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SAT Spanish tutors, lessons & classes
¡Hola! How a high school student opens a formal Spanish email.
Personally vetted Spanish tutors for high school exam prep. Honest guidance on the retired SAT Subject Test, plus rubric-aware prep for the credentials that actually count today: AP Spanish Language and Culture, AP Spanish Literature and Culture, and CLEP Spanish Language.
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SAT Spanish tutors for private lessons & classes
Strommen has been prepping high school and adult students for AP Spanish, IB Spanish, CLEP Spanish, and college Spanish placement for years. The students who land on this page most often are juniors and seniors whose counselor or older sibling mentioned the SAT Subject Test (now retired) and who need clarity on which credential actually moves the needle on college applications. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview. No marketplace. No automated profile-creation. Real teachers with real AP and CLEP experience, which you can read about in their bios.
Filter by location, age, or price. Then book a 30-minute free trial.
Below are the Strommen tutors who prep high school students for college-credit Spanish exams. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial.
Exam essentials — high school Spanish
5 things every HS Spanish exam still tests
These aren't textbook drills. They're the five threads that ran through the retired SAT Subject Test and still run through the AP and CLEP exams that replaced it. Screenshot the list, then book a tutor to drill the rest.
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01
Formal-register Spanish
The Spanish you write in an essay or a formal email, not the Spanish you text to a friend. Formal greetings (Estimado/a), formal closings (Atentamente, Cordialmente, Quedo a su disposición), connectors like cabe destacar que and por otro lado, and the absence of onda, chido, or tipo. The AP persuasive essay caps register-slippy responses at a 3 even when the language is otherwise strong.
e.g. Estimado señor Pérez: Cabe destacar que, según el artículo, la migración ha aumentado significativamente. Atentamente, [name].
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02
Classic reading-comprehension texts
Authentic Spanish-language journalism, opinion pieces, short fiction, and (for AP Lit) the literary canon from Lorca, Cervantes, García Márquez, Borges, Cortázar, and Allende. The exams test reading speed and reading stamina in real Spanish text, not textbook-adapted excerpts. Students who build a weekly Spanish-reading diet (a news outlet plus one short story per week) outperform students who only read inside lesson hours.
e.g. Read one El País or BBC Mundo article and one short Borges or Cortázar story per week between lessons.
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03
Subjunctive triggers, ser/estar, por/para
The three grammar topics every SAT Spanish, AP Spanish, and CLEP Spanish exam reliably tests. Subjunctive after verbs of doubt, emotion, and influence, and after conjunctions like para que, antes de que, aunque in non-factual contexts. Ser-vs-estar where the distinction carries semantic weight (es aburrido = boring vs. está aburrido = bored). Por-vs-para in the constructions that actually trip students up. Drill these three before drilling anything else.
e.g. Dudo que <em>venga</em> mañana (subjunctive after doubt); el café <em>está</em> frío (state, not essence).
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04
The 1,000 most common Spanish words
The vocabulary frequency band the retired SAT Subject Test pulled from, and the band the AP interpretive sections and CLEP reading still pull from. A student who reliably knows the top 1,000 has a different ceiling than a student who knows 500. The lift between those two thresholds is often the difference between a 3 and a 4 on the AP, or a 45 and a 55 on the CLEP.
e.g. Weekly target: master 50 new high-frequency words per week between lessons; review the previous week's 50 at the start of the next session.
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05
AP as the modern pathway
With the SAT Subject Test retired, AP Spanish Language and Culture is the canonical college-credit Spanish credential for most high school students. CLEP Spanish is the right play for heritage speakers without AP access, homeschool students, and adult learners. AP Spanish Literature is the deeper-water option for students on an AP Lit track. Pick the right exam first; prep second.
e.g. Junior with strong school AP Spanish class: AP Language. Heritage senior with no AP at school: CLEP. Lit-track student with reading appetite: AP Literature.
About SAT Spanish
What "SAT Spanish" actually means now
Most families who arrive at this page are looking for the SAT Subject Test in Spanish (also called the SAT II in Spanish, with a separate SAT Spanish with Listening variant). The honest answer is that the test no longer exists. The College Board discontinued all SAT Subject Tests, including SAT Spanish and SAT Spanish with Listening, in January 2021, and the Subject Tests have not been administered since. If a counselor, an older sibling, or an outdated tutoring website pointed you toward "SAT Spanish" as a real exam to register for, that information is stale. The College Board's own announcement and current registration site are the authoritative confirmation; the Subject Tests are off the menu.
