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

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Thornbury's tutors feature a PhD-bound educator with over 15 years' experience, VCE high-achievers including ATAR 97+ scorers and Maths Competition top 1%, seasoned K–12 maths and science mentors, experienced school wellbeing counsellors, university-level peer coaches, accomplished sports and music leaders, and Golden Key Honour Society scholars across law, neuroscience, biotechnology, and engineering.

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Aditya

Ancient History Tutor West Melbourne, VIC
A tutor should use as simple language as possible because using fancy language can make them loose interest as they won't know the words. A tutor should involve the students into the discussion so that they don't sleep off during the session. I have a good command over English Language which helps me connect with people so that I can go to the…
Dolanath Sai
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Dolanath Sai

Ancient History Tutor Bundoora, VIC
1. Create a comfortable learning environment 2. Build confidence 3. "Simplify complex concepts" 4. "Adapt teaching style" My biggest strengths as a tutor are patience, clear communication, and the ability to break down complex topics into simple, understandable steps. I adapt my teaching style to each student’s pace, make learning engaging,…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Ancient History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Mony Nancy
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Mony Nancy

Ancient History Tutor Burnley, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do are to create a safe, encouraging learning environment, help students build confidence, and guide them to develop their own problem-solving skills rather than just giving them answers. I’m patient, a good listener, and I always try to explain things in a way that makes sense to each individual student. I…
Patrick
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Patrick

Ancient 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…
Patricio
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Patricio

Ancient History Tutor Southbank, VIC
I believe that the most important things a tutor can do for a student include: Provide individualized attention and support: A tutor should be able to understand the unique needs and learning styles of their students and tailor their approach accordingly. This includes providing personalized feedback and guidance, as well as adapting teaching…
Ann
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Ann

Ancient History Tutor Bundoora, VIC
I think the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide support, build confidence, and foster a positive learning environment. Support is crucial because it helps students feel that they have someone in their corner, guiding them through challenges. Building confidence is also key—when students start to believe in their own…
Syed muhammad
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Syed muhammad

Ancient History Tutor
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make the student feel comfortable and enjoy learning. As the say goes “no bad subjects, only bad teachers†the more comfortable a student is the more they would enjoy the subject My strength definitely would be the ability to make students feel comfortable so they dont worry about…

Local Reviews

So far we've been pleased with our Tutor and getting started was easy. My daughter and the tutor clicked straight away and there was good follow up throughout the process.
Kym, Preston

Inside ThornburyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Daniel focused on solving worded problems by translating real-life scenarios into mathematical equations and practiced skills with quadratic equations, including factorising and sketching their graphs.

For Year 11, Lily worked through probability concepts such as sample spaces, conditional probability, and the addition and multiplication rules, using tables to clarify multi-stage experiments.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Max tackled calculus topics by reviewing differentiation from first principles as well as applying derivative rules to interpret the meaning of slopes and turning points in functions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student reviewing organic chemistry sometimes skimmed over questions without fully checking charge states, as a tutor noted: "Needs to remember states and to check over charge of molecules."

In Methods calculus (Year 12), another student showed confidence but occasionally struggled to set out full working for integration constants, leading to uncertainty about final answers.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 learner tackling multi-digit subtraction would often forget to carry the one, making it tricky to spot where errors crept in.

During practice, the urge to finish quickly meant small details—like careful reading or stepwise calculations—were missed, resulting in avoidable confusion mid-task.

Recent Achievements

A Thornbury tutoring session saw a Year 11 student tackle trigonometric relationships independently, where previously he'd often paused or waited for hints before attempting these questions.

Another high schooler who used to get stuck factoring polynomials was able to complete almost all quadratic equations without any help, showing real self-sufficiency during revision.

In the primary years, one student who would hesitate over times tables managed to recall and write out their 9s with only minor prompting—something that's been a challenge in earlier sessions.

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 Northcote Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Mary's School.