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

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Tutors in Melbourne include a centre director with over five years of K–12 maths and science curriculum leadership, a chemical engineering postgraduate who tutored high schoolers as part of the Golden Key Society, an early childhood educator studying at ACU, and an aerospace engineer with three years' maths and physics tutoring experience from primary through university level.

Callum
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Callum

Ancient History Tutor Brunswick East, VIC
Be supportive of their difficulties, mistakes and challenges. Everyone deserves the chance to learn and part of learning is making mistakes. If mistakes are always treated as awful, they still won't stop. However, the student will feel terrible every time they make one and will either push themselves too far, or lose motivation to learn. I'm…
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…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Ancient History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Ramelle
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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…
Brigid
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Brigid

Ancient History Tutor Brunswick West, VIC
As a tutor, I encourage each student and show patience when something is 'difficult', 'boring', or the student doesn't think they 'are good at this subject'. This includes finding learning methods that will best engage the individual in different situations. 1) Experience in understanding how best to motivate and teach different people, depending…
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…
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…
Trevor
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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

We're off to a good start with Hayden.
Naja, Melbourne

Inside MelbourneTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 11 student Jason reviewed key concepts in Trigonometry, including complementary angles, and practiced differentiation using first principles to prepare for a Math Methods test.

Year 12 student worked through complex numbers in polar form (cis(theta)) and tackled textbook exercises, also revising inverse trigonometric functions ahead of an upcoming Specialist Mathematics assessment.

Meanwhile, Year 8 student covered the basics of linear equations—solving for one variable and graphing lines—and explored atomic structure in Chemistry, focusing on subatomic particles and electron shells.

Recent Challenges

Homework was not completed in a recent Year 11 session, which left gaps in understanding and slowed progress with new calculus problems—"please do the HW:), as it'll really strengthen your understanding," noted the tutor.

In another Year 12 lesson, revision focused mainly on familiar question types; less time was spent on more challenging trigonometric proofs and complex numbers, limiting exposure to higher-level exam material.

For a Year 4 student tackling long division, feeling stressed when unable to solve problems instantly led to hesitation in practice. In these moments, avoidance or incomplete work delayed deeper confidence and fluency.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Melbourne recently noticed Jason, a Year 11 student, moving from hesitancy to actively asking thoughtful questions while tackling challenging Trigonometry problems—a big step up from his earlier quietness.

In another high school session, Thomas started out unsure with negative numbers but now solves linear equations more confidently after connecting operations across Math and Chemistry.

Meanwhile, a younger student, Charlie, who used to get stuck on addition and subtraction, can now work through most sums without help.

Last week, Jonas—previously distracted—chose mental maths strategies himself and completed all division tasks unaided.

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 City Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Stott's Colleges. Contact us at Ezy Math Tutoring - Melbourne, 200 Queen St, Melbourne VIC 3000, (03) 7073 9599