What replaced the Subject Test for college-credit-by-Spanish-exam purposes is a short list of three credentials that are still administered and still accepted by US colleges. AP Spanish Language and Culture, taken by most high school students who want a Spanish credit line on their transcript, scored 1-to-5, administered in May, with credit and placement granted at most US colleges for a 4 or 5. AP Spanish Literature and Culture, a separate exam built around the Spanish-language literary canon from Spain and Latin America, typically taken by advanced heritage speakers or students on an AP Lit track, with its own reading list and rubric. And CLEP Spanish Language, the College-Level Examination Program test (yes, still active in 2026), which 2,900+ US colleges accept for course credit and placement, especially for adult learners, homeschool students, and dual-enrolled high schoolers who want to skip introductory college Spanish without a year of AP curriculum. Each of those exams has its own page on collegeboard.org with current specs, dates, and policies; verify against the official source before you commit to a prep plan.
The practical question for a high school student is which of those three to actually take. AP Spanish Language and Culture is the default for students whose school offers an AP Spanish class and who want a transcript line, college credit, and (in many states) the Seal of Biliteracy that recognizes high school graduates as bilingual. AP Spanish Literature is the right call only for students who genuinely enjoy literary analysis in Spanish and whose school supports the Lit track; it is not a backup or an alternative for students who didn't like Language and Culture. CLEP Spanish is the smartest play for two specific profiles: heritage Spanish speakers whose school doesn't offer AP Spanish (or whose AP class is weak), and homeschool, dual-enrollment, or gap-year students who want college credit without sitting a May AP exam tied to a school schedule. CLEP can be taken nearly any time of year at a Pearson VUE test center and is graded on a 20-to-80 scale, with most colleges granting credit at 50 or above. Pricing, schedules, and accepted-college lists are all on the College Board's CLEP site.
The skills the old SAT Subject Test rewarded are still the skills these current exams reward, which is why the prep doesn't change as much as the credential change suggests. Formal-register Spanish, the kind a high school student writes in an essay rather than texts to a friend, is the foundation. That means conditional and subjunctive moods, the subjunctive triggers high school grammar books drill (verbs of doubt, emotion, and influence; impersonal expressions; conjunctions like para que, antes de que, aunque in non-factual contexts), and the connector phrases that move an essay from sentence-level competence into paragraph-level argument: cabe destacar que, por otro lado, en cuanto a, a diferencia de. Ser-vs-estar at the level the AP and CLEP graders expect, where the distinction carries semantic weight (es aburrido = boring vs. está aburrido = bored), not just textbook memorization. Por-vs-para in the constructions that actually trip students up: por for duration, exchange, and motive; para for deadline, purpose, and recipient. Our ser vs. estar guide and common grammar mistakes guide are useful supplements between lessons.
Vocabulary frequency is the other layer. The old SAT Subject Test in Spanish drew heavily from the 1,000-to-3,000 most common Spanish words, with the harder test items pulling from the next band up. The AP exam tests the same frequency curve in interpretive reading and listening, and CLEP tests it in a more academic register. A student who reliably knows the 1,000 most common Spanish words has a different ceiling than a student who only knows 500, and the lift between those two thresholds is often the difference between a 3 and a 4 on the AP, or between a 45 and a 55 on the CLEP. Our 1,000 most common Spanish words list is the standard between-lesson assignment for students who want a concrete weekly target.
Classic reading-comprehension texts also haven't gone anywhere. The AP Lit reading list is canonical (Lorca, Cervantes, García Márquez, Borges, Cortázar, Allende, and a defined set of poems and short fiction). The AP Language and CLEP exams pull from contemporary journalism, opinion pieces, and short fiction at the same difficulty band. Building reading speed and reading stamina in real Spanish-language text, not textbook-adapted excerpts, is what moves the Section I score. Pairing that with our Spanish reading comprehension guide gives a concrete weekly practice arc.
