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

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Luscombe's tutors feature a UK Deputy Headteacher and Inclusion Lead with 15+ years' K–6 classroom and leadership experience, seasoned Queensland maths and science teachers with postgraduate credentials, high-ATAR achievers (up to 99.1) and subject award-winners, peer mentors, academic competition medalists, creative writing specialists, and passionate education undergraduates skilled in engaging students of all ages.

Emma
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Emma

Modern History Tutor Belivah, QLD
I believe two of the most important things a tutor can do for a student are help them gain some new insight and understanding into a subject, as well as try to inspire a genuine passion for the topic. As a tutor, I believe my one of my strengnths would definitely be my intense love of English. I'm also extremely time efficeint and organised, and…
Bardia
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Bardia

Modern History Tutor Beenleigh, QLD
I believe a tutor's duty is not to necessarily improve the intellectual capability of their client, but rather, guide them in a way that allows them to harness their own learning potential through customised, carefully tailored programs specific to the individual. Whilst this may not necessarily be viable for every circumstance, it is the role of…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Modern History

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Caitlin
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Caitlin

Modern History Tutor Beenleigh, QLD
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help them in becoming more confident in their ability to do the work in the subjects they need help in. I think my strengths as a tutor are such things as: my patience, my ability to understand what it’s like to struggle in class, my ability to explain things multiple ways, my…
Dylan
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Dylan

Modern History Tutor Beenleigh, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student, is to explain concepts, theories and course content in an easy to understand, and easy to recall way. So that the student can gain an understanding of the content, and the knowledge will be retained for future studies. I think the main reasons that people came to me for help in school was…

Local Reviews

A very prompt response with my inquiry returned with a friendly a informative phone call.
Catherine Searle

Inside LuscombeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Milly focused on multiplying decimal numbers and revising the conversion between improper fractions and mixed numbers, working through both tutoring and school homework.

In Year 9, Jackson tackled trigonometry topics such as angles of elevation and depression, including practice with converting degrees to DMS (degrees, minutes, seconds) and understanding compass bearings.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Sarah revised logarithmic equations and index laws, as well as applying the sine and cosine rules to a range of exam-style questions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 algebra, a student relied on mental calculations for steps—"I can do this in my head," they said—but missing written working meant negative signs were lost and errors multiplied.

In Year 11 maths, another student left Task 3 incomplete and hadn't contacted their teacher about Measures of Spread, delaying feedback and clarity.

Meanwhile, a Year 6 lesson revealed anxiety after missed school; confusion drawing diagrams led to frustration when interpreting geometry questions.

For one Year 4 session, multiplication tables were avoided during long division practice, slowing progress as "he kept mixing up which number to use."

Recent Achievements

One Luscombe tutor noticed a Year 9 student who had previously rushed through homework is now double-checking her division steps and even spots some of her own careless mistakes before asking for help.

In another session, a high schooler who struggled with equations involving multiple brackets can now solve similar problems confidently after working through several practice sheets together.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who used to rely heavily on prompts has begun verbalising each step when tackling tricky word problems—now explaining her reasoning aloud instead of waiting for hints. Last week, she completed all three multiplication tasks without any prompting.

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 Beenleigh Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Norfolk Village State School.