History Tuition Singapore
We Have Over 20+ Professional Tuition Coordinators.
Every subject team is led by a former senior MOE teacher.
Each of our tuition coordinators has at least 4 years of tuition matching experience.
We can therefore understand your tutoring needs. Immediately.
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We have over 37,000 highly qualified private tutors. Singapore’s best home tuition teachers have joined our team.Â
It’s easy for us to show you profiles of experienced tuition teachers with solid track records of improving grades.
All tutors go through at least 3 rounds of careful screening before we show their profiles to you.
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100% Success Rate.
We are experts in tutor matching, and our 1-to-1 home tutors are experts in the subjects they teach.
Our clients are always justifiably confident that they can easily hire the best tutors in Singapore once they contact us.
At affordable and reasonable hourly rates. No tuition agency fees.
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History Tuition Singapore - SG's Best Private Tutor Agency
*According to reviews and feedback from parents & students since 2007
Exam Results Are Forever.
Make Sure They Are Good.
37,000 Qualified And Experienced Tuition Teachers Are Ready To Help
If you are 10 to 20% behind in the syllabus by March/April, now would be a good time to hire a professional tutor.
This ensures that by May or June, you would have caught up or even completed this year's syllabus.
When you have enough time to revise and practice the more challenging and demanding questions, your A for each of your subjects will then be assured and practically guaranteed.
Your Eventual And Ultimate Goal Is To Be Accepted By The University And Course Of Your Choice
Learn from the best. Our private tuition team comprises MOE teachers, experienced tutors who have PhD/Master's/Bachelor's or who are university undergraduates in the subject you want tuition in. All with 2 to over 30 years of strong track records of helping their students' grades improve by 10 to 40 marks
LIFE IS VERY COMPETITIVE
Whether you are in primary school, the Express/IP/IB streams - you need to score higher marks
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Exams will be a huge struggle once you fall behind in the syllabus
Before you let that happen, you MUST catch up and be thoroughly familiar with the breadth and depth that is required during your exams
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Hire The Most Capable Experienced Tuition Teachers
MOE teachers, experienced tutors who have PhD/Master's/Bachelor's or who are university undergraduates in the subject you want tuition in.
All with 2 to over 30 years of strong track records of helping their students' grades improve by 10 to 40 marks.
Tutors: Please ensure that you have registered at:Â https://happy-students.org/sg-tutoring-teacher-jobs-most-new-assignments/
We are not able to accept any tutor registrations through this Hire Tutors Form. Thank you.Â
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Answer According To What The Exam Markers Expect From You
Your grades will determine which class, school, junior college/polytechnic, and university you will be accepted into
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Each tutor has 2 to over 30+ years of teaching experience
We have over 37,000 MOE Teachers, PhD, Master’s, Experienced Undergraduates, Graduated Tutors.
The 4 to 10 tutor profiles we show you have been carefully shortlisted for relevant tutoring experience.Â
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Competent tuition teachers
We accept tutor applications only if they have scored A’s in the subject(s) they teach. So that our students will be taught the correct content.
History Tuition Singapore | History Tutor | Top Tuition Centre | Tuition Teacher | Social Studies Tuition
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Reliable study methods, so that your grades will quickly improve
Our clients have no time to lose. Our tutors teach only proven techniques using the latest MOE syllabus, so that we can help your grades improve within 4 lessons.
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Latest MOE syllabus & exam requirements
We are focused on what is relevant and important for you to quickly understand what you really need to know, and to thoroughly prepare.
Getting that A is not elusive. It is achievable.
Transform your understanding of the complex syllabus.
Make sure that what you are studying now is actually really aligned to the MOE exam requirements.
The wrong study skills will erode your ability to answer the questions the way that the exam marker expects you to, in order to score that A - especially when your classmates, schoolmates or students from other schools are able to give those correct answers.
Good grades signal an ability to learn and analyze.
These valuable higher order thinking skills are some of the many crucial qualities that schools, junior colleges, polytechnics, universities and employers are looking for.
In the real world – and even in your exam questions (now that you are still in school) – information is not clear.
It comes from all different locations and various combinations. This results in exam questions that students find difficult to answer.
And businesses face different problems every day.
When you start working, you will find that an employee who is able to grasp the significance of the issues/problems, and is resourceful enough to find profitable solutions will be quickly promoted over (or given more decision-making authority than) those who lack the ability to use their resourceful thinking skills and market acumen.
Success in the workplace requires the ability to communicate complex ideas to a diverse team of people, relentlessly pursue solutions, and explore possibilities beyond current knowledge.
The answers to real world problems are more divergent than what we are usually accustomed to in primary school, secondary school, and the tertiary institutions.
We must therefore start to develop a good level of cognitive intelligence and ability to learn – especially now that we are young and in school.
