Dr Du is a bit intense man. You gotta change your old habits and not be lazy, anyways I prefer and recommend private because you can go at your own pace, you can ask questions more freely. I don't recommend college tutoring, because chances are, most of your friends go there anyways so you guys access to the same resources. I reckon you can excel better in private, free of distractions and you can message your private tutors more freely. Some of college tutors have a lot on their plate, so they might not have time to reply LOL.
+ 1 to both.I'm pretty sceptical about Dr X and Dr Y claiming to fast track their students to HSC success... Often the resources might not be completely aligned to the syllabus, or extend beyond the syllabus in a way that might not be the most beneficial. I don't doubt that they are highly talented mathematicians, but at the end of the day, HSC Math doesn't require a highly talented (PhD level) mathematician to teach it. Really, someone with a very in-depth knowledge of the syllabus who you can get along really well with (i.e., a recent graduate who knows their shit) is probably the best way to go. Imo
Had a uni student as my tutor and he catered to everything I needed. With tutoring the benefits of having a uni student as your tutor is they understand your side of the story better since they went through the same process as you more recent like academic and social problems so having a uni student as your tutor isn't bad, in fact many are very good.It really depends on who the private tutor is. Most are bad (the uni students) and some are either good or alright (qualified teachers/hsc markers). I've heard that with Dr Du, the top 2 classes (from memory A and A2) get the good teachers wheras the lower classes A3 and B get the shit teachers.
Yeah, I'd agree. Some uni students are bad some are good, most tend to be inexperienced with teaching and explaining so it's hard (for someone like me) to find a good private tutor who is a uni student (I'm very picky)Had a uni student as my tutor and he catered to everything I needed. With tutoring the benefits of having a uni student as your tutor is they understand your side of the story better since they went through the same process as you more recent like academic and social problems so having a uni student as your tutor isn't bad, in fact many are very good.
Usually the best way to find a good private tutor or any tutoring centre is word of mouth (That is how I found mine).Yeah, I'd agree. Some uni students are bad some are good, most tend to be inexperienced with teaching and explaining so it's hard (for someone like me) to find a good private tutor who is a uni student (I'm very picky)