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Private physics tutors that come to you in person or online

Tutors in Fyansford include a Master of Teaching (Secondary) candidate and former school integration aide, an experienced preschool head with years leading early childhood education, a biomedical science scholar in the top 15% at Deakin, multiple university science majors, state champion athletes and academic award-winners, and peer mentors with proven leadership and tutoring experience.

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    Love your tutor or it’s free.
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  • Qualified Tutors
    Only the top 10% pass our screening.
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    Flexible in-home or online flexible scheduling.
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  • 100% Good Fit Guarantee
    100% Good Fit Guarantee

    Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.

  • Qualified Tutors
    Qualified Tutors

    Carefully screened, fewer than 10% are good enough to work with us.

  • Simple Terms
    Simple Terms

    No booking fees, no hidden fees. Cancel any time, no lock-in.

  • We come to you
    We come to you

    You decide where and when to meet. As little or as often as you want.

  • Working with Children Check
    Working with Children Check

    All tutors have a valid working with children check

  • Real Results
    Real Results

    Reach goals and improve grades faster with private, 1-to-1 lessons.

  • Any Grade
    Any Grade

    High school or primary, you'll get a tutor that fits your needs.

  • 1000's of Happy Students
    1000's of Happy Students

    Our tutors show WHAT to study + HOW to study

  • Lesson Reports
    Lesson Reports

    You'll get feedback on each lesson, so you know how your child gets on.

Syed Ashtar Hussain
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A good tutor wants to create a student that no longer requires help and so they instill those executive study skills that will serve the student well in academics and in life. Skills like organization, task initiation, focus and time management are essential to being a great learner. Able to connect meaningfully with the student. Caring and…
Tom
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I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is create a safe learning environment to provide the student with the confidence to ask questions without the risk of feeling silly. As a tutor, I would love to share my passion for maths and science, inspiring students to pursue further knowledge and find enjoyment within the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Physics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Vipin
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He can be a idol to a student. Not only teaching the subjects but also life experiences can help the students for better future. Parents give birth to the children but a tutor teach them how to lead life. Make it understand the content to students. Enthusiastic Good communication skills Time management skills Leadership skills Organizing…
Rowan
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I believe the best thing a tutor can do is to connect with the student to further understand what type learning can be best suited to incerease the students ability to take in information regarding a subject I can explain situation and problems in many ways and with a lot of detail going into the interest of a student to help them focus on a…
Gouripriya
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The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to clarify concepts, boost confidence, personalize learning, offer support, foster critical thinking, set and track goals, empower independence, promote a love of learning, provide constructive feedback, and create a positive learning environment. A tutor plays a multifaceted role in a…
Shasthri
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Being real with your students. Your students should know that they can always count on you and that you are always there for them to get help at any time. whatever you teach should be taught in a way that they will never forget. I love to explain difficult problems in a simple way by relating it with day to day activities. As I am not very…
Jamie
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The most important thing a tutor can do is be passionate about what they're teaching as this passion can be reflected onto the student helping them stay motivated and accountable. Being able to form a connection with the student to grasp their own way of learning and foster the best way to learn new…
Callum
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Be patient. Not everyone is able to understand everything at the same rate and it can take time. You have to be patient with the student and be able to explain the same concept ina variety of ways to be able to adapt the core principles of the topic to the student. I have a pretty firm grasp on topics such as maths and science and have been able…

Local Reviews

Alexa is wonderful she's kind friendly patient and very reliable she is the perfect math tutor for my daughter thank you Alexa you are amazing :)
Donna

Inside FyansfordTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Saanvi worked on comparing and ordering fractions with the same denominator, interpreted fraction meanings in real-life contexts, and practised finding ratios using unit conversions.

For Year 10, Phoebe focused on revising index laws and applying them to exam-style questions.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Tom tackled exponential growth and decay as new content and solved additional problems involving irrational numbers.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student, when working on quadratic factorising, often relied on notes rather than recalling rules independently; as one tutor observed, "she needed reminders for each step instead of trying from memory."

In a senior session, another student avoided surface area worded problems, choosing to repeat familiar exponential drills instead—this meant less growth in multi-step reasoning.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner guessed division answers rather than showing working, which hid small errors and slowed progress with remainders.

Across both primary and high school sessions, unfinished practice questions sometimes left concepts only partially reinforced by the end of the lesson.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Fyansford recently noticed some real turning points with students at different year levels.

In Year 9, a student who used to freeze up over large numbers tackled complex ratio problems without hesitation and even started coming up with creative algebra solutions on her own.

During a high school session on exponential growth and decay, another student went from confusion about compound interest to solving practice questions independently—she now requests tougher examples for extra challenge.

Meanwhile, a younger student who previously lost focus during maths sessions has begun showing steady attention and finishes bookwork before asking what's next.

What they say about our tutoring

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Jacques seems quite happy with the 3 weeks tutoring he has had and when asked says he is enjoying the lessons. So a good start.

Sophie is responding to Rounak very well. Rounak is a great teacher and Sophie gets along well with him. We're all very happy!

It is going very well. Katie is a truly lovely person. Cassandra has responded well. It is going as well as it can. Cassandra is naturally avoidant of the subjects that she is being tutored in, currently with Katie we are doing one week on Maths and the following week on English and so on. Cassandra engages in the tutoring, and does seem to learn, despite her being sure that she doesn't need a tutor. My partner and myself are very busy at the moment and don't have time to tutor her ourselves, besides, she doesn't like to listen to us, whereas, she will sit beautifully with the tutor. So it really works in that way.

Local Spots for Tutoring

If you'd prefer not to have lessons at home, tutoring can also take place at a local library—such as Geelong West Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Hamlyn Banks Primary School.