing! Lets conquer this together and get some work done, learn and have and enjoyable fun experience!
Ryan
AP Calculus AB Tutor • +35 Subjects
I am currently a neuroscience student at DePaul University in Chicago. I have always enjoyed working with students. I tutored in high school and found that the opportunity to teach/tutor is also an opportunity to learn. I also took AP and Honors courses throughout high school, I was part of the National Honors Society, and was involved in the band, psychology club, philosophy club, and mathletes just to name a few. Currently, I am part of the University Honors Program and the Pathways Honors Program (for science students) at DePaul. I look forward to meeting you!
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Students often find it challenging to synthesize the long arc of African-American experiences across multiple centuries while maintaining analytical clarity. Common trouble spots include: distinguishing between the distinct experiences and resistance strategies of enslaved people versus free Black communities in the North; understanding the complex relationship between Reconstruction policies and their actual implementation in different regions; and tracing how systemic racism evolved through different legal and institutional forms (slavery → Jim Crow → redlining → mass incarceration). Many students also struggle to move beyond memorizing dates and figures to analyzing primary sources that reveal competing perspectives within Black communities themselves—such as ideological differences between Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois, or tensions within the Civil Rights Movement between different organizations and strategies.
A tutor can teach you a systematic approach to source analysis that goes beyond surface-level comprehension. This includes learning to identify the author's positionality (their social location, audience, and potential biases), recognizing what the source reveals about both the writer's perspective and the historical moment, and comparing competing narratives—for example, comparing enslaved people's narratives with slaveholders' accounts, or contrasting different civil rights leaders' strategic visions. Tutors help you practice asking critical questions: Who created this source and why? What assumptions does it contain? What voices or perspectives might be absent? This skill directly strengthens your ability to construct evidence-based arguments in essays and exams, moving beyond summary toward genuine historical interpretation.
African-American History involves complex, interconnected causes—economic systems, political decisions, cultural resistance, demographic shifts, and individual agency all interact in ways that resist simple linear explanations. A tutor helps you practice identifying multiple contributing factors and understanding how they reinforce each other. For instance, understanding the Great Migration requires examining not just the push factors (Jim Crow violence, limited economic opportunity in the South) but also the pull factors (industrial job availability, existing community networks, railroad recruitment), plus the ways this migration itself transformed American politics and culture. Learning to construct nuanced arguments that acknowledge complexity while still making clear analytical points—rather than listing disconnected factors—is a skill tutors develop with you through guided practice on actual historical questions.
Students often struggle with how to balance traditional periodization (Colonial era, Antebellum, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, Civil Rights, Post-Civil Rights) with the reality that African-American experiences don't neatly fit these categories. A tutor helps you develop flexible frameworks that track specific themes across periods—for example, following evolving strategies of resistance and freedom-seeking from the colonial period through emancipation, or examining how racial capitalism transformed across different eras while maintaining core exploitative structures. You'll learn to ask: What changed in this period, and what persisted? How did African-American communities respond to those shifts? This approach helps you write more sophisticated essays that demonstrate periodization as an analytical tool rather than a rigid box, which is especially important for AP-level work.
Understanding how institutions (government, education, banking, criminal justice) created and maintained racial hierarchies requires learning to read policy documents, legal codes, and institutional practices as historical evidence. A tutor teaches you to trace specific mechanisms—like how redlining policies mathematically prevented Black wealth accumulation, or how convict leasing systems perpetuated slavery-like conditions after emancipation, or how school funding formulas created resource disparities. You'll practice analyzing not just what policies stated but how they actually functioned and whom they benefited. This skill is crucial for constructing evidence-based arguments about systemic racism and understanding how individual prejudice and institutional structures interact—a distinction many students initially miss but is essential for sophisticated historical analysis.
This is one of the most important analytical challenges in African-American History: representing the real constraints people faced while honoring their creative, strategic responses and refusal to be passive. A tutor helps you develop language and frameworks that hold both truths simultaneously. For example, you might examine how enslaved people created autonomous spaces and cultural practices within an oppressive system, or how Black communities built thriving institutions and economies despite systematic exclusion, or how civil rights activists strategically chose tactics (nonviolence, direct action, litigation, political organizing) based on careful analysis of power. Learning to use primary sources that showcase African-American voices and decision-making—rather than only sources about what was done to Black people—fundamentally shifts your analytical approach and strengthens your historical arguments.
Many students initially treat African-American History as a monolithic category, missing how gender, class, sexuality, geography, and other identities shaped different experiences within Black communities. A tutor helps you practice analyzing how, for instance, Black women's experiences during slavery differed from Black men's due to sexual violence and reproductive coercion; how class divisions within Black communities affected civil rights strategies; or how LGBTQ+ Black activists contributed to and sometimes faced marginalization within mainstream movements. You'll learn to read sources that reveal these internal complexities—like Black feminist critiques of male-centered civil rights narratives, or working-class perspectives that challenged elite Black leadership. This analytical skill deepens your understanding of historical complexity and produces more nuanced, compelling essays that demonstrate sophisticated historical thinking.
An effective African-American History tutor should have deep subject knowledge that goes beyond textbook narratives—understanding historiographical debates, being familiar with major primary sources and scholarly works, and able to discuss how historical interpretations have evolved. They should excel at teaching source analysis and evidence-based argumentation rather than just drilling facts, and be skilled at helping you recognize bias (including in traditional narratives) while developing your own analytical voice. Look for someone who can connect African-American History to broader historical themes while maintaining focus on the specific experiences and agency of Black people, and who can adapt their approach whether you're preparing for AP exams, writing research papers, or building foundational understanding. Varsity Tutors connects you with tutors who specialize in social studies and can tailor their expertise to your specific learning goals and skill level.
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