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

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Park Orchards' tutors include a university PhD physicist and former RMIT lecturer, experienced VCE and primary school tutors, a seasoned peer mentor and netball coach, multiple academic award-winners including subject dux and IB 43 scorer, Scouts youth leaders, accomplished chess coaches, and a Bachelor of Education pre-service teacher passionate about supporting K–12 students.

Robert
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Robert

Modern History Tutor Box Hill North, VIC
The goal of tutoring, in some sense, should be to equip students with the skills to no longer need tutoring. I believe this is best achieved by allowing the student to choose study-related goals, and help them take achievable steps in order to get there. As their competence increases in proximity to the larger goal, so too does their confidence as…
Mason
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Mason

Modern History Tutor Blackburn South, VIC
A tutor should do more than simply teach a subject for a student. A tutor is an individual that can encourage others to act at their best, this can be in the academic field but can extend to other aspects of life as well. A tutor's most important goal should always be understanding, and if possible, relating to the circumstances of each of their…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Modern History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

James
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James

Modern History Tutor Vermont South, VIC
Increasing a student's grade or helping them understand a single concept are just some of the things that most people look for in a tutor. While these are undoubtedly worthwhile indicators of a tutor's ability to teach a student, they are often mercurial and temporary once the tutoring stops. I firmly believe that what differentiates a good tutor…
Vahid
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Vahid

Modern History Tutor Box Hill, VIC
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to build their confidence and create a supportive learning environment where questions and mistakes are welcomed. A tutor should personalise their approach to match the student’s individual learning style, clarify difficult concepts in simple terms, and encourage curiosity and…
Ella
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Ella

Modern History Tutor Warrandyte, VIC
To build a safe space in which the student knows they are safe to make mistakes and ask questions to ensure they can grow to the best of their ability Being patient and building a connection with the student as well as being able to explain concepts in different ways to suite different learning…
Goutham
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Goutham

Modern History Tutor Vermont, VIC
I think that the tutor acts as a mentor for the student. In this role, the tutor should encourage the students to think critically in order to find answers to their questions. By providing the means to discover the answers for themselves, the tutor ensures that the student does not merely address the 'what' of the question but is also able to…
Jillian
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Jillian

Modern History Tutor Blackburn, VIC
Firstly, ensuring that a student actually understands the content and effective approaches to tackling questions.This can help refine their ability to understand and answer questions. Secondly, be a supporter and motivator. Being motivated to work hard and supporting them throughout their journey encourages students to be more proactive towards…

Local Reviews

Ezymaths were very professional and helpful. They are excellent at communicating, offering written or verbal advice, updates, payment notices etc. Even when our first tutor didn't quite suit my child, they arranged a second more suitable one within days. It's great that they come to you and fit with your schedule even when things change.
Kelli, Donvale

Inside Park OrchardsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Daniel worked on converting fractions to decimals and percentages, along with simplifying using the distributive law.

For Year 9, Chloe focused on solving linear equations and simultaneous equations, using step-by-step algebraic techniques to prepare for an upcoming assessment.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Olivia tackled quadratic equations by calculating discriminants and applying the quadratic formula, as well as simplifying surds and indices in practice problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 Physics student, when facing unfamiliar exam formats, often relied on long-term memory rather than recent practice—this led to slower responses and missed details ("Kirill elected to answer some questions based on long term memory, resulting in slower exam taking").

In Year 9 Mathematics, a student struggled with rearranging equations due to not consistently using pen and paper for working steps, which made tracking errors harder.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 learner avoided expanding on her writing plan, so stories remained brief and underdeveloped.

These patterns meant time was lost untangling misunderstandings or revisiting unfinished work instead of building new skills.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Park Orchards noticed that a Year 11 student, previously hesitant to ask for help, now actively raises questions during sessions when confused—especially while tackling complex matrix topics.

Another high schooler who used to make frequent errors on quantitative exam questions recently completed a full test much faster and with almost no mistakes, showing real improvement in both speed and accuracy.

In the younger years, one Year 3 student has started independently checking her writing for punctuation errors before moving on—a big shift from needing constant reminders in earlier lessons.

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 Warrandyte Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Park Orchards Primary School.