Personally vetted instructors
SAT tutors, lessons & classes
Ready for the digital SAT? What a tutor opens a diagnostic session with the week prep begins.
Personally vetted SAT prep tutors. Lessons built around the digital SAT College Board actually administers now, with section-aware diagnostics and the rubric-grounded drilling that separates first-sit composite jumps from plateaus.
Your instructors
SAT tutors for private lessons & classes
Strommen has prepped SAT candidates since well before the 2024 digital redesign and has updated curriculum through every recent revision. Most students arrive with a target university list, a target test date, and an honest sense of one weaker section. 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 Bluebook-era SAT experience.
Filter by location, age, or price. Then book a 30-minute free trial.
Below are the Strommen tutors who prep students for the SAT. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial.
SAT strategy — exam playbook
5 digital SAT moves students wish they'd learned earlier
These aren't textbook tips. They're the adaptive-format habits that separate first-sit composite jumps from plateaus. Screenshot the infographic, then book a tutor to drill the rest.
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01
The first module routes the score ceiling
Both sections adapt: module one is the same for everyone, then performance on it routes you into either an easier or a harder module two. The harder pool has a higher score ceiling. Spending two minutes on one brutal question in module one and rushing the rest can route a strong candidate into the easier pool, capping the composite before module two even starts.
e.g. Pace through module one. Flag the hard question, finish, circle back.
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02
The Desmos calculator is in every Math question
The no-calculator Math section was eliminated. Desmos is built into the Bluebook test interface and available on all 44 Math questions. Most students underuse it. Tutors drill Desmos workflows for solving quadratics, graphing systems, evaluating function expressions, and finding zeros directly. Thirty to sixty seconds saved per question across a module compounds.
e.g. Type the equation into Desmos. Read the intersection. Move on.
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03
Reading and Writing tests in context, not flashcards
The old long-passage Reading section and the separate Writing & Language section are merged into one short-passage RW section. Passages run 25 to 150 words paired with one question each. Vocabulary is tested in context. Rote flashcard prep underperforms reading-rich practice in the same register the test draws from.
e.g. Read The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Scientific American. Don't drill Quizlet decks alone.
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04
The essay is gone, the no-calculator section is gone
The optional SAT Essay was retired in 2021. The no-calculator Math module was eliminated with the 2024 digital redesign. The whole exam is now Reading and Writing plus Math, two sections, both calculator-allowed, no essay. If your prep material includes either, it's outdated.
e.g. Total runtime: about 2h14. Two sections, four modules, no essay.
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05
Practice in Bluebook, not on paper
The four full-length adaptive practice exams College Board provides through the Bluebook app are the gold standard. Paper practice tests no longer match the test interface, the question flow, or the adaptive routing. Score reports from Bluebook practice tests show per-domain breakdowns the tutor uses to plan the next month of lessons.
e.g. Download Bluebook. Sit a full mock in week two. Review every miss with the tutor.
About SAT
The digital SAT, section by section
The SAT is the College Board's college-admissions exam, sat by roughly two million students a year, and as of spring 2024 in the United States the paper version is gone. Every test-center sitting is now the digital SAT delivered through the Bluebook app on a laptop or tablet, with section-adaptive scoring, a built-in Desmos graphing calculator available across the entire Math section, and a total runtime of about two hours and fourteen minutes. If your prep book was printed before 2024, set it aside. The whole exam was rebuilt: shorter, computer-adaptive, with reading passages cut down to short single-paragraph texts paired with one question each, and the entire essay (Writing prompt) gone for good.
The 1600 composite still sits at the center of the score scale. Two sections, each scored 200 to 800, summed to a composite between 400 and 1600. Reading and Writing is now one combined section instead of the old paper format's separate Reading and Writing & Language. Math is the other. Each section runs in two modules. The first module is the same for every candidate; performance on module one routes the candidate into either an easier or a harder module two. Score on the harder module-two path is capped higher than on the easier path, so the adaptive routing matters: a strong module-one performance is what unlocks the top of the 800 ceiling on either section. This is the structural shift most students underestimate. The digital SAT isn't just a shorter version of the paper test. The adaptive scoring means the first thirty-or-so questions of each section disproportionately determine the score ceiling for that section.
