Get Smarter This Summer!

Give us a week — we’ll push you ahead!


  1. BulletFill in gaps from classes you’re taking this year, or preview major topics in challenging classes you’ll be taking next yearGet ahead in the college admissions game

  2. BulletLearn how to manage test stress and academic anxiety

  3. BulletImprove all your study skills

  4. BulletGet ahead in the college admissions game


Smart Summer Sessions at CollegePrepExpress are five-day, intensive classes designed to give you a fun and productive way to keep your minds active and to gain a competitive edge for a week or more of your summer vacation. Sharpen your academic or study skills, move ahead in the college admissions game, or review/preview challenging school subjects. Each class meets Mon-Fri, three hours/day, in West Hartford and online. The cost for each class is $799. Receive a 10% discount for two or more classes.  Class size is strictly limited to maximize learning gains. Top-notch instructors include Dr. Yo, Ph.D., Alisha Cipriano, M.A., Kevin Berry, and Hilory Wagner, author and communications professional.

Take ONE WEEK to work on your GRADES instead of your TAN! ;-)

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2013 Course Descriptions


Common App Boot Camp: Get It DONE!


  1. Get most or ALL of your CommonApp done BEFORE the school year starts.  Whether you take this class or not, this is excellent advice.  This class will walk you through EVERY section of your application, help you craft stand-out essays, activities lists, and short answer responses for each of the schools on your list. See our CommonApp Boot Camp page for more details.


Essential Study Skills Workshop


  1. Spend five days learning and practicing essential study skills that enable students to excel in high school and get the most out of their college educations. Featured topics include organization (in notebooks and on computers) and various note-taking techniques; active reading strategies, making use of summer reading material for practice; various study methods, including the latest online study tools; essay planning and writing (using summer reading assignments for practice); using technology to boost efficiency and efficacy; making and giving class presentations; and building historical frameworks across the curriculum.  A GREAT class to take right before the start of a new school year!


Test Anxiety and Academic Stress Reduction


  1. A slightly expanded version of out Mindfulness-Based Test-Anxiety Reduction Workshop that runs throughout the year, this class takes advantage of the relatively low-stress summertime to train students how to manage to manage the considerable academic stress, and test anxiety in particular, they face throughout the year. Participants learn and PRACTICE classic mindfulness strategies used very successfully for years to treat general stress and to manage pain. Breathing, meditation, and mental focus techniques will be taught and practiced every day, giving students simple and highly effective mechanism to use before and during anxiety-provoking experiences.   Watch video. See also The New York Times article, “Is School Stressing You Out?


Transition Math for Grades 7-9


  1. This is a great class for middle schoolers and early high school students. This course makes sense for students who require extra presentation of fundamental arithmetic and early algebraic concepts as well as practice with fundamental skills, or for those who want to review all these fundamentals before moving on to their first Algebra course in school.  Topics include: working with fractions (adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing); place value and decimals; converting fractions, decimals, and percentages; using variables; basic word problems; basic shapes, perimeter, and area; coordinate graphing and basic equations; and order of operations.


Algebra 1 Review/Preview


  1. This class is intended for students who either will have just completed an Algebra 1 class in school and want to review before moving on to Geometry or Algebra 2, or for those going into Algebra 1 in the fall.  Topics include: review of basic math for Algebra (real numbers, ratios and proportions, powers, square roots, order of operations, variables, and simplifying expressions); solving equations and using formulas; graphing linear equations in slope-intercept and point-slope forms; solving and graphing inequalities; solving systems of equations and inequalities; exponent laws and scientific notation; absolute value; pythagorean theorem and special right triangles; polynomials; factoring; solving and graphing quadratics; and word problems. While the class is geared toward the standard Algebra 1 high school class, special attention is given to topics that frequently appear on standardized tests, like the CAPT, SAT, ACT and SAT Subject Test Level 1.


Geometry Review/Preview


  1. This class is intended for students who either will have just completed a Geometry class in school and want to review before moving on to Algebra 2, or for those going into Geometry in the fall. Topics include: points, lines, and planes; common shapes, perimeter, area, and volume; angles and triangles; pythagorean theorem and special right triangles; similarity and congruency; parallel lines and transversals; perpendicular lines; proofs; and basic Trigonometry. While the class is geared toward the standard Geometry high school class, special attention is given to topics that frequently appear on standardized tests, like the CAPT, SAT, ACT, and SAT Subject Test Level 1.



Algebra 2 Review/Preview


  1. This class is intended for students who either have completed an Algebra 2 class in school and want to review before moving on to Precalculus, or for those going into Algebra 2 in the fall. Topics include: real numbers; absolute value; equations and inequalities; functions and their graphs; polynomials and factoring; rational expressions; irrational and complex numbers; quadratic equations and functions; probability; and introduction to Trigonometry. While the class is geared toward the standard Algebra 2 high school class, special attention is given to topics that frequently appear on standardized tests, like the CAPT, SAT, ACT and SAT Subject Tests.



