Award-Winning CLEP College Composition
Tutors
Award-Winning
CLEP College Composition
Tutors
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.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
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Linda
Having taught college composition and mentored graduate students at Harvard, Linda knows exactly what the CLEP College Composition exam is testing: thesis construction, rhetorical analysis, and comman...

Peter
Two timed essays plus multiple-choice questions on rhetoric and grammar make the CLEP College Composition exam a test of both writing speed and analytical precision. Peter brings a journalist's instin...
Manuel
Scoring well on the CLEP College Composition exam means demonstrating rhetorical analysis skills — identifying an author's purpose, evaluating argument structure, and producing clear thesis-driven ess...
Samantha
Earning college credit through CLEP College Composition means proving you can write a clear, well-organized argument on demand. Samantha's approach zeroes in on the two essay types — persuasive and an...
Strong CLEP College Composition scores come down to two skills: constructing a clear, evidence-driven argument under time pressure and catching rhetorical and grammatical errors in sample passages. Ar...
Ariana
Scoring well on the CLEP College Composition exam means producing a coherent, well-supported essay under a tight deadline while also nailing the multiple-choice rhetoric and grammar sections. Ariana s...
Philosophy majors learn to do one thing exceptionally well: build airtight arguments from scratch — which is exactly what the CLEP College Composition essays demand. Caroline applies that training to ...
The CLEP College Composition exam tests rhetorical analysis, argumentation, and revision skills under tight time constraints — all areas Kevin has sharpened through a daily writing practice and the ri...
A strong CLEP College Composition score requires more than decent grammar — the exam tests rhetorical analysis, argument construction, and the ability to revise passages for clarity and logical flow. ...
Jennifer
Two timed essays plus multiple-choice questions on rhetoric and grammar — the CLEP College Composition exam asks students to perform under pressure. Jennifer approaches the essays by building a reusab...
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Frequently Asked Questions
The CLEP College Composition essay (worth 50% of your score) requires a clear thesis statement, organized body paragraphs with supporting evidence, and a conclusion that reinforces your argument. A tutor can help you master the five-paragraph format quickly, teach you how to develop topic sentences that directly support your thesis, and show you how to integrate quotes and examples effectively within the time constraints. Many students struggle with balancing depth of argument against the 45-minute time limit, so targeted practice with feedback on structure is key to improvement.
The multiple-choice portion (also 50% of your score) tests grammar, sentence construction, rhetorical effectiveness, and reading comprehension. You'll encounter questions about comma splices, dangling modifiers, pronoun agreement, and identifying the most effective way to revise sentences for clarity or style. A tutor experienced with CLEP can help you recognize common error patterns, understand why certain constructions are grammatically incorrect, and develop speed in eliminating weak answer choices—critical skills since you have only about 90 minutes for 50 questions.
Time management is one of the biggest challenges students face: you need roughly 45 minutes for the essay and 90 minutes for 50 multiple-choice questions, leaving little buffer. A tutor can teach you to spend 5-10 minutes planning your essay before writing, recognize when to skip a difficult multiple-choice question and return to it, and practice pacing drills with actual CLEP-style questions. Working through timed practice tests with a tutor helps you identify where you lose time and develop strategies—like quickly identifying the main idea in reading passages or spotting grammar errors without overthinking.
Students frequently miss questions involving comma usage, sentence fragments, run-on sentences, misplaced modifiers, and pronoun reference errors. Many test-takers also struggle with understanding the difference between formal and informal register, recognizing redundancy, and choosing the most concise way to express an idea. A tutor can diagnose your specific grammar gaps through diagnostic quizzes, teach you the rules behind common errors rather than just memorizing rules, and give you targeted practice on your weak areas so you're not wasting time reviewing concepts you already know.
Spending 5-10 minutes planning—jotting down your thesis, three main supporting points, and one or two examples for each—dramatically improves essay clarity and prevents rambling or off-topic writing. Many students rush into writing and end up with weak organization or incomplete arguments that cost them points. A tutor can teach you a quick outlining system that works within the time limit, help you practice generating strong thesis statements under pressure, and show you how good planning actually saves time by keeping your writing focused and reducing the need for major revisions.
The exam rewards essays that support claims with specific, relevant examples rather than vague generalizations. You don't need to cite sources formally, but you should use concrete details, hypothetical scenarios, or logical reasoning to back up each main point. A tutor can teach you how to introduce evidence smoothly (avoiding awkward quote drops), explain why your examples matter to your argument, and practice balancing multiple examples within each paragraph. Many students either use too much evidence (running out of time) or too little (leaving claims unsupported), so a tutor helps you find the right balance for a strong score.
Rhetorical effectiveness questions ask you to identify which revision best achieves the author's purpose, maintains appropriate tone, or communicates an idea most clearly to the intended audience. For example, you might choose between a formal and casual version of a sentence, or decide whether to add, delete, or move a sentence to improve flow. A tutor can teach you to recognize different rhetorical strategies (persuasion, description, explanation), understand how word choice affects tone, and practice identifying what works best for a given context—skills that go beyond grammar and require understanding how language creates meaning.
Start with untimed practice to build skills, then move to timed full-length exams to build stamina and pacing. After each practice test, review every question you missed—not just to see the right answer, but to understand why you chose wrong and what concept you need to review. A tutor can help you analyze your practice test results to spot patterns (e.g., you consistently miss pronoun questions or struggle with essay organization), prioritize what to study based on your actual weak areas, and give you feedback on your practice essays so you know exactly what's holding your score back.
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