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Private modern-history tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Brunswick East include a PhD physicist and university lecturer, an ATAR 99.45 science scholar, a Melbourne Uni literature graduate with tutoring experience, seasoned K–12 maths and English mentors, engineers with honours, award-winning debaters and peer mentors, and tutors with international teaching credentials—bringing both academic excellence and real-world mentoring to local students.

Patrick
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Patrick

Modern History Tutor Deepdene, VIC
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to really help them get the best out of themselves. I think a really good teacher or tutor will always leave their students with a sense that they should always be trying to get the most out of themselves, whatever level that is, and not cheat themselves by being lazy. I think my…

Local Reviews

I am extremely happy with service from ezymath and the tutor is of a very high standard. We have had Dexter for a year now and she is very professional and has a natural teaching ability. She has developed a good rapport with my children and their grades have certainly improved. Dexter has a great work ethic and always prompt.
Sara Ryan, Brunswick East

Inside Brunswick EastTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Edie worked on algebraic rules and explored how to expand and factorise expressions, building readiness for upcoming classwork.

Year 8 student Sophia focused on applying angle rules after wrapping up algebra topics, practising with a range of geometric questions.

Meanwhile, Year 7 student Alina tackled common errors from a recent quiz by working through algebra skills such as substitution and simplification, using targeted practice to strengthen her understanding.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student left several test answers blank after struggling with terminology and inverse function concepts, a challenge deepened by missing some class content.

As one tutor observed, "she needed a lot of prompting to work through questions," particularly when her textbook was forgotten at home.

In Year 8 mathematics, messy handwriting and skipping written steps led to confusion during multi-step fraction problems—errors often went unnoticed until too late.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student relied heavily on mental calculations for division, which resulted in small mistakes that repeated across practice sessions. This slowed confidence-building as errors lingered uncorrected.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Brunswick East noticed a Year 10 student who previously hesitated to write out her algebra steps is now working through substitution problems independently, only checking in for the trickiest parts.

Another high schooler, who often guessed when stuck on factorising, took the initiative this week to create her own step-by-step cheat sheet and now refers back to it without prompting during practice.

Meanwhile, a younger student who struggled with choosing between long and short division has started explaining aloud which method she's using and why before starting each problem.

Local Spots for Tutoring

If you'd prefer not to have lessons at home, tutoring can also take place at a local library—such as Brunswick Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Our Lady Help of Christians School.