Clearly, good grades signal this ability.
It is therefore important that you do well in as many of your exams as possible, from the time you are in primary school.
There are a number of possible reasons that students get poor grades.
Some are external factors, such as the subject matter being too difficult, the teacher is hard to understand, and problems at home.
Other reasons have to do with student attitudes, such as not doing homework and was playing too much in class.
Here are some other common causes that could potentially be causing your lack of focus:
- Your study environment does not support learning. You may have too many distractions like noisy neighbours, background noise, and an uncomfortable study space
- You’re feeling tired because you’re not getting enough sleep
- Test anxiety
- Problems understanding the questions and content when doing homework and revision
- The pace is too fast for you to keep up withÂ
- You did not learn the required material in previous classes (because you were not interested?)
- Teacher is not very good. Some may have an accent that makes it difficult to understand. Others can’t explain things in a clear manner. And some may not want to explain things at all. They might say, “You should have learned that last year/month, so I am not going to explain it over again.”
- There are also teachers who don’t like certain students, and this can affect their willingness to help those students. Also, some students don’t like certain teachers and thus may not cooperate in class
- Poor attitudes lead to poor grades. If you have negative attitudes toward school and studying, it can result in getting weak or failing grades
- Sometimes, you lack the motivation to do well in school. One reason can be that you have no dreams of what you want to do, or can see no benefit from going to school. It is good to have dreams, and for a mentor to guide you on how to achieve them step by step
- One of the biggest reasons why students do not do well in exams is because they didn’t study or do their homework
- Some students attend class but don’t pay attention
Our experienced specialist tutors have the latest best insights on each MOE/IB subject.
Every individual aspect of each exam section is given significant attention.
For each particular section, we build the skills required for your grades to improve.
We guide you in the thinking process behind how the correct answer can be generated, and how to accurately organize and present the answer to achieve maximum marks.
During home tuition, we will make sure you are spending the majority of your time on the key concepts that matter.
Learning how to think things through is a much better use of your time than trying to memorize everything.
Memorizing everything takes a lot of time and results in errors, whereas understanding everything will allow you to apply your knowledge to unexpectedly difficult questions.
After you have progressed beyond the foundational level, we will teach you more advanced and sophisticated techniques that help you secure perfection in your responses.
We believe that a mastery of the exam questions requires enhancing two broad sets of skills:
- Being able to understand what the question specifically requires you to answer
- Learning how to find the answer and how to present the answer in a precise manner for each question type
Therefore, we teach analytical and reading strategies so that you can break down each word in the exam question.Â
This way, you will not carelessly misunderstand, and give the wrong answers.
You will therefore be able to make the right inferences, as well as understand how and why the question was structured this way.
We will then teach you how to construct your answers to meet the requirements of the questions, and to get your A.
Here’s a little secret: nobody actually wants anyone to fail an exam.
It’s not good for your school or university, nor for the exam boards. They really want everyone to pass, because then everyone is happy.
All students take exams. But some students have better exam skills and therefore perform better at exams than others.
It is, therefore, important to develop the skills you need to prepare for, to take and excel in exams.
Effective and robust exam SKILLS are critically important to exam takers, because these skills allow you to respond at your best to all the challenges presented by any exam.
Fortunately, these skills can be learned.
One of the best ways to learn how to manage better during exams is to look at what NOT to do.
Apart from panicking, common mistakes made in exams include:
- Not answering the question. This is usually because you have misread the question, or have prepared a different response that does not answer what the question requires you to do (ie your answer was off-point). Always make sure that you read the questions several times, and re-check your answer against the question at every step of your answering process.
- Failing to notice the obvious clues. This might include the strong hints in the question itself (for example, ignoring words like “Analyse…” or “illustrating your answer with evidence from x”. You also need to be very aware of the marking scheme, and the number of questions. If you have a question worth 15 points, you will need to give more than a one-sentence answer.
- Failing to plan ahead. You need to plan your time for any essays that you have to write, and for any MCQ questions that are in the paper. Take a moment to work out how long you have for each question before you start – and make sure that you don’t take more time than this. If you are writing essays, plan them briefly before you start, to make sure that you have a sensible argument and structure. This will also mean that you might get some marks for your ideas even if you don’t have time to completely finish your essay.
Exam skills improve with practice, over time.
With the right focus via coaching, exam skills can be improved significantly.
Students taking exams often describe difficulties like anxiety and stress, various mishaps or mistakes during an exam, poor decisions during an exam, or the effects of poor preparation and/or overconfidence leading up to an exam.
Every student has his or her own individual strengths and weaknesses in exam skills.
Knowing what they are will lead to good exam performance.
Consider:
Thinking Positively: Do you sometimes struggle to think positively about your exam ability and your exam performance?
Achieving Results: Do you sometimes get worse results than your study preparation and school/mock exams indicate?
