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

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Franklin's tutors include a university-level physics lecturer and lab demonstrator with a doctorate, seasoned K–12 maths and English tutors—including one with expertise supporting neurodiverse learners—a primary school Learning Support Assistant training as a teacher, an award-winning maths student (ATAR 98.1), and accomplished peer mentors, academic prizewinners, and youth dance instructors.

Ragini
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Ragini

Ancient History Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
A tutor should have the ability to share information in a way that others will learn, grasp the concepts, understand the input. A tutor should be able to know strengths and weakness of a student. A extra paper work is required by tutor for better performance of a student. A regular assessment of student to enhance his performance. A tutor should…
Io
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Io

Ancient History Tutor Mckellar, ACT
I think communication with your student is important. As a tutor, you can not force a student to do things your way, so it's important to be able to compromise and help them with what they think is important so they don't lose interest in a subject, whether it is a struggling student or one that wants to excel. By involving them in the process you…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Ancient History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Cian
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Cian

Ancient History Tutor Acton, ACT
A tutor is not there to do a student's homework for them but rather to help them think and problem solve in new ways so that they can complete their work more effectively and be a more independent learner. Thus, a tutor can help by bringing with themselves a large amount of knowledge in the subject area(s) and by having a patient and understanding…
Tara
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Tara

Ancient History Tutor Canberra, ACT
I think one of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to give them confidence in themselves and their understanding of the subject. I find that from confidence can come a wealth of improvement in performance, as a student's willingness to take risks and belief themselves can go a long way. In terms of specific strengths, I…
Iulia
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Iulia

Ancient History Tutor Downer, ACT
I believe it is essential to understand your student, and adapt your teaching and communication style to benefit their learning style, age, personality, and knowledge. It is important for a tutor to really believe in their student, and do all they can to help them excel. I believe I have excellent communication skills as I am able to adapt to each…
Michael
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Michael

Ancient History Tutor Acton, ACT
I think the most important facet is personalising lesson plans and taking time to understand the main shortcomings of each individual student. Being able to have open conversations and earn students trust to offer constructive feedback that extends outside the lesson - e.g dealing with mental stress and study regimes - can be far more important to…
Gurjit
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Gurjit

Ancient History Tutor Acton, ACT
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is to help students develop critical thinking skills. It’s not just about giving them the right answers, but guiding them to ask the right questions, break down problems, and reason through solutions on their own. This way, they become independent learners who can tackle new challenges with…
Hugo
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Hugo

Ancient History Tutor Acton, ACT
I think to be dependable and reliable is the best thing for a student, so that they can feel safe with asking for help from their tutor. A student must first feel safe around their teacher so that they can more openly accept guidance and assistance. I consider myself a very friendly and approachable person. As someone who experienced academic…

Local Reviews

Rithika is a fantastic tutor and a very friendly person. We are very happy.
Nikolina, Franklin

Inside FranklinTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 11 student focused on solving titration problems by calculating concentration, volume, and moles.

For Year 12, basic differentiation techniques were covered with Alex, including exponentials and trigonometric functions, using targeted examples to build confidence.

Meanwhile, another Year 12 student extended their understanding of limits and first principles, then practised applying product, quotient, and chain rules for derivatives of exponential and trig functions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Chemistry, one student did not reorganise the equation to solve for the volume of NaOH, missing a crucial step in laying out knowns and unknowns—"listing all information would have made it easier to spot what was needed," noted a tutor.

A Year 10 student repeatedly left homework unfinished or forgot their book at school, leading to gaps in revision.

Meanwhile, negative self-talk ("not very academic") surfaced during Year 12 Maths lessons; this sapped motivation and limited participation when confusion arose with logarithms. In each case, confidence and clarity slipped just when they mattered most.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Franklin noticed Luca, a high school student, has shifted from hesitating to ask questions to now regularly speaking up whenever unsure—he even brought his own list of queries last session, which helped him tackle more advanced polynomial expansions independently.

Another recent win came when Zoe, also in high school, caught a mistake the tutor made about parallel lines and confidently corrected it herself—a big change from her earlier reluctance to speak out.

In a Year 3 maths session, one student who previously struggled with multiplication managed to finish all ten problems without errors.

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 Gungahlin Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Franklin School.