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

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Uraidla's tutors feature a PhD physicist and university practical demonstrator, seasoned school placement teachers with education degrees, multiple ATAR 97+ graduates with subject merits, a robotics world finalist and Olympiad awardee, experienced youth coaches and music educators, and high-achieving maths specialists—all bringing real teaching, mentoring, and competition success to local students.

Jonathan
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Jonathan

Modern History Tutor Burnside, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is to accommodate their learning style. Students have ranging techniques and motivations when learning content. Personally, I struggled with auditory learning as a student, and would therefore ask my teachers to give me a range of tactile learning techniques to assist in my learning. I…
Amitava
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Amitava

Modern History Tutor Heathpool, SA
To gain confidence in them and make them more methodical and improve their exam strategy and psychological approach. I can feel the wavelength of every student quickly and befit my style of teaching…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Modern History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Archibald
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Archibald

Modern History Tutor Glenside, SA
I believe the most powerful way a tutor can aid a student is by giving them confidence. More than often, students can show more vulnerability in a one-on-one session than in a classroom surrounded by their peers, and so the best thing I can do is use these private sessions to impart confidence in the students by making them see ways they can…
Kayla
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Kayla

Modern History Tutor Woodforde, SA
Open the student's mind to new ideas, be there for the student. I am a good listener, organised and…
Timothy
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Timothy

Modern History Tutor Burnside, SA
My understanding of a tutors role is not to do the students work, yet to uncover their natural ability so that they may proceed to increase their academic results. Therefore, the most important thing a tutor can do is not only provide advice but draw out the best of people. I have been told I am a 'people person', I previously worked in a busy…
Hannah
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Hannah

Modern History Tutor Tranmere, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their students is to encourage them to continue with their studies and motivate and help the student achieve to the best of their abilities. If a tutor can do this then a student can become more confident in their learning and more willing to work on study. My strengths as a tutor are my ability to…

Local Reviews

Amber has been an excellent tutor and I would highly recommend her to any prospective clients.
Jana, Carey Gully

Inside UraidlaTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Daniel worked on fraction simplification and addition/subtraction with mixed numbers, using visual models to clarify changing denominators.

For Year 9, Emily revised factorisation of polynomials and practised graphing equations from given forms.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Alyssia focused on titration calculations in chemistry—applying molar ratios and rearranging the n = m/M and C = n/V formulas—as well as reviewing redox reaction equations for her upcoming exam.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student's messy handwriting and use of capitals mid-sentence ("reminder that capital letters are only for the start of sentence") made it hard to follow his maths working, especially in algebra.

In Year 10, a student repeatedly relied on looking back at formula sheets rather than recalling methods unaided—"some reliability on equations," as noted—which slowed progress when tackling unfamiliar questions.

For a senior chemistry task, another student avoided attempting written explanations until prompted; "he should attempt the written discussion portions of the assignment," their tutor remarked. This meant less confidence with worded responses under test conditions.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Uraidla noticed a Year 12 student who used to make frequent calculation errors during chemistry sessions now completing complex titration equations independently and without prompting, even handling mixed molar ratios for the first time.

Meanwhile, a Year 10 student who previously relied on being shown every step in statistics started identifying which parts of her assignments she struggled with and initiated questions to target those areas herself.

In primary years, one student who needed constant reminders about fraction rules managed to add and subtract mixed numbers almost entirely unprompted, then explained where commas belong in his writing.

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 Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Uraidla Primary School.