Why Every Student Needs a Different Explanation
Mary can solve complex maths problems with ease… until mechanics appears.
Tammy knows all the psychology… vaguely.
Same lesson. Same teacher. Completely different needs.
That’s the reality of 1:1 tuition.
Teaching isn’t delivering information.
It’s diagnosing misunderstanding.
And once you see that clearly, everything changes.
The Myth of “Just Explain It Better”
In a traditional classroom, the assumption is simple:
If students don’t understand, explain it again… but clearer.
But here’s the problem—clear for whom?
An explanation that works perfectly for one student can completely miss the mark for another.
- One student needs structure
- Another needs visualisation
- Another needs a real-world example
- Another just needs to slow everything down
So repeating the same explanation rarely fixes the issue.
It just reinforces the confusion.
Two Students, Two Very Different Problems
Let’s go back to Mary and Tammy.
Mary – The Logical Thinker Who Gets Stuck
Mary is excellent at maths:
- Algebra? Fine
- Calculus? No problem
Then mechanics appears… and everything falls apart.
Why?
Because mechanics isn’t just maths—it’s applied thinking:
- Interpreting diagrams
- Choosing the correct model
- Understanding forces before writing equations
Mary’s issue isn’t ability.
It’s translation—turning a real-world situation into maths.
What she needs is not more equations.
She needs:
👉 Diagrams
👉 Step-by-step interpretation
👉 “What does this actually mean?”
Tammy – The Knowledge Collector
Tammy is studying psychology and seems confident:
- She recognises all the terms
- She’s heard all the theories
But when it comes to exam questions?
Everything becomes… vague.
She writes:
- General ideas
- Half-formed explanations
- Broad descriptions
Her problem isn’t lack of knowledge.
It’s lack of precision.
She needs:
👉 Structure
👉 Definitions
👉 Depth over breadth
Same Lesson? Not Even Close
Put Mary and Tammy in the same classroom, and they receive the same explanation.
But they don’t need the same explanation.
- Mary needs help starting the problem
- Tammy needs help finishing it properly
That’s why 1:1 tuition works.
Because it allows you to adjust—not just what you teach, but how you teach it.
Teaching as Diagnosis
In 1:1 sessions, the first task isn’t teaching.
It’s listening.
- Where does the student hesitate?
- What assumptions are they making?
- What are they not seeing?
Because mistakes are rarely random.
They are patterns.
And once you spot the pattern, you can fix the root cause.
Common Types of Misunderstanding
Over time, you start to see the same categories appear:
1. The “I Don’t Know Where to Start” Student
They freeze at the first step.
Fix:
Break problems into entry points. Give them a starting strategy.
2. The “I Know This… Sort Of” Student
They recognise everything—but can’t apply it.
Fix:
Drill down into specifics. Force precision.
3. The “I Rush and Miss Things” Student
They make avoidable mistakes.
Fix:
Slow them down. Build checking habits.
4. The “I Memorise But Don’t Understand” Student
They can recall—but not adapt.
Fix:
Change contexts. Test understanding, not memory.
The Power of Changing the Explanation
Sometimes the breakthrough comes from something very small:
- Drawing a diagram
- Using a different analogy
- Reordering the steps
- Asking a different question
Suddenly:
👉 “Oh… I see it now.”
And that moment is everything.
Because once a student sees it, they don’t forget it.
Why This Matters More Than Ever
In exam systems, students are judged on:
- Precision
- Application
- Clarity
Not just knowledge.
Which means:
👉 Understanding how a student thinks is more important than what they know.
What 1:1 Tuition Really Provides
It’s not just:
- More time
- More attention
It’s:
- Targeted explanations
- Immediate feedback
- Adaptation in real time
Instead of:
“Here’s the lesson.”
It becomes:
“Let’s figure out how you think—and build from there.”
And This Is Where Confidence Comes From
Students don’t lose confidence because they can’t learn.
They lose confidence because:
👉 The explanation never quite fits.
Give them the right explanation…
…and suddenly they realise:
👉 “I can actually do this.”
So What Changes?
Everything.
- Lessons become conversations
- Mistakes become useful
- Progress becomes visible
And most importantly…
Students stop feeling like they’re “bad at a subject”
…and start understanding how to approach it.

