Macroeconomics


  • Economic Indicators: ​Unemployment, CPI, Real & Nominal GDP
  • ​Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and Fiscal Policy
  • ​Banks, Money Supply, and Monetary Policy
  • ​Money Growth, Inflation, and Crowding Out

Exam Topics

How does this work?

Send us an email (bethesda.md.tutoring@gmail.com) with your availability and which sessions you would be most interested in.  We'll work as quickly as possible to schedule sessions and get you the help you need.  

Note: given the circumstances, we understand the College Board will allow students to take their AP Economics exams online and at home.  These exams will only consist of short and long-form essay questions.  We believe the best way to prepare for these questions is through reviewing only free response questions - we have official questions, answers and rubrics.  Classes are taught by prior AP Exam graders.

Online AP economics tutoring


small group sessions taught by current economics professors & Prior ap exam graders


Bethesda Tutors is piloting a new online tutoring program to support students currently studying for their Microeconomics and Macroeconomics AP or final exams. Our goal is to host online small-group tutoring sessions, each discussing on one of the key areas highlighted by the College Board.  These sessions will be interactive and focused on reviewing and answering official AP Free Response Questions [FRQs] from prior years.


Here's what we're doing: 


  • Online Zoom meetings capped at 10 students - we'll provide the link 
  • $30 for a one-hour session, with sessions and topics scheduled as frequently as is practical
  • We'll send you Free Response questions from prior AP exams once you register
  • Session structure: first 30 minutes will cover key concepts; second 30 minutes will review prior AP exam free response questions - these questions will be different from what we email you

Microeconomics


  • Supply & Demand
  • ​Production, Costs, & Perfect Competition
  • Monopoly, Monopolistic Competition, Oligopoly
  • ​Government Intervention and Market Failures