Reading Questions: Do you sometimes misread questions on an exam paper and present a half-done or wrong answer?
Experiencing Exam/Mental Blocks: Do you sometimes experience “Exam/Mental Blocks” and struggle to calm down and continue with your exam?
Preparing Properly: Do you sometimes fail to prepare properly for exams, only to regret that when the exam starts?
Time Management: Do you sometimes run out of time and are not able to complete all the questions on an exam paper?
Answering All Questions: Do you sometimes choose to answer some questions well rather than attempt all questions required?
Picking Up Marks: Do you sometimes feel uncertain about how to score the maximum marks for your answers?
Having Panic Attacks: Do you sometimes have “panic attacks” right before an exam or during an exam?
Leaving The Exam Early: Do you sometimes leave the exam room early or put your head down on your desk, because you have exam anxiety or are disappointed with the questions you were given?
Performing As Expected: Do you sometimes leave the exam thinking that you did not perform as you were expecting?
When you are more aware of what are really causing you to lose marks (and sleep), you are one step closer to improving your exam management skills and your exam performance.
Active listening, reading comprehension, note taking, stress reduction, time management, testing practices, and memorization are some of the skills that our home tutors will teach you.
Perhaps the most important part of doing homework and/or revision – and often the most difficult – is simply getting started.
It is easy to allow yourself to get distracted, to decide that you just don’t feel in the mood today, or that there’s plenty of time.
The best thing to do is just to get on with it.
Just getting started will be a huge boost to your confidence.
We will keep your end goal in mind and will also use interim goals along the way:
- Set clear personal learning goals. Students perform better when they know what exactly is expected of them. They also want to know how they will be able to achieve those learning objectives. After we have established what is the gap between current skill levels and those required by MOE/IB exams, we will discuss with you your expectations of your upcoming learning schedule, based on your unique needs and personal goals
- Make learning convenient. Your tutor will structure content in small, manageable chunks that are easy to digest. We can also provide notes, tools, short videos, checklists or infographics to help make the content easier to understand and remember
- Get creative with course content. Boredom causes students to lose interest in the subject. We will use active engagement strategies so that we can deliver learning content that is creative and interesting
- We coach students. Instead of giving them the right answer, we ask the right questions so that the students are able to arrive at the right answers themselves. Hence, instead of spoon-feeding students, we guide them and encourage them to think critically, so that they are able to produce complex and insightful answers on their own, during their exams. This helps them consistently get higher marks, and prevents panic attacks when the questions are more difficult than they expected
Students who are weaker are given more help to meet the fundamental requirements.
We also constantly stretch our high-achieving students by introducing more complex concepts to help them develop greater critical thinking and more sophisticated writing and answering skills.
We want to help students develop the right strategies, higher-order thinking skills, techniques and analyses to score their A.
And to obtain perfection in exam techniques and skills.
With such expert guidance, you will soon have results that are superior to your peers in school.
It’s relatively easy to score the first 40% but increasingly difficult to achieve the next 60% in any exams.
It also helps if you bear in mind that the examiner may be faced with as many as a hundred (or more) exam papers/assessments to mark within a very short period of time.
What you should avoid when answering exam questions:
- Inability to address the question’s topic in your introduction
- Stray from the focus of the question (especially in the conclusion)
- Insert quotes without introducing them or relating them back to the topic
- Fail to provide credible references
- Use informal language, colloquialisms, or overuse rhetorical questions
- Write words that are too informal, unsophisticated, vague, exaggerated, or subjective, as well as those that are verbose, generally unnecessary, or incorrect
- Struggle to develop your ideas fluently (poor ideation)
- Have difficulty in keeping track of your thoughts
Exam responses that score higher marks have three well thought-out components: Introduction, Body, and Conclusion:
- Introduction. The purpose of an introduction is to introduce your essay. Importantly, it sets the stage to let your reader know that the content is worth reading further
- Body. The body of the essay develops and elaborates your argument, as well as the appropriateness and accuracy of references. The information has to be relevant and substantial in order for you to score well
- Conclusion. Your conclusion should not offer any new material and should summarize why the content in the Body is credible and important
There are many reasons students avoid writing. Primary reasons may be one or more of the following:
- They have a hard time getting started and feel overwhelmed by the task
- They struggle to organize and use mechanics of writing
