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

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San Remo's tutors include a Master-qualified secondary maths teacher and school leader with international experience, a UWA-trained mathematician and experienced K–12 tutor, a peer mentor and academic award-winner with dance coaching expertise, multiple ATAR high achievers and competition medallists, plus university students passionate about teaching, science, creative writing, music, and mentoring young learners.

Aaron
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Aaron

Ancient History Tutor Halls Head, WA
A tutor is more than just one that imparts knowledge. Any textbook, podcast or Youtube Video can do that. The power of a good tutor is in his or her ability to strengthen and encourage their students, so helping them gain some momentum to keep persevering in subjects that are challenging them. This means patiently helping the students understand…
Kristen
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Kristen

Ancient History Tutor Golden Bay, WA
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to understand their goals and help them achieve them as well as help them form a great foundation and attitude towards Math. I believe that math is simple and with the right view on it, it is possible for everyone to excel. I am understanding of others capabilities and I am…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Ancient History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Kayla
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Kayla

Ancient History Tutor Secret Harbour, WA
I consider helping a student improve their grades is the most important thing a tutor could do for a student. That or helping a student gain a better understanding about the subject they are being tutored on. I am able to explain topics a person is struggling with in more detail, in a way that is able to be understood easily. I have knowledge in a…
Eva
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Eva

Ancient History Tutor Silver Sands, WA
As a tutor helping students feel confident in themselves and their ability to overcome difficult tasks and assignments is crucial. Empowering students and watching them grow is the most important part of being a tutor I'm very patient and am completing my bachelor of Education where we are learning how to make the scsa curriculum exciting. I'm…
Deacan
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Deacan

Ancient History Tutor Golden Bay, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel like they are being spoken with, not spoken to. They need this so they can feel included in the discussion of learning, and not like they are being belittled for not knowing as much. I am very good at learning the best way to help someone and am able to find that way and show…

Local Reviews

I am so impressed with how Lynn and my daughter have started off strong. She seems to be understanding a lot more than we originally thought also I think that comes down to a focus aspect in the class room. Lynn will definatly be installing some confidence into my daughter to return to the class which we love.
Sarah

Inside San RemoTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Scarlet worked on confidently counting to 100 and practising basic addition skills using number lines.

For Year 5, Cruz focused on building multiplication fact fluency and began applying long division strategies to solve problems involving hundreds divided by single-digit numbers.

Meanwhile, Year 6 lessons with Ethan included adding fractions and converting improper fractions into mixed numbers for real-world contexts.

Recent Challenges

In Year 3–4 maths, one student often avoided showing working in addition problems; as a tutor wrote, "struggling with neatness for adding" led to missed place values and confusion when reviewing errors.

Another pattern: forgetting homework or not practicing tables between sessions meant progress slowed in division and mental arithmetic.

In Year 5–6, lack of concentration became clear during lessons—after initial enthusiasm, attention drifted when tasks grew harder ("tended to tune out if things got a bit hard"), which left subtraction and fractions incomplete.

This reluctance to engage fully saw skills plateau before new topics could be tackled confidently.

Recent Achievements

One San Remo tutor noticed a big shift with Cruz, who started the session reluctant but later asked lots of relevant questions and managed to multiply large numbers—a turnaround from previous lessons where he'd been hesitant to try.

In another session, a high school student was able to identify problem elements independently in math tasks without prompting, showing new independence after often waiting for hints before.

Meanwhile, Scarlett had a breakthrough: after struggling with telling time, she now reads both hours and minutes accurately and even explained AM/PM distinctions while practicing on the training clock.

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 Lakelands Library and Community Centre—or at your child's school (with permission), like Oakwood Primary School.