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

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Ellen Grove's tutors include veteran K–12 educators with cum laude honors and teaching licenses, high school maths specialists and Olympiad awardees, peer mentors with ATARs up to 97.75, a Queensland Academy graduate, university scholars in STEM fields, and leaders experienced in coaching, debating, camp facilitation and supporting diverse learners.

Lisa
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Lisa

Modern History Tutor Durack, QLD
I encourage students that it is okay to learn differently and that it does not make them any less great. I am patient and adaptable to each…
Ragulan
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Ragulan

Modern History Tutor Middle Park, QLD
Most important thing is to be able to teach for an individual students needs. Each student is different and it is vital tutors are able to adapt their teaching methods for the different students to ensure students achieve their potential. My biggest strength is communication. Being able to communicate both what I understand and clear concepts as…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Modern History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Kayla
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Kayla

Modern History Tutor Mount Ommaney, QLD
If you are a tutor, your job is to empower other people. Even if you are picking up blind spots, asking a student to paraphrase something, or advising more research in a particular area, there are ways to convey this information that are encouraging and helpful, (rather than condescending). We all have blind spots, too. I have found it…
Umucaltum
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Umucaltum

Modern History Tutor Acacia Ridge, QLD
- Helping the student overcome their problem area (concepts or areas the struggle to understand or comprehend) - Motivate them along the way -Help them develop a good work ethic to enable them to stay motivated even when you are not tutoring them -Listen to their concerns and encourage them to ask questions along the way My strengths as a…
Ana
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Ana

Modern History Tutor Bellbowrie, QLD
While I believe it is obviously important to help a student learn and understand their chosen subject, it is also important to support and encourage confidence in a student. I found during my schooling years that the subjects I most succeeded in were ones where my teachers were kind and encouraging - it allowed me to feel comfortable to ask…
Edward
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Edward

Modern History Tutor Pinjarra Hills, QLD
- Make positive environment through skilful teaching so that student can progressively work towards academic goals - Giving the student the skills they need to sequence their learning and understanding - Allows the students to understand their own learning processes. By understanding this, the student will feel confident in approaching more…
Rebekah
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Rebekah

Modern History Tutor Carole Park, QLD
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to provide understanding and gentle encouragement. It has been my experience that, if a student feels like the work is overwhelming and the teacher isn't listening, then the student will simply cease to care or give up. Listening to a student and helping them to work through what…
Alyssa
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Alyssa

Modern History Tutor Sinnamon Park, QLD
I believe the most important aspect of being a tutor is maintaining patience and understanding for the student at all times. I also think that instilling a sense of excitement and passion for study is the greatest gift any teacher can give. My strengths as a tutor would lie in my deep understanding for both written and spoken English. I am an…
Hamish
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Hamish

Modern History Tutor Parkinson, QLD
The best thing a tutor can do for their student is to help them to realise their full potential. I have a passion for learning and I love to try and instil that passion in…
Naiyao
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Naiyao

Modern History Tutor Corinda, QLD
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to boost their self-confidence. Learning, like everything else, is dependent on one's perception of one's abilities. Students who are confident in their abilities are more likely to be motivated than students who think they will never succeed. I think my strength as a tutor would be…
Natasha
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Natasha

Modern History Tutor Parkinson, QLD
It is highly important for a tutor to listen and more specifically identify gaps and concerns that a student is having in a particular area. I believe that my strengths are that I have developed strong communication skills over the course of my employment and my university studies. I studied Board English at highschool and maintained high grades…
Delaram
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Delaram

Modern History Tutor Springfield, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can give to his/her student is confidence. The confidence to know that whatever the problem is. There is no point trying to avoid it when if you work hard enough and practice enough with the right help, you will be able to solve problems on your own. Eventually the student does not need the tutor as a crutch if the…
Vanessa
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Vanessa

Modern History Tutor Calamvale, QLD
Teach themappropriately. Know your students, and teach them in their way. Strengths- I am availiable and I know i can teach so students will benefit from this! Weakness- Maybe pushing my cherubs too…

Local Reviews

Our daughter is really happy with Fay.
Peta, Forest Lake

Inside Ellen GroveTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Sofia focused on solidifying multiplication skills with the column method and tackled basic division, also practising quick mental maths.

In Year 9, Lucas worked through expanding and factorising binomials using the FOIL method and reviewed solving equations for x by rearranging algebraic expressions.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Genevieve revised factorising quadratic equations and applied the null factor law in preparation for her upcoming maths test.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student frequently guessed answers in algebra without first unpacking the question, as a tutor observed, "lots of guessing." This led to confusion and repeated errors.

In Year 10, another learner's written work was difficult to follow; untidy layout made it challenging to trace mistakes during trigonometry tasks.

For a senior student working on compound interest problems in Maths Methods, there was heavy reliance on calculators—missing "x" in calculations—and inconsistent attention to unit conversions.

A Year 5 student avoided setting out division steps clearly, so small errors went unnoticed until review. The lack of clear working delayed real progress each lesson.

Recent Achievements

One Ellen Grove tutor noted a Year 9 student who used to quietly guess now regularly talks through her thinking out loud and asks for help as soon as she's unsure, making her approach problems more actively.

A high schooler who'd often skip checking his work is now pausing to fix errors before submitting, showing he's taking ownership of his learning rather than rushing ahead.

In primary, a Year 4 student who previously needed guidance for multiplication has started working out x4 problems by herself and quickly distinguishes positive from negative numbers just by glancing at the question.

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 Inala Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Forest Lake State School.