- They are slow and inefficient in retrieving the right word(s) to express an idea
- They feel that the paper never turns out the way they want
- They realize that their answers are still sloppy even though substantial time and effort were spent
To write good answers:
- A reply to an exam question should have a single clear central idea
- Each paragraph should have a clear main point or topic sentence
- Every paragraph and sentence should support or expand the central idea of the paper
- The idea of each paragraph should be explained and illustrated through examples, details, and descriptions
- Be specific, use short sentences and avoid tripping around your points
- Make sure your work uses evidence of insight and synthesis, and has quality arguments. The confidence in your writing will shine through, gaining you those extra marks
- Remember to be clear on your view in the introduction and use the body of the essay to argue that position
- Include your point of view, supported by relevant ideas, arguments and evidence
- Summarize your arguments/points using a clear, organized structure that includes an introduction, body paragraphs and a conclusion
- Try to write neatly
- Use paragraphs of appropriate lengths (long paragraphs are difficult to read and/or understand)
- Try to have some meaningful ideas of your own rather than simply repeating “model answers”. Some exam markers do not like “model answers”. Also, do be aware that “model answers” are often wrong
- Be careful about spelling, punctuation, grammar, writing style, and legibility
Take The Safest Route To Score Much Higher Marks
Hire The Home Tutor With A Strong Track Record Of Helping Students' Grades Improve
37,000 Experienced Tutors
MOE Teachers,
Tutors With Proven Track Records,
PhD/Master's/Post-Doctoral Tutors,
Graduated/Undergraduate Reliable Tutors
Ms ENH has 14 years of History tuition experience. She is NIE-trained and has a Master’s in History (Empires, Colonies and Imperialism) from NUS. Ms ENH taught at MOE schools for 9 years and is a private tutor. Her home tuition students attended Canberra Secondary School, CHIJ St Joseph’s Convent, Crescent Girls’ School, Hwa Chong Institution, Eunoia Junior College, and Victoria Junior College.
Ms STP has 9 years of History tuition experience. She has a PhD in History from Harvard University, and a Bachelor’s in History from NUS (First Class Honours). Her private tuition students attended Catholic High School, St. Patrick’s School, CHIJ St Nicholas Girls’ School, Anglo-Chinese Junior College, Eunoia Junior College, and National Junior College.
Mr KYC has 7 years of History tuition experience. He has a Bachelor’s from NUS, majoring in History. His private tuition students attended Anderson Secondary School, Christ Church Secondary School, Methodist Girls’ School (Secondary), Nanyang Junior College, Yishun Innova Junior College, and Raffles Institution.
Mr YYB has 8 years of History tuition experience. He has a Bachelor’s from NTU, majoring in History (First Class Honours). Mr YYB taught at a leading group of tuition centres and is currently writing their O Level and A Level History in-house curriculum for them. Mr YYB’s private tuition students attended St. Margaret’s Secondary School, Singapore Chinese Girls’ School, Hwa Chong Institution (Integrated Programme), National Junior College, Catholic Junior College, and St. Andrew’s Junior College.
Ms HCH has 9 years of History tuition experience. She has a Master’s in History from NUS, and a Bachelor’s in Political Science from NUS (2nd Upper Class Honours). Her home tuition students attended Cedar Girls’ Secondary School Integrated Programme, Methodist Girls’ School (Secondary) IB programme, Presbyterian High School, Anglo-Chinese Junior College, St Andrew’s Junior College, and Temasek Junior College.Â
Mr KT has 14 years of History tuition experience. He was a contract teacher at MOE schools for 5 years and is also a private tutor. Mr KT has a Bachelor’s in History from NUS. His private tuition students attended Damai Secondary School, Maris Stella High School, St. Anthony’s Canossian Secondary School, Tampines Meridian Junior College, Victoria Junior College, and Temasek Junior College.
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37,000 Experienced Tutors
MOE Teachers,
Tutors With Proven Track Records,
PhD/Master's/Post-Doctoral Tutors,
Graduated/Undergraduate Reliable Tutors
Ms GFH has 5 years of History tuition experience. She has a Master’s in History from the University of London, and a Bachelor’s in History from NTU (Honours). Ms GFH was a contract teacher at an MOE school for 1 year. Her home tuition students attended Kuo Chuan Presbyterian Secondary School, Nanyang Girls’ High School, St. Andrew’s Secondary School, Anderson Serangoon Junior College, Jurong Pioneer Junior College, and Raffles Institution.
Ms KES has 7 years of History tuition experience. She has a Bachelor’s in History from NUS, and had taught at a tuition centre for 2 years. Ms KES’s private tuition students attended Greenridge Secondary School, Marsiling Secondary School, Queensway Secondary School, Nanyang Junior College, Jurong Pioneer Junior College, and Anderson Serangoon Junior College.
Ms WYT has 11 years of History tuition experience. She is NIE-trained, and taught at a junior college for 5 years. Ms WYT has a Master’s in History from the University of Pennsylvania and a Bachelor’s in History from NTU (First Class Honours). Ms KYS’s private tuition students attended Catholic High School, Anglo-Chinese School (Independent), Nan Hua High School, Catholic Junior College, St. Andrew’s Junior College, and Eunoia Junior College.
