CLASSROOM OPTIONS

 

All Classes:

á      90 minutes long

á      10 + students

=============================

 

Fundamentals Classes

Class #1  (Fundamentals)
Tuesdays @ 6:45 PM

 

START DATE

END

DATE

TARGET TEST

# of Classes

Cost

Tues

Nov 10

 


mid-June

 

May SAT

and/or

June ACT [1]

22

 

(33 hours of instruction)

$3540

 


Click to register for a Fundamentals Class


Class #2  (Fundamentals)
Sundays @ 12 noon

 

START DATE

END

DATE

TARGET TEST

# of Classes

Cost

Sun

Nov 8

 


mid-June

 

May SAT

and/or

June ACT 1

22

 

(33 hours of instruction)

$3540

 





 

 

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Honors Classes


Click to register for an Honors Class



Class #3  (Honors) Wednesdays @ 7 PM

 

START DATE

END

DATE

TARGET TEST

# of Classes

Cost


early January


mid-June

 

May SAT

and/or

June ACT [2]

21

 

(31.5 hours of instruction)

$3540




To qualify for an Honors class, students must meet one of the following requirements:
A) provide proof of an official PSAT score of at least a 130 (Reading + Math only). If you are in the class of 2017, please do NOT include the Writing score.
B) provide proof of an official PLAN score of at least 27 (composite score only);
C) take a new a diagnostic ACT or SAT and achieve the minimum threshold levels detailed in A) and B).

 

 





F.A.Q.

 

Which is the better test for my child: SAT or ACT?

The new SAT will be very similar to the ACT. There is a significant amount of overlap between the two tests—especially in the Math, Grammar, and Reading sections.
            Some minor differences between the two tests:

1.     The ACT has a Science section, which is actually more of a reading test, one that measures how quickly and precisely students can interpret scientific data, as presented in charts and graphs. (Although the SAT does not have a separate science section, scientific passages with charts and graphs—passages that are practically identical to those on the ACT—will show up in the SATÕs Reading Section)

2.     The math concepts tested on both tests are identical.  However, the SAT Math has one section (20 questions out of 58) during which students may not use their calculators; the ACT allows calculator usage on all 60 of its math questions. However, the SATÕs multiple-choice questions will have only 4 choices, as opposed to the 5 choices on the ACT math.

           

I have structured my classes so that students will be prepared for both tests. The differences between the two tests, as detailed above, actually arenÕt that significant.

 

When should my child begin tutoring?


            To get the full benefits of tutoring, most students should start
the summer before 11th grade—or September, October, November, or January of 11th grade.

            Students who fall in one of the following categories should consider starting in January or April of 10th grade:

1.     Recruited athletes should start tutoring as early as possible—perhaps sophomore year or the summer before junior year—since the vast majority of colleges will require that athletes have all of their testing done by June of junior year.

2.     Students who are within striking distance of the National Merit Scholarship—a combined score of approximately 180 on the 10th grade-PSAT—might also want to start as early as possible. The reason is that the qualifying test for National Merit is the PSAT that students take in October of junior year.

3.     Accelerated math students (those who have skipped a year of math—and/or will take Calculus junior year) might also want as early as possible. Why? The math section on both the ACT and SAT will cover concepts through Pre-Calculus only, so accelerated math students might want to start early so that they can take the ACT/SAT early—at the beginning of junior year or even the end of sophomore year—while the Pre-Calculus concepts are fresh in their heads. If accelerated math students start tutoring in November of junior year or later, they might have to review too much of the concepts from Pre-Calculus. An ÒHonorsÓ starting this July is specifically geared toward accelerated math students.

 

 

 

Do you offer mock exams?

            Yes.  I offer mock exams on the weekends. These exams are held at St. Francis College and will be on a staggered schedule: Saturday one week, Sunday the next, then Saturday again, etc.

 

 

 

How are you different from the other teachers at the big agencies?

           
            In general, the franchise agencies hire young teachers, often recent college graduates without significant classroom experience, and ask them to teach from the standardized, Òcookie-cutterÓ script. This model has some advantages and disadvantages. Some of the teaching from the chain agencies can be excellent, but sometimes the teaching can be inconsistent.

            One of my main goals is to teach students what I call ÒHIQÓ (High I.Q.) shortcuts to solve some of the hardest problems in, literally, one-half or one-third of the time it would take to solve the problem the traditional (ÒtextbookÓ) way. And I always strive to make my lessons creative, fun, and even inter-disciplinary. Please visit www.luututoring.com to view sample videos of my lesson plans.
            I have almost 20 yearsÕ experience teaching in the classroom: IÕve taught upper-school Pre-Calculus and Geometry; fifth-form American Literature; sixth-form Expository Writing; and sixth-form Fiction & Poetry—all at a competitive private school in New York City. IÕve also taught English Composition at Boston University. And of course for many years now IÕve taught standardized tests through Luu Tutoring.
           

 

 

 



[1] Students encouraged to take earlier tests (March SAT and April ACT) if they feel ready

[2] Students encouraged to take earlier tests (March SAT and April ACT) if they feel ready