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John
Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

John

BA University of St Thomas
AS American Academy of Dramatic Arts
AP Calculus AB
College Algebra
Middle School Math
Geometry
86+ more

After scoring a 36 ACT composite and earning a BFA with an English concentration, John knows how sentences are built — and more importantly, how they break. He teaches the SAT Writing and Language sec...

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Elliot
Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Elliot

BA Hampshire College
Doctor of Philosophy, Neuroscience Vanderbilt University
Statistics Graduate Level
Pre-Algebra
Statistics
Middle School Math
86+ more

Elliot's neuroscience PhD required writing and revising dense, argument-driven prose where every transition had to earn its place and every clause needed grammatical precision — the exact editing inst...

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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Alex

BA Washington and Lee University
Pre-Algebra
Pre-Calculus
Calculus
Algebra
53+ more

Most SAT Writing and Language mistakes come from the same handful of grammar patterns: subject-verb agreement across long modifying phrases, comma splices disguised by transition words, and misplaced ...

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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Elena

BA Cornell University
Juris Doctor, Law University of Chicago Law School
Calculus
Algebra
SAT Mathematics
SAT Reading
20+ more

Most SAT Writing and Language mistakes come down to a handful of grammar rules — subject-verb agreement across long clauses, comma splices, pronoun ambiguity — and Elena drills those patterns until st...

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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Mimi

MS Harvard University
BA Dartmouth College
Middle School Math
Calculus
Algebra
Elementary School Math
28+ more

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...

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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Anna

BA Northwestern University
Graduated (Honors Program in Medical Education) Northwestern University
Calculus
Algebra
Middle School Science
PSAT Writing Skills
31+ more

Medical school admissions forced Anna to write and revise under pressure — personal statements, research abstracts, clinical case reports — all genres where every word has to earn its place and sloppy...

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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Nina

MS Columbia University
BA Northwestern University
Statistics Graduate Level
Statistics
Calculus
Algebra
20+ more

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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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Chelain

PhD Thomas Jefferson University
BA Swarthmore College
Calculus
Algebra
College Essays
Literature
11+ more

I am currently a resident physician at Northwestern Hospital.

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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Michelle

MD Baylor College of Medicine
BA Rice University
Pre-Algebra
Pre-Calculus
Geometry
Calculus
25+ more

Comma splices, misplaced modifiers, and subject-verb agreement buried in complex sentences — the SAT Writing and Language section tests grammar rules most students have never been explicitly taught. M...

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Verified SAT Writing and Language Tutor

Logan

MS The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
BA University of Kentucky
Pre-Algebra
Geometry
Calculus
Algebra
28+ more

I'm eager to teach students how to make connections and understand any part of the world they need!

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Practice SAT Writing and Language

Free practice tests, flashcards, and AI tutoring for SAT Writing and Language

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Frequently Asked Questions

Score improvement depends on your starting point and how much you practice. Students typically see 40-80 point improvements with focused preparation over 2-3 months, though some students gain more with consistent effort and personalized instruction. The key is identifying your specific weak areas—whether that's grammar rules, reading comprehension within the section, or time management—and targeting those directly. Working with a tutor helps you avoid wasting time on skills you've already mastered and concentrate on what actually holds your score back.

Students typically struggle with three main areas: rushing through passages and missing context clues needed to answer questions correctly, confusing similar grammar rules (like when to use a comma versus a semicolon), and misunderstanding what the question is actually asking. Many test-takers also lose points by not reading the full sentence or paragraph for context, which is crucial since the Writing and Language section tests grammar within the context of actual passages. A tutor can help you slow down strategically, build a system for catching these patterns in your own work, and develop question-reading habits that catch tricky wording before you answer.

The Writing and Language section gives you 35 minutes for 44 questions, which works out to about 45-50 seconds per question. A solid strategy is to read each passage actively (about 2-3 minutes per passage) while marking potential errors, then answer questions as you go rather than re-reading. Some students benefit from answering easier questions first within each passage to build momentum, then returning to trickier ones. The real time-saver, though, is reducing the urge to re-read—if you read actively the first time, noting grammar issues and tone shifts, you'll answer more questions efficiently. A tutor can help you practice this pacing with real passages so it becomes automatic on test day.

For focused improvement, aim to practice the Writing and Language section 1-2 times per week alongside targeted skill drills. Taking full practice tests every 2-3 weeks (rather than constantly) helps you build stamina and test-day confidence without burning out. The real value comes from what you do after: review every single question you missed or guessed on, identify patterns in your errors (Do you always miss questions about commas? Struggle with tone? Rush through one type of question?), and focus your next practice session on those specific skills. Tutors excel at this review process—they catch patterns you might miss on your own and design your study plan around what actually needs work.

It's actually both, in a way that trips up many students. While you do need solid grammar knowledge, roughly 30% of the section tests your ability to understand context, tone, and meaning within the passage—skills that feel more like reading comprehension. You might need to choose between two grammatically correct answers, but only one fits the author's tone or the paragraph's main point. This is why some students with strong grammar knowledge still struggle—they're not reading for meaning and rhetorical purpose. The best preparation combines grammar drills with passage reading practice, so you develop both skills and learn to think about why an answer is correct, not just that it follows a rule.

Start by taking a full, timed practice test of just the Writing and Language section, then categorize every wrong answer by type: Is it a grammar rule issue (comma usage, verb tense, pronoun agreement)? A vocabulary/word choice problem? A question about sentence structure or combining ideas? Or did you miss it because you misread the passage or didn't understand what the question asked? Most students find patterns quickly—maybe they lose points to comma rules and tone questions but nail everything else. Once you've identified 2-3 categories where you consistently miss points, you can drill those specifically. A tutor accelerates this process by analyzing your practice tests and spotting patterns you might overlook, then building a study plan around your actual weak spots rather than reviewing material you've already mastered.

Test anxiety often stems from feeling unprepared or uncertain about your approach, so the most effective antidote is building real confidence through targeted practice and clear strategies. Develop a simple system before test day—like always reading the full sentence before answering, or flagging every unfamiliar word to consider later—so you're not making decisions on the fly. Practice this system repeatedly on timed drills until it becomes automatic; that automaticity reduces anxiety because you trust your process. It also helps to take practice tests under realistic conditions (quiet room, timed, no phone), so test day feels familiar rather than shocking. Working with a tutor gives you a calm, consistent voice to help you refine your approach and build that confidence through guided practice rather than white-knuckling your way through tests alone.

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