Ms LL has 13 years of History tuition experience. She has a Bachelor’s in History from NUS, and taught at tuition centres for 5 years. Ms LL’s private tuition students attended Springfield Secondary School, Geylang Methodist School (Secondary), CHIJ St Joseph’s Convent, Jurong Pioneer Junior College, Anderson Serangoon Junior College, and Nanyang Junior College.
Mr SP has 9 years of History tuition experience. He has a Master’s in History from Cornell University, and a Bachelor’s in History from NTU (2nd Upper Class Honours). Mr SP’s private tuition students attended St. Joseph’s Institution, Tanjong Katong Girls’ School, Victoria School (Integrated Programme), Nanyang Junior College, Catholic Junior College, and Dunman High School.
Mr WH has 8 years of History tuition experience. He has a Bachelor’s in History from NTU (Honours) and was an MOE contract teacher for 1 year. Mr WH’s home tuition students attended Boon Lay Secondary School, Maris Stella High School, Northbrooks Secondary School, Jurong Pioneer Junior College, Eunoia Junior College, and St. Andrew’s Junior College.
Ms OY has 8 years of History tuition experience. She is NIE-trained, and taught at a junior college for 5 years. Ms OY has a Master’s in History from the University of Pennsylvania and a Bachelor’s in History from NTU (First Class Honours). Ms OY’s private tuition students attended Catholic High School, Anglo-Chinese School (Independent), Nan Hua High School, Catholic Junior College, St. Andrew’s Junior College, and Eunoia Junior College.
Mr KRJ has 16 years of History tuition experience. He is a post-Doctoral Fellow at NUS. His PhD in History was from Princeton University, and his Bachelor’s in History was from NTU (First Class Honours). Mr KRJ’s private tuition students attended St. Margaret’s Secondary School, Singapore Chinese Girls’ School, Nanyang Girls’ High School, Eunoia Junior College, Dunman High School, and Raffles Institution.
Mr LKE has 5 years of History tuition experience. He has a Bachelor’s in History from NUS, and taught at tuition centres for 5 years. Mr LKE’s private tuition students attended Hillgrove Secondary School, Maris Stella High School, Fairfield Methodist School (Secondary), Anderson Serangoon Junior College, Yishun Innova Junior College, and National Junior College.
Ms TG has 4 years of History tuition experience. She has a Master’s and Bachelor’s in History from NTU and was a contract teacher at MOE schools for 6 years. Ms TG’s private tuition students attended Queenstown Secondary School, Pei Hwa Secondary School, Henderson Secondary School, Anglo-Chinese Junior College, National Junior College, and Jurong Pioneer Junior College.
Ms PNP has 8 years of History tuition experience. She is NIE-trained, and taught at an MOE school for 5 years. Ms PNP’s Bachelor’s is from NUS (2nd Upper Class Honours). Her home tuition students attended Methodist Girls’ School (Secondary), Hougang Secondary School, East View Secondary School, Eunoia Junior College, Victoria Junior College, and Catholic Junior College.
Ms WSY has 10 years of History tuition experience. She has a Bachelor’s in History from NUS (2nd Upper Class Honours), and was a contract teacher at MOE schools for 3 years. Ms WSY’s private tuition students attended Jurong West Secondary School, Maris Stella High School, National Junior College (Integrated Programme), Catholic Junior College, River Valley High School, and Tampines Meridian Junior College.
Mr FN has 5 years of History tuition experience. He has a Bachelor’s from NUS (2nd Upper Class Honours). Mr FN taught at a tuition centre for 4 years and is also a private tutor. His home tuition students attended Si Ling Secondary School, Regent Secondary School, North Vista Secondary School, Hwa Chong Institution, Raffles Institution, and St. Andrew’s Junior College.
Mr OCK has 9 years of History tuition experience. He has a Master’s and Bachelor’s (Honours) in History from NTU. Mr OCK’s private tuition students attended Punggol Secondary School, Woodlands Ring Secondary School, Yuan Ching Secondary School, Jurong Pioneer Junior College, Hwa Chong Institution, and Anderson Serangoon Junior College.
Ms TWH has 13 years of History tuition experience. She has a Master’s in History from Dartmouth College and a Bachelor’s in History from NUS (First Class Honours). Ms TWH’s private tuition students attended Nanyang Girls’ High School, Methodist Girls’ School (Secondary), Singapore Chinese Girls’ School, Eunoia Junior College, Hwa Chong Institution, and Anglo-Chinese Junior College.
Ms KLS has 12 years of History tuition experience. She has a Master’s in History from the University of Paris-Sorbonne, and a Bachelor’s in History from NUS (First Class Honours). Ms KLS wrote the O Level and A Level teaching curriculum for a leading group of tuition centres, and she taught at those centres for 4 years. Ms KLS’s private tuition students attended Presbyterian High School, Cedar Girls’ Secondary School, Geylang Methodist School (Secondary), Victoria Junior College, National Junior College, and Anglo-Chinese Junior College.