What each section looks like in practice. Reading and Writing runs 64 minutes total across two 32-minute modules, with about 54 questions. Passages are short, typically 25 to 150 words, paired with a single multiple-choice question on craft and structure, information and ideas, standard English conventions, or expression of ideas. The old long-passage format is gone. Math runs 70 minutes total across two 35-minute modules with about 44 questions, covering algebra, advanced math (functions, quadratics), problem-solving and data analysis, and geometry and trigonometry. About 75 percent of Math questions are multiple choice; the rest are student-produced response (grid-in numerical answers). The Desmos calculator is built into the test interface and available across both Math modules; the old no-calculator section was eliminated. Every Math question can use the calculator.
Scoring rewards strategic prep more than ever. Because module-one performance routes you to the harder module two and the higher score ceiling, the first thirty questions of each section are the most leveraged questions on the entire exam. A candidate who burns time on a single brutal early question and rushes the rest of module one often ends up routed to the easier module-two pool, with their composite ceiling capped before they ever reach module two. The right move under the new format is to keep pace through module one, flag and skip on hard questions rather than grind, finish the section, and use any remaining time to circle back. The Bluebook interface supports flagging questions and reviewing within the active module; once a module submits, it cannot be revisited. This is a different test-taking posture than the old paper SAT rewarded.
Fee waivers, Khan Academy, and BigFuture Days. The College Board offers fee waivers for eligible US juniors and seniors that cover the SAT registration fee and waive score-report fees for college applications. Khan Academy's Official SAT Practice partnership with the College Board is the only practice platform endorsed by College Board itself, and it includes free full-length practice tests, score reports, and personalized practice recommendations. The BigFuture Day events and the BigFuture Scholarships program both connect SAT scores to college-money pathways most candidates don't know about. Mention them to your tutor; the tutor will tell you whether they actually map to your situation.
SAT or ACT. The ACT is the other major US college-admissions exam, run by ACT Inc., scored on a different scale (1 to 36 composite), with a different rhythm: four sections (English, Math, Reading, Science), faster per-question pacing, a math section that allows calculators throughout, and an optional Writing essay. Most US universities accept either. Some students score noticeably higher on one than the other; the differentiator is usually pacing tolerance (ACT is faster) and comfort with the ACT Science section's data-interpretation focus. If you don't already have a strong preference, sit a full diagnostic of each in your first month and pick the one where you scored higher relative to the percentile range. Our ACT prep page covers the sibling test in more detail. Test-optional admissions policies have softened the pressure since 2020, but the most selective US universities have largely returned to requiring or strongly recommending scores; check each program's stated requirement.
How our tutors prep candidates. Most lessons start with a Bluebook practice test, ideally one of the four full-length adaptive practice exams College Board provides through the official app. The diagnostic produces a composite plus section breakdowns plus per-skill detail (the App reports performance against the rubric's content domains). The tutor identifies which section is the weaker, then within that section which content domain is dragging the score, then plans the first six weeks around that domain while keeping the strong section sharp. Math drills lean on the Desmos calculator workflow (most students underuse it; on the digital SAT it can solve quadratics, plot functions, evaluate expressions at a point, and read intersections directly). Reading and Writing drills focus on the question types that actually appear: standard English conventions (semicolons, parallel structure, modifier placement, subject-verb agreement) and expression of ideas (transitions, rhetorical synthesis, evidence questions). Vocabulary in the old sense is gone; the new RW section tests vocabulary in context with words like circumscribe, tenuous, magnanimous embedded in short paragraphs, and rote flashcard prep underperforms reading-rich practice. Close to test date, lessons shift to full timed mocks in Bluebook under real exam-clock conditions. A reasonable arc to move from a baseline around 1100 to a target of 1300+ is three to four months at one or two lessons per week with consistent practice; moving from 1400 to 1500+ typically takes longer because the marginal gains at the top of the scale come from accuracy on the hardest module-two questions, where small careless errors compound.
