Physicist turned physics teacher, AP exam reader, and your friendly neighborhood guide to making AP Physics feel way less overwhelming.
I teach physics the way I wish more students got to learn it: slowly, clearly, and with all the missing steps actually shown.
I started out studying physics because I loved understanding how the world works. Eventually, that path took me through graduate school, college-level teaching, high school AP Physics, and years of watching students wrestle with the same thing over and over again.
The problem usually wasn’t that they were “bad at physics.” It was that the class moved too fast, skipped too many steps, or made everything feel like a pile of random formulas.
So now I build resources for students who need physics explained like a real human is teaching it—especially homeschoolers, self-studiers, and students who feel under-supported in a traditional classroom.
Here’s the quick version:
I’ve taught AP Physics 1 and AP Physics C, including students who were brand new to advanced physics and students aiming for serious STEM pathways.
I’ve taught intro Mechanics and Electricity & Magnetism at the college level, so I know what students actually need to be ready for next.
I’ve served as an AP Physics exam reader, which means I’ve seen exactly where students earn points, lose points, and make tiny mistakes that snowball.
Homeschoolers, self-studiers, and students in fast-paced classes deserve clear, structured physics support too. That’s the whole point.
Physics should be challenging, yes. But it should not feel impossible because no one explained the middle steps.
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