Mr CHY has 5 years of History tuition experience. He has a Bachelor’s in History from NTU, and had taught at a tuition centre for 5 years. Mr CHY’s private tuition students attended Hai Seng Secondary, Ang Mo Kio Secondary School, Ahmad Ibrahim Secondary School, Nanyang Junior College, Jurong Pioneer Junior College, and Catholic Junior College.
Ms OBM has 3 years of History tuition experience. She is NIE-trained and taught at MOE schools for 7 years. Ms OBM has a Bachelor’s in History from NTU. Her private tuition students attended Teck Whye Secondary School, Temasek Junior College (Integrated Programme), St. Hilda’s Secondary School, Anderson Serangoon Junior College, Dunman High School, and National Junior College.
Tuition Rates
History Tuition Singapore | History Tutor | Top Tuition Centre | Tuition Teacher | Social Studies Tuition
Hire the most professional and qualified tutors with proven and consistent track records of improving grades
PRIMARY 1 - 3
$30-$60/hr
- Experienced University Undergraduate ($30-$40)
- Full/Part-Time Graduated Private Tutor ($30-$45)
- MOE Teacher ($40-$60)
PRIMARY 4 - 6
$30-$65/hr
- Experienced University Undergraduate ($30-$45)
- Full/Part-Time Graduated Private Tutor ($30-$50)
- MOE Teacher ($45-$65)
SECONDARY 1 - 2
$35-$80/hr
- Experienced University Undergraduate ($35-$45)
- Full/Part-Time Graduated Private Tutor ($45-$55)
- MOE Teacher ($60-$80)
SECONDARY 3 - 5
$40-$90/hr
- Experienced University Undergraduate ($40-$60)
- Full/Part-Time Graduated Private Tutor ($40-$60)
- MOE Teacher ($65-$90)
Junior College
$50-$120/hr
- Experienced University Undergraduate ($50-$60)
- Full/Part-Time Graduated Private Tutor ($60-$80)
- MOE Teacher ($90-$120)
University-Level
$60-$120/hr
- Experienced University Undergraduate ($60-$70)
- Full/Part-Time Graduated Private Tutor ($80-$230)
- University Lecturer (starting from $90)
Take The Safest Route To Score Much Higher Marks
Hire The Home Tutor With A Strong Track Record Of Helping Students' Grades Improve
Your History tuition teacher will clearly explain to you:
- European Dominance and Expansion in the late 19th century
- The World in Crisis
- Source-Based Case Study
- Structured-Essay Questions
- Explain events and/or issues
- Evaluate and make judgement on events and/or issues
- Bi-Polarity and the Cold War
- Decolonisation and Emergence of Nation-States
- The Making of the Contemporary World Order (1870s–1991)
- What were the major forces and developments during this period?
- What caused these major forces and developments?
- How did the developments influence people’s decisions and actions and vice-versa?
- How did people’s views and perspectives shape their interpretation of these developments?
- How did these developments impact societies?
- European Dominance and Expansion in the late 19th century
- How were systems and societies transformed by colonialism?
- The compulsory case study of Malaya and either the case study of Vietnam or Indonesia will be studied in the context of European dominance and expansion in the late 19th century
- Reasons for European interest and expansion in Southeast Asia
- Responses of Southeast Asian states to European expansion
- Impact of colonial rule on Southeast Asia
- Case study of Malaya, 1874–c.1900
- Case study of Vietnam, 1870s–c.1900
- Case study of Indonesia, 1870s–c.1900
- The World in Crisis
- What forces and developments changed Europe and the Asia-Pacific in the first half of the 20th century?
- Impact of World War I
- Rise of authoritarian regimes and its impact in the interwar years
- Case study of Communist Russia
- Case study of Nazi Germany
- World War II in Europe and the Asia–Pacific
- Reasons for outbreak of WWII in Europe
- Reasons for outbreak of WWII in the Asia–Pacific
- Reasons for the defeat of Germany
- Reasons for the defeat of Japan
- Bi-Polarity and the Cold War
- How did the Cold War impact the world order in the post-1945 years?
- Cold War and the bi-polar world order
- Reasons for the Cold War in Europe
- Manifestation of the Cold War outside Europe
- Case study of Korean War, 1950–53
- Case study of Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962
- Reasons for the end of the Cold War
- Decolonisation and Emergence of Nation-States
- Was the attainment of independence in colonies shaped by the decline of Europe and Cold War politics?
