I am a published historian and active researcher whose doctoral work sits at the intersection of historical analysis and scientific enquiry. I teach History, Classics, and Philosophy with the depth of someone who practises these disciplines, not as a generalist filling a timetable gap.
History at GCSE and A-Level is not a memory test. It is an exercise in constructing and defending arguments using evidence. That is what I teach: how to read sources critically, how to evaluate the reliability and utility of evidence, and how to present a sustained, well-supported case in writing. These are the same skills I use daily in my own research.
My academic background in Classics and Ancient History gives me a particular strength in teaching the ancient world, but my teaching spans the full chronological range required by the major exam boards, from medieval Britain through to the Cold War and beyond. I have taught topics including Weimar and Nazi Germany, the Tudors, the American West, and the British Empire, among many others.
At A-Level, the demands shift towards historiographical awareness. Pupils must engage with competing interpretations and demonstrate that they understand why historians disagree. I introduce pupils to the key debates in their chosen topics and teach them how to incorporate scholarship into their essays without losing their own argument.
For university students, I provide guidance on research methods, dissertation planning, source evaluation, and the conventions of academic writing in the Humanities. My experience as a university lecturer at Liverpool and Manchester means I understand the standards expected at every level of higher education.
Philosophy tuition covers the core areas examined at A-Level, including epistemology, ethics, and the philosophy of religion. I teach pupils to construct and evaluate philosophical arguments with logical rigour, a skill that transfers directly into any discipline that values precise thinking.
Reading historical sources critically, assessing reliability and utility, and using evidence to support a sustained written argument.
Building structured, thesis-driven essays that engage with the question, deploy evidence effectively, and reach a substantiated judgement.
Understanding why historians disagree, engaging with competing interpretations, and incorporating scholarship into analytical writing.
The Greek and Roman worlds, including political structures, culture, warfare, philosophy, and the legacy of the classical period.
British, European, and world history from the medieval period to the twentieth century, across all major exam board specifications.
Core philosophical problems including epistemology, moral theory, the philosophy of religion, and the construction of logical argument.
Every lesson is oriented around building and defending a historical argument. I treat pupils as junior historians, not passive recipients.
I incorporate real historical sources into lessons so pupils develop the interpretive habits that examiners reward.
For A-Level and university students, I introduce the major scholarly debates relevant to their topics and show how to integrate them.
Regular timed practice essays with detailed feedback, focusing on structure, evidence, and the specific demands of the mark scheme.