Hello, I'm Nehar. I'm a 3rd year student averaging a first at the University of Bristol.
I approach tutoring from a place of patience, flexibility, and understanding. I work with people according to their needs and help them first and foremost understand the maths they're looking at. Once you understand something, applying, solving, and curiosity follow naturally. In fact, maths is a cool field...
Hello, I'm Nehar. I'm a 3rd year student averaging a first at the University of Bristol.
I approach tutoring from a place of patience, flexibility, and understanding. I work with people according to their needs and help them first and foremost understand the maths they're looking at. Once you understand something, applying, solving, and curiosity follow naturally. In fact, maths is a cool field where discovering a new fact isn't at all difficult, and often just results from asking the right questions. Learning maths just comes down to breaking big difficult concepts down into bitesized insights and seeing how those fit together. And that's how tutoring comes in. I've seen a wide range of maths in school and university, and can help unpack the questions (or lack thereof) you might have.
People can benefit from tutoring for any number of reasons. Just a couple for example:
Sometimes we fall behind because we're missing some simple key insight without even realising.
Sometimes (or even often) our teachers just don't explain things well or in a way that makes sense for us personally.
Sometimes maths just honestly isn't our cup of tea, and we just want to push through, get a good grade on a piece of paper and be done with it finally.
We can identify these causes together and improve on them. It helps to work one-on-one, ask questions and have them fully answered, see examples and have things click. As someone who has recently been through the school system I can offer this because I myself understand the student's perspective.