Heritage Spanish speakers who land on this page deserve a separate note. If you grew up speaking Spanish at home (Mexican-American, Cuban-American, Salvadoran, Puerto Rican, and dozens of other heritage backgrounds), your listening and conversational fluency are usually well above the AP threshold, and the SAT Subject Test would have been an easy win for you when it existed. What changes on AP and CLEP is the written register: accent marks on high-frequency words like está, también, más, qué; the formal connectors that don't come up at the kitchen table; and, on the AP cultural comparison, the explicit comparison structure the rubric is looking for. Prep that's calibrated to the written register typically lifts heritage students from a 3 or 4 on the AP into a 5 in 8-12 weeks of focused weekly lessons, with similar gains on the CLEP.
Our roster includes native Spanish-speaking teachers from across the Spanish-speaking world (Spain, Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Peru, and beyond), heritage Spanish tutors who walked the AP heritage-speaker path themselves and know what the rubric rewards, and former AP Spanish classroom teachers who taught the College Board curriculum at private and public high schools. Several have years of classroom AP experience and have prepared students for the free-response sections against the official rubric. Each tutor's bio specifies their background, their AP and CLEP experience, and the student profile they fit best. Match yourself to a heritage tutor if you grew up speaking Spanish at home, a former classroom AP teacher if your school's class is weak, or a native-speaker tutor with conversational depth if your weakest section is spoken Spanish. For broader Spanish program context, our Spanish course page shows the full family of programs, and our AP Spanish tutors page goes deeper into the AP-specific prep workflow.
Lessons calibrate to your actual exam date and your weakest section. A junior taking the AP in May runs a different curriculum than a homeschool senior planning a CLEP in September, which is different again from a heritage student deciding between AP Lit and AP Language with the registration window already open. Bring your most recent practice test, a piece of your own Spanish writing, or just the date on your calendar to the free trial. The tutor diagnoses where you are, what's costing you points, and what realistic weekly cadence moves the score. The pace is honestly variable. Some students close a two-band gap in six weeks because the foundations were already there and the leak was register-specific; others spend four months grinding because the underlying grammar needed real curriculum work. The trial is where we figure out which of those you are.
What you'll cover
Lessons & classes tailored to SAT Spanish
Honest credential triage
The retired SAT Subject Test in Spanish is the wrong place to start in 2026. The trial lesson includes a 10-minute credential consult: which of AP Spanish Language, AP Spanish Literature, or CLEP Spanish actually fits your transcript goals, your college list's credit policies, and your current proficiency level. Authoritative source for all three exams is collegeboard.org; we cross-reference your target schools' AP and CLEP credit policies before recommending a path.
Formal-register writing and the AP essay
Conditional and subjunctive moods, formal connectors (cabe destacar que, por otro lado, en cuanto a, a diferencia de), email salutations and closings, and the orthographic conventions heritage speakers especially need to drill (accent marks, opening punctuation). Live rubric-based feedback on practice persuasive essays, scored against the AP's published task-completion, topic-development, and language-use bands. The same prep generalizes to the CLEP writing sections and college Spanish placement.
Reading speed and listening fluency
Authentic Spanish-language reading from current journalism and (for AP Lit students) the canonical reading list. Listening practice from podcasts, news audio, and the audio sources the AP actually uses, at the difficulty band the College Board calibrates against. Pacing drills for the Section I multiple-choice sections, plus our reading comprehension guide as a between-lesson supplement.
Full timed mocks scored against the real rubric
Mock AP exams in the current paper-and-recorder format (with digital Bluebook simulation folding in once the College Board publishes the revised exam specs for the 2026-27 launch), and full CLEP mocks at Pearson VUE-style timing. Score reports include section-by-section breakdowns and question-type accuracy so the next two weeks of prep target the specific weak spots that came up. Tutors with years of AP classroom experience know what a 5 reads like versus a 4 versus a 3.
FAQ
About SAT Spanish lessons & classes
Is the SAT Subject Test in Spanish still offered?
No. The College Board discontinued all SAT Subject Tests, including SAT Spanish and SAT Spanish with Listening, in January 2021. The tests have not been administered since and there is no plan to bring them back. Current college-credit Spanish exams are AP Spanish Language and Culture, AP Spanish Literature and Culture, and CLEP Spanish Language. The authoritative source for the discontinuation and for current exam information is collegeboard.org.
If the SAT Spanish is gone, which exam should I take instead?