Precalculus Review/Preview


  1. This class is intended for students who either have completed a Precalculus class in school and want to review before moving on to Calculus, or for those going into Precalculus in the fall.  Topics include: functions and their properties (parent functions, inverses of functions, combination of functions, and transformations); conic sections and their graphs (circles, parabolas, ellipses, and hyperbolas); Trigonometric functions and their graphs; simplifying expressions and proving identities using Trig functions; law of sines and law of cosines; exponential and logarithmic functions; parametric equations and polar coordinates; and binomial expansion theorem and sequences and series. While the class is geared toward the standard Precalculus high school class, special attention is given to topics that frequently appear on standardized tests, like the SAT, ACT, and SAT Subject Test Level 2.


(AP) U.S. History Review/Preview


  1. This class is intended for students who plan to take U.S. History in the fall, standard or AP, who might want to take or re-take the SAT Subject Test in U.S. History in the fall, and who want to get a head start on the class! This is a great course for first time AP history takers because it will provide students with the nuts and bolts of AP history classes, introduce them to the test and introduce the major themes of the course, both chronologically and thematically.  We will use the AP U.S. History Exam as our anchor for topics and skills covered throughout the week, which will serve standard as well as AP history students. We will tackle topics most frequently covered on the Exam, work with Document-Based Questions (DBQs) and discuss specific topics covered in recent years, including Pre-Columbian and colonial America, The American Revolutionary Era, Economics, Society and Politics of Antebellum America, Manifest Destiny, The Civil War Era, Reconstruction, Industrial America and Urban Society in the late 19th Century, Populism and Progressivism, Emergence of America as a World Power, World War I, America Between the Wars (the Great Depression and the New Deal), World War II, Post War America, Urban Sprawl, The United States During the Cold War and Vietnam, Social Movements of the 50s, 60s, and 70s, and Post-Cold War America.  Some time will also be devoted to tackling a U.S. History THESIS paper, how to use and cite sources, analysis and understanding of primary documents and political cartoons, and understanding AP Exam multiple choice questions.


(AP) U.S. Government Review/Preview


  1. This class is intended for students who plan to take AP U.S. Politics and Government in the fall, have completed the course already and want a refresher before moving on to another challenging AP history course, or for students in standard U.S. Government classes who want a preview of the course so they can begin in September with a solid foundation. This seminar will be taught using the AP U.S. Politics and Government Exam as an anchor for topics and skills covered throughout the week, tackling topics most frequently covered on the Exam and discussing those specifically covered in recent years.  Topics include: Constitutional Underpinnings, Political Behavior and Public Opinion, Political Parties, Interest Groups, Mass Media, Public Policy, Institutions of National Government, Civil Rights and Liberties, and Elections.  Skills Include: note-taking techniques, active reading tips, analytical and persuasive writing best practices, how to use and cite sources, analysis and understanding of primary documents and political cartoons, and understanding AP Exam multiple choice questions.


(AP) World History


  1. This class is intended for students who plan to take AP World History in the fall. This seminar will be taught using the AP World History Exam as an anchor for topics and skills covered throughout the week. We will discuss the course both chronologically and thematically, tackling topics most frequently covered on the Exam and discussing those specifically covered in recent years.  Topics include: Early Technological and Environmental Transformations, Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies, Regional and Transregional Interactions, Economic Productive Capacities and its Implications, Global Interactions, Social Organization and Modes of Production, Industrialization and Global Integration, Global Migration, New Ideas of Global Society, Economy and Culture and Global Conflicts. Skills include: note-taking techniques, active reading tips, analytical and persuasive writing best practices, how to use and cite sources, analysis and understanding of primary documents and political cartoons, working with Document-Based Questions (DBQs), chronological thinking skills, how to compare and contextualize across the curriculum and understanding AP Exam multiple choice questions.



(AP) European History


  1. This class is intended for students who plan to take AP European History in the fall. This seminar will be taught using the AP European History Exam as an anchor for topics and skills covered throughout the week. We will discuss the course both chronologically and thematically, tackling topics most frequently covered on the Exam and discussing those covered in recent years.  Topics include: The Renaissance, The Reformation, Absolutism, The Scientific Revolution, The Enlightenment, Society and Economics of the Age of Reason, The French Revolution and Napoleon, The Industrial Revolution, The Political Shifts of the Early 1800s, Unification, Mass Politics, Imperialism, World War I, The Interwar Period, Dictatorships and World War II, and Shifts in society and Politics: 1945 to Present.  Skills include: note-taking techniques, active reading tips, working with Document-Based Questions (DBQs), analytical and persuasive writing best practices, how to use and cite sources, analysis and understanding of primary documents and political cartoons, chronological thinking skills, how to compare and contextualize across the curriculum and understanding AP Exam multiple choice questions.


