Where writing and English break down, and how we help
The same fixable issues appear from 6th grade ELA to senior year.
01
The thesis problem: essays with no argument
What it looks like: Five paragraphs, correct format, nothing said. The thesis restates the prompt, body paragraphs summarize instead of argue, and the grade comes back a B minus with the comment: develop your ideas.
How our tutors help: Our tutors teach thesis-building as a thinking move: take a position someone could disagree with, then defend it. Students practice turning observations into claims, and the essay stops being a container and starts being an argument.
02
Evidence: quote-dropping instead of analysis
What it looks like: Quotes appear with no setup and no follow-through. The dreaded pattern: claim, quote, next paragraph. Teachers write analyze, do not summarize, but nobody has shown the student what that means.
How our tutors help: We teach the sandwich explicitly: introduce, quote, then unpack how the language does its work. Tutors model it aloud, then coach the student through their own text. Analysis is a teachable move, not a talent.
03
Reading beyond the plot
What it looks like: Your student can retell every event in the novel but freezes on theme, tone, and author's purpose. Class discussions and essay prompts both assume a layer of reading nobody taught directly.
How our tutors help: Tutors coach annotation with a purpose: track a motif, mark shifts, ask why this word. NJSLA ELA and AP English both reward exactly this evidence-first reading, and it transfers straight into essays.
04
Grammar errors that survived every worksheet
What it looks like: Comma splices, fragments, apostrophe chaos, and agreement slips persist across years of instruction because worksheets never touched the student's own writing.
How our tutors help: We fix grammar inside the student's actual drafts, two or three patterns at a time, until self-editing becomes habit. Errors corrected in your own sentences stay corrected.
05
The college essay: 650 words of pressure
What it looks like: Senior fall arrives and your student is staring at the Common App prompt, torn between sounding impressive and sounding like themselves, while every adult they know offers different advice.
How our tutors help: Our tutors coach the process ethically: brainstorm real material, find the small story that shows character, draft and revise with honest feedback. The student writes every word. The essay sounds like them at their best, which is what admissions readers actually want.