For most high school students whose school offers an AP Spanish class, AP Spanish Language and Culture is the default. It's the broader of the two AP Spanish exams, scored 1-to-5, administered in May, accepted by most US colleges for credit or placement at a 4 or 5. AP Spanish Literature and Culture is the right pick only for students on an AP Lit track who want to work through the literary canon. CLEP Spanish Language is the smartest play for heritage speakers whose school doesn't offer AP Spanish, homeschool students, and adult learners; it's accepted for credit by 2,900+ US colleges at a score of 50 or above. Tell your tutor at the trial which path fits your transcript and your college list.
What's the difference between AP Spanish Language and CLEP Spanish?
AP Spanish Language and Culture is a year-long high school course capped by a May exam, with a four-task free-response section (interpersonal email, persuasive essay, simulated conversation, cultural comparison) scored against published College Board rubrics. CLEP Spanish Language is a single computer-based test taken at a Pearson VUE center on a date you choose, with multiple-choice listening and reading sections, scored 20-to-80, with most colleges granting credit at 50+. AP carries a transcript line and (in many states) feeds the Seal of Biliteracy; CLEP carries college credit and placement without the year-long course commitment. Both are administered by the College Board, both are widely accepted, and prep for one prepares you for the other to a meaningful extent.
I'm a heritage Spanish speaker. Should I take AP or CLEP?
Depends on what your school offers and your goals. If your high school has an AP Spanish class, AP Spanish Language is usually the right call: you get the transcript line, the AP score, and (in many states) the Seal of Biliteracy. If your school doesn't offer AP Spanish, or the class is weak and not preparing you for the actual exam, CLEP Spanish is often a faster path to college credit. Heritage students typically have strong listening and conversational fluency but need to drill the written register (accent marks, formal connectors, persuasive essay structure) for either exam. Prep calibrated to the rubric typically lifts heritage students from a 3 or 4 to a 5 on the AP, or from a 45 to a 60+ on the CLEP, in 8-12 weeks of focused weekly lessons.
I'm homeschooled. What's the easiest path to college Spanish credit?
CLEP Spanish Language is the strongest fit for most homeschool students. It's a single test, scheduled on your timeline at a Pearson VUE center, scored 20-to-80, and accepted by 2,900+ US colleges. No year-long AP course commitment, no May test-day dependency, no school AP coordinator needed. The College Board publishes the full CLEP Spanish content outline and a sample-question packet; prep against those, drill the multiple-choice listening and reading at exam pace, and most students who already have intermediate Spanish are ready in 8-12 weeks. Adult learners returning to school often follow the same path.
Do colleges still accept old SAT Subject Test scores from before the test was retired?
Some do, some don't, and the answer changes by school and by year. A few selective colleges still consider Subject Test scores submitted by students who took the test before January 2021, especially for placement (not credit) decisions. Most colleges have moved on entirely and don't accept Subject Test scores in any form. If you have an old SAT Spanish score on file and you're applying to colleges now, check each school's current testing policy on its admissions site. For students who never took the Subject Test before it was retired, the answer is unambiguous: the test is unavailable and the current pathway is AP or CLEP.
Can I take SAT Spanish prep lessons online or only in person?
Both, though we'll be teaching you AP or CLEP material rather than the retired Subject Test itself. Most of our tutors teach online via Zoom or Jitsi, which works well for digital-exam prep workflows. Several also teach in person around Los Angeles for students who prefer that format. Mock exams run online in either case, with the tutor proctoring over video while the student takes the test under timed conditions. The booking widget on each tutor's profile shows available formats.
How long does the prep actually take?
Depends on your starting level and which exam you're targeting. AP Spanish Language with eight or nine months of weekly lessons is typical for a non-heritage student moving from end-of-Spanish-3 to AP-ready. Heritage students often need 8-12 weeks of focused written-register work to lift a 3 or 4 to a 5. CLEP Spanish at intermediate proficiency typically needs 8-12 weeks of multiple-choice listening and reading drill. Lit-track students need a year or more to work through the canonical reading list at exam depth. The pace is honestly variable, and the trial lesson is where we calibrate to your actual diagnostic rather than guess at a generic timeline.
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Book a free 30-minute trial with one of our personally vetted tutors. Private lessons or small-group classes — your choice.