American test-takers share a fairly predictable set of stumble points. The first is pacing through module one. Candidates who treat the digital SAT like a paper test, spending two minutes on a tough early question, route themselves into easier module-two pools and cap their own ceiling. The second is underusing the Desmos calculator: it can do far more than four-function arithmetic on the SAT, and tutors drill the specific Desmos workflows (graphing systems of equations, finding zeros, evaluating function expressions) that save thirty to sixty seconds per applicable Math question. The third is letting Reading and Writing's short-passage format breed overconfidence; the questions are short but the answer choices are deliberately close, and many candidates lose points to the second-best choice rather than the wrong choice. The fourth is treating the optional Bluebook break between RW and Math as an afterthought; ten minutes of actual mental reset (water, stand up, breathe) is worth points on the Math section. The fifth is skipping the practice-test review. Every full-length Bluebook practice test produces a detailed score report, and students who actually work through their incorrect questions one by one, with their tutor, improve faster than students who just sit more practice tests.
Between lessons, the right materials matter. The four official Bluebook practice tests are the gold standard for exam-format drill. Khan Academy's Official SAT Practice is the College Board-endorsed free platform. The Daily Practice for the New SAT app from College Board pushes daily practice questions. For Reading and Writing exposure, read at the register the test draws from: The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Scientific American, and the science and arts sections of The New York Times all mirror the passage style and vocabulary range that show up in real RW modules. For Math, Khan Academy's algebra-2 and pre-calculus playlists cover the content domains directly. If you're aiming at a specific score and want help calibrating whether your timeline is realistic, our SAT Math specialty page and the SAT Reading and Writing specialty page go deeper on each section.
The Strommen SAT roster includes private-school SAT specialists with multi-year prep experience, former teachers from US college-admissions departments, longtime tutors with 1500+ composites of their own and a track record of moving students up 150-300 points across a single prep cycle, and a few highly specialized math tutors for the 750+ Math push and the verbal specialists for the 750+ RW push. Each tutor's bio specifies their background, the score band they typically work with (foundational 900-1100, intermediate 1100-1300, advanced 1300-1500, elite 1500+), and which student profile they fit best. Match yourself to a tutor whose specialty matches your target band and your weak section. Browse the tutor list, find a bio that matches your situation, and book the free trial.
What you'll cover
Lessons & classes tailored to SAT
Diagnostic + adaptive-format strategy
Your first lesson is usually a diagnostic against a full-length Bluebook practice test. The tutor scores both sections (Reading and Writing, Math) on the College Board's content-domain rubric and identifies your weaker section plus the dragging domains within it. Because the digital SAT is section-adaptive, the strategy includes pacing through module one to unlock the higher-ceiling module two, not just content review.
Math + Desmos workflow
Math drills lean on the Desmos graphing calculator built into Bluebook. Lessons cover algebra, advanced math (functions, quadratics, polynomials), problem-solving and data analysis, and geometry and trigonometry, with explicit Desmos workflows for the question types where the calculator saves the most time. Student-produced response (grid-in) questions get drilled separately because they reward different test-taking habits than multiple choice.
Reading and Writing in context
Lessons cover the four RW content domains: craft and structure, information and ideas, standard English conventions (semicolons, parallel structure, modifier placement, subject-verb agreement), and expression of ideas (transitions, rhetorical synthesis, evidence questions). Vocabulary in context is built through reading-rich practice rather than flashcards. The deliberately close answer choices that catch most students get explicit drill time.
Full-length Bluebook mocks + score-report review
Closer to test date, lessons shift to full timed mocks under real Bluebook conditions. The detailed score reports become the lesson plan: students review every incorrect answer with the tutor, categorize the miss (content gap, pacing, careless), and plan the next week's practice around the categories that show up most. Sitting more practice tests without reviewing them is the most common time-sink in SAT prep.
FAQ
About SAT lessons & classes
What changed with the SAT in 2024?
