HUNTERTUTORING

Standard syllabus

Qualifying exam prep · Graduate · Chemistry

Topics

Exam format and strategy

  • Understanding departmental qualifying exam structure
  • Written vs oral exam components and timing
  • Topic coverage: organic, inorganic, physical, analytical breadth
  • Historical pass rates and common failure modes
  • Study timeline: 6-month and 3-month preparation plans
  • Practice exam archives and peer study groups
  • Faculty expectations and evaluation rubrics
  • Retake policies and appeal procedures
  • Balancing research and exam preparation
  • Stress management and exam-day logistics

Organic chemistry review

  • Reaction mechanisms: substitution, elimination, addition, rearrangement
  • Pericyclic reactions and stereochemistry
  • Spectroscopy-based structure elucidation problems
  • Retrosynthesis and forward synthesis planning
  • Named reactions and reagent selection
  • Physical organic concepts: Hammett, pKa, kinetics
  • Organometallic catalysis mechanisms
  • Bioorganic and medicinal chemistry highlights
  • Common qualifying exam problem types
  • Timed problem-solving practice strategies

Inorganic and analytical review

  • Coordination chemistry: bonding, spectra, magnetism
  • Organometallic reaction steps and catalytic cycles
  • Main-group chemistry and cluster compounds
  • Solid-state and materials chemistry essentials
  • Group theory and symmetry applications
  • Quantitative analysis: error, equilibrium, electrochemistry
  • Instrumental methods: chromatography, MS, NMR, IR
  • Spectroscopic interpretation problems
  • Bioinorganic highlights: metalloproteins, models
  • Descriptive chemistry trends across the periodic table

Physical chemistry review

  • Thermodynamics: laws, potentials, phase equilibria
  • Statistical mechanics: ensembles, partition functions
  • Chemical kinetics: rate laws, mechanisms, catalysis
  • Quantum chemistry: hydrogen atom, MO theory, spectroscopy
  • Electrochemistry: Nernst, Butler–Volmer, cells
  • Transport phenomena: diffusion, viscosity (intro)
  • Mathematical methods: calculus, differential equations, linear algebra
  • Physical chemistry problem-solving techniques
  • Connecting theory to experimental observables
  • Cross-topic integrative problems

Pricing

Graduate-level rates are set on consultation. See the pricing page for K–12 and undergraduate rates.