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

100% Good Fit Guarantee
100% Good Fit
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Kensington's tutors include a VCE and university lecturer who coached Olympiad medallists, seasoned school teachers with years of classroom experience, an astrophysics PhD and published researcher, a chemistry Olympiad silver medalist, accomplished peer mentors, and current high-ATAR achievers in maths and sciences—offering deep subject mastery and real-world expertise for K–12 students.

Cesc
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Cesc

Ancient History Tutor Collingwood, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do for a student for mi consideration would be listening to my students and get to know them in order to adjust and assess my strategy and way of teaching as a tutor, and in that way the tutor can be the most creative as it can, giving hints and techniques to students on how to think by themselves, question…
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Ramelle

Ancient History Tutor Brunswick, VIC
Be patient, be attentive to their learning styles, involve them in the process of learning, focus on their strengths and not just the areas that they’re struggling with and make sure I fully understand the tasks that they are required to do so I can best support them to complete these. I really love teaching, and am willing to go out of my way…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Ancient History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Katie
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Katie

Ancient History Tutor Thornbury, VIC
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student in boost their confidence, as confidence is so important when it comes to tests and exams. I also believe providing a student with a safe and comfortable tutoring enviroment, where they aren't afraid to ask questions is incredibly important if goals are to be acheived I am very…
Samuel
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Samuel

Ancient History Tutor St Kilda West, VIC
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make them feel comfortable learning the material the school gives them and to develop good study skills. Students have different learning styles and process information at different paces. A school can't accomodate all the individual learning styles of their students, but tutoring…
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Trevor

Ancient History Tutor Preston, VIC
That is easy. The most important thing is to inspire them and engage their curiosity. To be more interesting than a teacher trying to teach a class, and to show the student /s that learning is beneficial, fun, and not-dreary schoolwork. Gamification can be used here, and exposing the student to new texts above the level they are used to, so as to…

Local Reviews

I have got to say that Miles is absolutely perfect. Besides being prompt and all that, his explanations are so good that Roland shares them with his school friends to enable them to understand tricky concepts in class. They inevitably will say "Oh, I understand now!" He is making Maths Methods manageable.
Kristen, Flemington

Inside KensingtonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Nick focused on graphing linear equations by both intercept and slope methods, and explored parallel linear relationships as a new topic.

In Year 11, Laura revised algebraic techniques including expanding brackets and factorisation, alongside practicing worded problems involving linear equations.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Bita worked through exam-style questions covering integration techniques and the application of circular functions, with extra attention to graphing trigonometric equations by hand.

Recent Challenges

In Year 12 Maths Methods, a student often avoided voicing questions or uncertainties, which made it harder to address knowledge gaps—"she was reluctant to inform me which areas were her strengths and weaknesses." This led to incomplete feedback loops before tests.

Another Year 8 student struggled with keeping workbooks dated and organized; pages without dates made it tricky to track progress and revision for probability topics.

For a Year 9 algebra session, skipping steps in written working resulted in missed sign changes, causing repeated errors. These habits left students searching for errors instead of consolidating understanding when under test pressure.

Recent Achievements

One Kensington tutor noted that a Year 11 student, previously hesitant to speak up, now clearly vocalises her thought process and even points out the tutor's mistakes while tackling advanced calculus problems.

In another session, a high schooler who struggled with identifying explanatory and response variables began confidently explaining his reasoning out loud—something he'd avoided before.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who often guessed at answers started checking her own work for errors without prompting and could explain decimal division steps back to the tutor. Last week, she corrected two test mistakes herself after only one explanation.

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 Flemington Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Holy Rosary School.