Music theory tutoring develops understanding of the language and structure of music, covering topics from notation and rhythm to harmony, counterpoint, and form. The tutor helps students analyze musical scores, identify chord progressions, understand key relationships, and recognize compositional techniques used across different styles and periods. Sessions balance written exercises with listening and analysis, teaching students to hear theoretical concepts in actual music. Students learn to write in four-part harmony, realize figured bass, compose in various forms, and prepare for AP Music Theory if needed. The result is both technical knowledge and the ability to understand music at a deeper structural level.
These tutors also teach ACT, AP English, Algebra, Biology, Calculus, Chemistry, Chess, College Applications, and more.
If you have a specific tutor in mind, you're welcome to request them directly — we'll confirm whether they're available and the right fit for your student. Otherwise, Ryan writes a personal email to understand your student's needs, learning style, and goals — then handpicks a tutor from the roster. You're not filling out a form and getting assigned randomly. If the first tutor isn't the right fit after the first session, we'll find you a better match at no extra charge.
Tutoring can be conducted online, giving you access to exceptional tutors from leading colleges nationwide. When you are in the same college town as a tutor, in-person sessions may also be arranged on or near campus.
Yes. Many families start with a single session to see how the tutor and student connect before committing to a regular schedule. There's no pressure to book in advance — reach out and we'll set something up.
Yes. Many of our tutors are strong across several subjects, and sessions can cover more than one if that's what the student needs that week. Flexibility is built into how we work.
Most of our tutors continue working through breaks, either online or in-person at the college if the tutors remain on campus during that vacation. We'll let you know in advance if a tutor has a gap in availability and arrange coverage with one of our other tutors — in-person or online — in the required subject.
The families who see the biggest results are the ones who commit to a regular cadence — typically once, twice, or three times a week. One-on-one tutoring with a student from an elite college, who genuinely understands the material, is a fundamentally different experience from a tutoring center or an app. Most of our clients stay with us for multiple semesters.
That depends on where your student is starting and how consistently they attend. Our tutors will identify the specific gaps, focus sessions on them, and adjust as the student progresses. Families who stick to a weekly schedule typically see meaningful progress within four to six weeks.
Email Ryan@ShiresTutoring.com and mention which tutor and college town you're interested in (or if you're interested in online tutoring), or fill out our Request a Tutor form. We typically respond within one business day.