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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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West Ryde's tutors include a Dean's Honours List medical student and VCE specialist, a James Ruse graduate with HSC Maths Extension 1 raw mark of 100, an International Maths Olympiad gold medallist, experienced K–12 maths tutors, a NumberWorks'nWords instructor, peer mentors in science and music, and volunteers skilled at working with children.

Natasha
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Natasha

Ancient History Tutor Baulkham Hills, NSW
An open environment, a student should not feel embaressed when asking questions or having a problem with their school work. This can be a problem sometimes in a classroom environment as some children may riddicule the child. This open environment is important for a tutor as the student should feel open to ask questions without peer judgement. A…
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Jacqui

Ancient History Tutor Winston Hills, NSW
Make them feel confident in their abilities is definitely the most significant. Providing them with the skills to not only pass the exam or assessment but give them the ability to progress through school and further confidently. As someone who struggled with exams throughout high school, I feel I can bring some first hand experience and coping…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Ancient History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Andre
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Andre

Ancient History Tutor Leichhardt, NSW
Teach obviously! but i think if the tutor can make the lessons as fun as possible so that the student looks forward to them as something enjoyable rather than as purely work, the best results will occur. I am an excellent communicator and can teach via example quite effectively in almost any subject. I am easily able to match my communication…

Local Reviews

Karla's tutoring is going very well. Hilario has a lovely manner and approach and Karla seems to be getting on very well with him. They have talked about getting the basics right and he's teaching her tips to remember key things as Karla becomes very stressed in exams and cannot concentrate. So hopefully this approach will help.
Sonya, Eastwood

Inside West RydeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Amy worked on solving linear algebraic equations and inequalities, as well as finding midpoints and gradients in coordinate geometry using diagrams for clarity.

Year 10 student Ethan focused on trigonometric applications including the Sine Rule and Cosine Rule, plus practised integration techniques relevant to their current coursework.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Lily tackled exam revision by covering calculus concepts like differentiation and integration alongside statistics topics such as regression analysis with real past paper questions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student working on algebraic equations involving fractions relied heavily on a calculator, which, as one tutor noted, "meant he struggled to spot patterns or catch errors without it."

In Year 11 advanced maths, a student avoided practicing questions they got wrong, preferring familiar types—this limited exposure to exam-style challenges.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 learner skipped regular homework from their textbook; missed practice led to confusion when new fraction topics appeared in class.

For one HSC candidate, rare revision sessions left steps half-remembered during problem-solving under time pressure.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in West Ryde recently noticed a Year 10 student who used to make repeated mistakes with negative numbers now actively double-checking their signs and explaining each step out loud, which has helped her get through tricky algebra questions with fewer errors.

A Year 12 student who previously struggled to connect integration techniques to area problems started using the first principles method independently, tackling practice questions without hints.

Meanwhile, a Year 6 student who would guess answers on worded ratio problems began pausing to write out what each part of the question means before solving—last session, he set up and solved a multi-step problem entirely on his own.

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 West Ryde Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like West Ryde Public School.