- The compulsory case study of Malaya
- Case study of Vietnam
- Case study of Indonesia
- Decolonisation and emergence of nation-states in Southeast Asia in the post-war years
- Struggles for independence in Southeast Asian states in the post-WWII period
- Establishment of newly independent states in Southeast Asia
- How European powers established themselves in Southeast Asia
- Investigate the tensions and issues brought about by the interaction between these western colonial powers and the Southeast Asian states
- Establishment of British control over Malaya (British Residential
- System, Federated Malay States) and its impact on local rulers
- Economic: Development of cash crop and mineral industries (rubber, tin), creation of export-oriented economy, development of infrastructure
- Social: local responses to British colonial rule, urbanisation and migration, creation of Western-educated elites
- Extension of colonial rule and its impact on Southeast Asia since 1870s
- Assess the reasons for European expansion and dominance in Southeast Asia with reference to Malaya and either Vietnam or Indonesia
- Extension of colonial rule and its impact on Southeast Asia since 1870s
- Political: Establishment of French control over Vietnam and its impact on local rulers
- Economic: Development of cash crops and mineral industries (rice, coal), development of infrastructure, introduction of private property, growth of landless peasants
- Social: local responses to French colonial rule, changes in class structure, migration within Indochina, creation of Western-educated elites, worsening of living standards of the locals
- Political: Establishment of Dutch control over Indonesia (Regency System) and its impact on local rulers
- Economic: Development of cash crops and mineral industries (sugar and tobacco, oil exploration), changes in livelihoods of the locals, creation of a dual economy, development of infrastructure
- Social: Local responses to Dutch colonial rule, creation of Western-educated elites, urbanisation and migration, worsening of living standards for the locals
- Intra-European rivalry on the European continent that gave rise to large scale conflicts as well the rise of new regimes
- In the Asia–Pacific, Japan was challenging European dominance and looking to increase its own power through colonial expansion in Asia
- World War I and II and the rise of Communist Russia, Nazi Germany and expansionist Japan – that threatened European dominance in the world
- European dominance in world affairs and brought about a shift in the balance of power
- The impact of the large-scale conflicts and the rise of new regimes
- The key forces and developments that challenged Europe’s dominance in world affairs
- The devastating effects of the two World Wars
- Attempts at world peace are often challenged by the interests and ambitions of individuals and nations
- The study of Communist Russia, Nazi Germany and Japan
- How totalitarian regimes can bring about both benefits and great costs
- Impact of World War I
- Peace Settlement – Aims and the terms of the Treaty of Versailles and its immediate impact on Germany
- Attempts at collective security by the League of Nations – Successes and failures of the League of Nations in the 1920s and 1930s
- Rise of authoritarian regimes and their impact in the interwar years (up to 1939)
- Case study of Communist Russia
- Reasons for the rise of Stalin in Russia
- Circumstances after Lenin’s death
- Stalin’s manipulations
- Impact of Stalin’s rule on Russia
- Political: Stalin’s dictatorship – culture of fear, persecution and personality cult
- Economic: modernisation of Soviet industry and agriculture
- Social: controlled society, culture of fear, policies on minorities
- Case study of Nazi Germany
- Reasons for the rise of Hitler in Germany
- Weaknesses of the Weimar government and Hitler’s leadership
- Impact of Hitler’s rule on Germany
- Political: consolidation of power, one-party rule
- Economic: Recovery and Nazi control of the economy, and militarisation
- Social: controlled society, culture of fear, persecution of Jewish people and other minority groups
- Assess the impact of World War I on Europe
- Evaluate the rise of authoritarian regimes and their impact on the political, social and economic context of countries and the world order
- Examine the reasons for the outbreak of World War II in Europe and the Asia–Pacific
- Examine the reasons for the defeat of Germany and Japan in World War II
- Analyse the roles of key players in shaping particular forces and developments during this period
- Assess the impact of World War I on Europe
- Evaluate the rise of authoritarian regimes and their impact on the political, social and economic context of countries and the world order
- Examine the reasons for the outbreak of World War II in Europe and the Asia–Pacific
- Examine the reasons for the defeat of Germany and Japan in World War II
- Analyse the roles of key players in shaping particular forces and developments during this period
- World War II in Europe and the Asia – Pacific
- Reasons for the outbreak of World War II in Europe
- Weaknesses of the League of Nations
- Hitler’s aggressive foreign policy
- Policy of appeasement
- Reasons for the outbreak of World War II in the Asia–Pacific
- Economic crisis in Japan
- Japan’s expansionist foreign policy
- Weaknesses of League of Nations
- Japan’s worsening relations with the USA
- Reasons for the defeat of Germany
- USA’s entry into World War II
- Over-extension of Hitler’s army on many fronts
- Reasons for the defeat of Japan
- Allied victory in Europe