The paper SAT is gone in the United States. Every test-center sitting is now the digital SAT delivered through the College Board's Bluebook app. The exam is shorter (about 2h14 total), the Reading section was rebuilt into short single-paragraph passages paired with one question each, the Reading and Writing & Language sections were merged into a single Reading and Writing section, the no-calculator Math module was eliminated (Desmos is built into Bluebook and available on every Math question), and both sections are now section-adaptive: module one routes you into either an easier or a harder module two with different score ceilings. The optional Essay was retired earlier (2021). Prep materials dated before 2024 are now misleading on the format.
What's a competitive SAT score for top US universities?
Depends on the program tier. Ivy League and elite peer universities (Stanford, MIT, Caltech, Chicago, Duke, Northwestern) typically see admitted students in the 1500-1580 composite range, with the 25th percentile often around 1490-1510. Top-25 US universities outside the Ivy peer group generally see admitted students in the 1450-1550 range. Top-50 universities sit in roughly the 1350-1500 range. Below the top-50 tier, 1200-1400 is competitive at most US universities, with some flagship state schools admitting students with composites in the 1100-1300 range depending on residency and major. Test-optional policies have softened the pressure but the most selective programs have largely returned to requiring or strongly recommending scores. Check each program's published 25th-75th percentile band before setting a target.
How does section-adaptive scoring actually work?
Both Reading and Writing and Math run in two modules. Module one is the same for every candidate. Performance on module one routes you to one of two versions of module two: an easier pool with a lower score ceiling, or a harder pool with a higher score ceiling. A strong candidate routed to the harder pool can score up to 800 on that section; a candidate routed to the easier pool is capped below that. The structural implication is that the first thirty-or-so questions of each section are the most leveraged questions on the entire exam. Burning time on one brutal early question and rushing the rest of module one is the most common single mistake under the new format. The right move is to pace through module one, flag and skip on hard questions, finish, and circle back if time allows.
Should I take the SAT or the ACT?
Most US universities accept either, with no preference. The differentiator is usually pacing and content fit. ACT is faster per question and includes a Science section with data-interpretation and chart-reading; SAT has more time per question and no separate Science section. Students with strong reading speed and quick chart-reading instincts often score higher on the ACT relative to percentile; students who prefer more time per question and lean stronger on writing mechanics often score higher on the SAT. The honest move is to sit a full diagnostic of each within the first month of prep and pick whichever percentile you scored higher on. Our ACT prep page covers the sibling test in more detail.
Can I take the SAT at home?
Not in the United States. The digital SAT is delivered at official test centers using the College Board's Bluebook app on a school-issued or personal device. There is no at-home version comparable to TOEFL Home Edition or GRE at Home. International test sittings follow the same in-center model. The PSAT and the school-day SAT (administered in some US high schools during the school day) are also in-center exams.
How long does SAT prep usually take?
Depends on the baseline and target. Moving from around 1000 to 1200 typically takes 2-3 months at one or two weekly lessons plus consistent practice. Moving from 1200 to 1400 typically takes 3-4 months. Moving from 1400 to 1500+ usually takes 4-6 months because the marginal gains at the top of the scale come from accuracy on the hardest module-two questions, where small careless errors compound. Intensive daily lessons can compress these but practice-test review is the gating factor: students who actually review every miss with a tutor improve faster than students who only sit more mocks. The free trial includes a baseline diagnostic so the tutor can give you an honest read on your timeline.
Do SAT scores expire?
No. College Board does not place an expiration date on SAT scores. Individual universities set their own policies on how recent scores must be for admission; most accept scores up to five years old without question, and many accept older scores. If you took the paper SAT before March 2024 and are applying to college now, your scores remain valid. If you are reapplying years later for graduate or professional programs that consider SAT scores, check the specific program's policy.
Can I prep for the SAT online?
Yes, and most candidates do. Most of our SAT tutors prep students entirely online via Zoom or Jitsi. The Bluebook practice tests are taken on the student's own device anyway, so the lesson workflow translates cleanly: timed practice with screen-share for review, recorded mock-explanation videos, and shared Desmos sessions for Math workflow drills. Several tutors also offer in-person lessons in Los Angeles for candidates who prefer face-to-face work. The booking widget on each tutor's profile shows available formats and locations.
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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.