AP English Language and Composition


  1. This class will introduce and give to for students to practice the key skill sets necessary to excel in their AP English Language & Composition class and to get a high score on the AP Exam in May. Participants will become skilled readers of prose written in a variety of rhetorical contexts and in becoming skilled writers who compose for a variety of purposes. Both their writing and their reading should make students aware of the interactions among a writer’s purposes, audience expectations, and subjects, as well as the way genre conventions and the resources of language contribute to effectiveness in writing. The class will be organized around several years’ worth of AP Exams, so students will be familiar not only with their AP course expectations but also with the AP Exam itself.


Writing Across the Curriculum


  1. This class offers instruction on the most common forms of writing students are asked to produce in high school and college: analytical essays, history essays, persuasive essays, research writing, and creative writing. Brainstorming, outlining, drafting, editing, and polishing in each genre will be presented and practiced, so that when students return to school in the fall, they will know exactly how to handle writing assignments as they arise in each of their classes.


Summer Reading and Writing


  1. This class will help students complete their summer reading assignments and get instruction on and help with producing meaningful and polished essays they can bring to school on day one. Writing instruction and practice will extend beyond just summer reading assignments, however, to include creative writing, journaling, and other common genres in the high school curriculum, catered to the individual needs and desires of enrolled students.


Creative Writing


  1. In this intensive, five-day program to develop creative writing skills, students in grades 9-12 will develop their own craft ideas in the genres of short story, poetry, playwriting, and verbal scrapbooking. Every student will complete the course with at least one beautiful, hand-crafted piece of creative writing. We will concentrate on effectively developing a deeper understanding of our own ideas and stories,  finding our own voices and tones, and the ability to understand and communicate in the different genres.  Enroll in this class to have lots of fun with writing, and to move your skills to a whole new level!



Standardized Test Prep


Math on the SAT/ACT


  1. This class offers a comprehensive presentation of ALL the math you’ll need to know on the SAT and ACT. If the material is covered on either exam, you’ll see it here, and it’s not, you won’t (we’ll leave that to our other Math classes and to your teachers in the fall ;-)). The most common standardized test questions in arithmetic, algebra, and geometry will be emphasized, so that whether you have to take the PSAT, the SAT, the ACT, or all of the above, you will be supremely prepared for the MATH!


PSAT/SAT Prep and Practice


  1. This class offers an intensive 5-day immersion in the content, strategies, and test-taking skills necessary to excel on the PSAT and SAT. The course makes sense for any sophomore-senior who plans to take the PSAT or SAT in 2012-2013. Using CollegePrepExpress’s time-tested study program and copyrighted materials, students will begin to study the substantial body of knowledge covered on the exam and practice taking tests in a simulated testing environment. All three sections—Critical Reading, Math, and Writing, including the essay writing portion of the exam for SAT students (students will received detailed, individualized feedback on their essays), are covered in detail. Students will receive a substantial amount of printed material in class, but they are also required to purchase the CollegeBoard’s Official Guide to the SAT and are encouraged to buy Princeton Review’s Word Smart.


ACT Prep and Practice


  1. See our 6-Session ACT Prep Class, in West Hartford and online on the Classes page.


SSAT/ISEE Prep and Practice


  1. This class offers an intensive 5-day immersion in the content, strategies, and test-taking skills necessary to excel on either the SSAT or the ISEE. The course makes sense for any middle schooler—or precocious elementary school student—taking the SSAT or ISEE during the coming academic year. Using CollegePrepExpress’s time-tested study program and copyrighted materials, students will begin to study the substantial body of knowledge covered on the exams and practice taking tests in a simulated testing environment. Verbal, Mathematical, and Reading Comprehension knowledge and skills will all be covered and practiced! Students will receive a substantial amount of printed material in class, but they are also required to purchase Princeton Review’s SSAT & ISEE book.



Take ONE WEEK to work on your GRADES instead of your TAN! ;-)

Click to Register


 
“I learned more from Dr. Yo in a week than I learned in the first semester of school!”
                -Student, 2012

Dr. Yo’s SAT/ACT prep is the way to go! You get all the help you could ever need to excel on the next SAT/ACT you plan to take!                
 -Student, 2012
I just got my DBQ back today and I got a 92! Mrs. xxxx said there were only a few A's this time so I was really happy... Thanks so much for all your help. I can show it to you next time I see you, Alisha. :-)
        -Student, 2012