- Economic and military might of USA
- Over-extension of Japanese empire
- At the end of World War II, a war-torn and weakened Europe created a power vacuum that gave rise to a world order that was characterised by the emergence of two superpowers, the US and the Soviet Union
- The military, economic and political confrontation between the US and the Soviet Union
- The causes and consequences of this rivalry that resulted in the Cold War and the creation of a bi-polar world
- Over-extension of Japanese empire
- At the end of World War II, a war-torn and weakened Europe created a power vacuum that gave rise to a world order that was characterised by the emergence of two superpowers, the US and the Soviet Union
- The military, economic and political confrontation between the US and the Soviet Union
- The causes and consequences of this rivalry that resulted in the Cold War and the creation of a bi-polar world
- Cold War and the Bi-polar World Order
- Reasons for the Cold War in Europe
- Post-World War II rise of USA and USSR as superpowers: collapse and decline of old European powers
- US-Soviet mistrust and rivalry: breakdown of wartime alliances, division of Europe after World War II, differences in ideology, American containment policy and Soviet responses, military alliances
- Manifestation of the Cold War Outside Europe
- Case study of Korean War, 1950–53
- Partition of Korea after World War II
- Emergence of communist China
- Role of external powers in the conflict: USA, USSR and China
- Case study of Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962
- Cuba’s strategic importance to USA
- Tensions between USA and Cuba: Castro’s policies and American responses
- The immediate impact of World War II on Europe
- The impact of the rivalry of the USA and USSR in the aftermath of World War II on the world order
- Cold War tensions that were manifested in and outside of Europe
- The reasons for the outbreak of the Korean War and the Cuban Missile Crisis
- The role of superpowers and regional powers in localised conflicts, with special reference to the Korean War and Cuban Missile Crisis
- Bi-Polarity
- Communism
- Containment
- Democracy
- Ideology
- Proxy war
- Glasnost
- Perestroika
- The rise of newly independent states in former European colonies all over the world – Africa and Southeast Asia
- How the various colonial powers responded to the demand for independence from their colonies and how external developments like Cold War politics intervened and shaped the struggle for independence
- The unique circumstances and the key developments in the world that influence the struggles for independence
- Decolonisation and emergence of nation-states in Southeast Asia
- Re-establishment of British rule in Malaya and local responses
- Malayan Union, 1946
- Federation of Malaya Agreement, 1948
- Communist movement in Malaya – Establishment of independent Malaya, 1957
- Merdeka Talks, 1956
- The policies taken by the British and either the French or the Dutch in responding to local struggles for independence
- Anti-colonial struggle
- Decolonisation
- Nationalism
- Nation-states
- Resistance and collaboration
- Sovereignty
- Independence
- Attempts by French to re-establish French rule in Vietnam and local responses
- August Revolution, 1945
- 1946 Agreement
- Battle of Dien Bien Phu, 1954
- Reunification and establishment of independent Communist Vietnam, 1975
- Intervention of USA, Soviet Union and China
- Fall of Saigon, 1975
- Attempts by Dutch to re-establish Dutch rule in Indonesia
- Declaration of Independence, 1945
- Indonesian revolution, 1945–49
- Linggadjati Agreement, 1946
- The Madiun Affair, 1948
- Renville Agreement, 1948
- Establishment of Independent Indonesia, 1949
- Round Table Conference, Dec 1949
- Growth and Problems in the Global Economy
- Reasons for growth of the global economy
- Post-war economic reconstruction
- Post-war economic liberalisation: economic miracle in Western Europe and
- Japan, rise of Multinational Corporations
- Problems of economic liberalisation
- 1973 and 1979 oil crises
- Rise of protectionism
- Debt crises of the 1980s and their impact on developing countries
- Rise of Asian Tiger economies (South Korea and Taiwan) from 1970s to 1990
- The growth of the global economy, and the challenges that affected it
- The role of the USA, Europe and Japan in the growth of the global economy and evaluate the effects of their decisions and actions
- The causal relationships that underpinned the economic transformation in South Korea and Taiwan
- Formation of the United Nations
- Origins of the UN: reasons for the founding of the UN, its aims and principles
- Political effectiveness of the UN in maintaining international peace and security
- Security Council, General Assembly, Secretary-General
- Peacekeeping, peace enforcement, peacemaking, peacebuilding
- Efforts to stay relevant and effective despite Cold War bipolarity
- International Court of Justice: ensuring adherence to international law; arbitration and advisory opinion
- UN Reforms
- Sovereignty of nation-states
- Great Power politics
- Rise of regionalism and regional organisations
- Collective security
- International law
- Causes of inter-state tensions: historical animosities, racial and religious divisions, ideological differences, territorial disputes, transboundary challenges
- Consequences of inter-state tensions: effects on regional cooperation and security
- Reasons for the formation of ASEAN
- Growth and development of ASEAN: building regional peace and security,
- promoting regional economic cooperation