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

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Tutors in Parafield include a government school maths teacher with over a decade's experience, multiple Kumon and private tutors for Years 1–12, two teachers with master's degrees in education or mathematics, an ATAR 98.65 graduate and school Dux, an advanced maths subject expert from Chegg, plus accomplished peer mentors and STEM competition participants.

Ishan
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Ishan

Ancient History Tutor Ingle Farm, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to listen to them and understand the problem they are facing and later on help them solve it. Making the student comfortable matters the most I listen and analyse the situation carefully and respond in that way. Also i adjust to what the other person needs and being a student myself I know…
Sharyn
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Sharyn

Ancient History Tutor Wynn Vale, SA
It is essential each student is regarded as an individual with specific strengths, interests and abilities. This equips a tutor with information needed to tailor a suitable learning program, while providing modelling, feed-back and positive reinforcement. - patience - perseverance - reliability - long-term availability, including holidays -…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Ancient History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Hibah
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Hibah

Ancient History Tutor Wynn Vale, SA
Understanding and sociability are the most important traits for a tutor. The tutor needs to be attentive so they can understand the best approach to help a student with their work. Additionally, you do not want to come off as imposing or tough because you will make a student feel adverse towards studying and possibly about themselves. Being…
Samskruthi
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Samskruthi

Ancient History Tutor Modbury North, SA
I feel, providing guidance, understanding students learning style and creating a supportive learning environment is most important thing. It's also important for a tutor to foster confidence, encourage students in their learning process. I feel I'm great at providing clear explanation, offering patient and supportive friendly environment.…
Navika
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Navika

Ancient History Tutor Valley View, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for his/student is to be a friend to him/her,be patient to the student and deal with politeness so that the student must not hasifate or be scared of asking the doubts again if not clear. He can also provide the best help to the students with providing the best notes and making the work easier. Strengths…
Neha
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Neha

Ancient History Tutor Northfield, SA
Tutors can make students believe in themselves. They need to be that person who is transparent with them about their positives and areas of improvement. It’s vital that students gain confidence for any achievements. I am a patient and empathetic listener. I am great at scaffolding and explaining concepts especially to EAL/D…
Keely
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Keely

Ancient History Tutor Burton, SA
I think the most important things a tutor can do is a) be consistent and persistent - constantly show up, be willing to explain things 100 times if that's what is needed. The student needs to have faith in you. And b) build confidence - tutoring isn't a short term option, by teaching them the skills of how to attack problems they don't understand,…
Rovee June
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Rovee June

Ancient History Tutor Valley View, SA
One of the most important things that a tutor can do for a student is not just learn the subject based on the books or resources but also learn them by heart. It might not seem important but it might be useful in the near future. Also, it is very important that the tutor and the student build a good relationship because it is easier to learn and…
Sanazahera
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Sanazahera

Ancient History Tutor Oakden, SA
My most important things toward students to Listen carefully to your students, Constantly assess and adjust your strategy,Be creative and flexible with learning styles,Build relationships, Be patient with students at all times, Teach students how to problem-solve, Foster student independence. My strength is honesty,sincerity and hardworking…
Kit
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Kit

Ancient History Tutor Gilles Plains, SA
Bring a sense of enjoyment to a challenging field. Instill confidence and a desire to improve. Ground the subject in reality to bring relevance and life skill to their learning. My strengths are a broad skill set coupled with broad life experience. I approach mentoring as a case by case venture rather than a one size fits all approach, and I am…
Adwait
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Adwait

Ancient History Tutor Lightsview, SA
I think the most important things a tutor can do are to build a student’s confidence and spark their curiosity. Creating a safe, supportive space where they feel comfortable asking questions makes a huge difference. A tutor should also help students develop their own problem-solving skills, empowering them to tackle challenges independently and…
Abdallah
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Abdallah

Ancient History Tutor Hope Valley, SA
The most important is working to the individual’s strengths and approaching things in ways they will understand, offering a tailored learning experience. I also firmly believe immediate repetition combined with increasing-interval repetition is a vital component of consolidating knowledge and methods, ensuring my student’s understanding does…
Therese
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Therese

Ancient History Tutor Dernancourt, SA
I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to ultimately inspire them in a love of learning and hopefully pass onto them capsules of knowledge which are priceless. My strengths as a tutor are to challenge the pupils to think abstractly about language and harness the true power it possesses. I love hearing the pupil's own…
Jeniece
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Jeniece

Ancient History Tutor Campbelltown, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is to always try to understand their student. Everyone learns differently, needs help in different ways, and faces different problems. There's no one size fits all and tutoring offers students a chance that they don't have in classrooms of thirty other students where they a learn in a way that makes…

Local Reviews

Thank you so much for sending us Leonardo! He was brilliant! Luke absolutely LOVED HIM! I can’t wipe the smile off his face, and this is the text he sent me soon after..
Matilda, Parafield Gardens

Inside ParafieldTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Daniel worked through geometry by classifying triangles and solving complementary and supplementary angle problems using diagrams.

For Year 7, Alicia focused on BEDMAS order of operations and practiced applying the Law of Indices to related questions.

Meanwhile, Year 8 student Arjun tackled ratio word problems and explored percentage increase and decrease in real-life contexts.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student tackling algebra often skipped writing out steps, which, as noted, "hid sign errors and made it hard to spot where things went wrong."

In Year 11 trigonometry, forgetting formulas during problem-solving led to hesitation and slowed progress.

One Year 4 learner avoided saying multiplication tables aloud when practicing, resulting in weaker recall later on.

A Year 9 student faced difficulty with worded problems by not reading questions carefully—this left them unsure which operation to apply.

During revision for a Year 10 maths test, working only familiar exercises meant gaps in newer content remained unaddressed.

Recent Achievements

One Parafield tutor recently noticed a Year 8 student, who used to struggle with homework and rarely finished it on time, completed all assigned fraction addition tasks correctly this week—his first time getting every question right.

A Year 10 student surprised herself by scoring 100% on a test covering last week's content, after previously missing several questions in similar topics.

Meanwhile, during primary sessions, one younger learner has started using mental maths for addition instead of counting fingers—a big step up from her earlier hesitation to try without support.

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 Mawson Lakes Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Thomas More College.