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Lathlain's tutors include a Master of Teaching (Distinction) science specialist, experienced K–12 English and maths tutors with 2000+ hours combined teaching, a recent ATAR 99.60 scorer now studying medicine, award-winning peer mentors, former university lecturers, and passionate educators with backgrounds in psychology, geophysics, and engineering—all dedicated to inspiring young learners.

Siddhartha
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Siddhartha

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are fostering a positive and supportive learning environment, tailoring their teaching to the student's unique needs, and building the student’s confidence. By providing clear explanations, encouragement, and strategies for independent learning, a tutor empowers students to reach their full…
Kurtis
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Kurtis

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
Give them the confidence they need to stay motivated to acheive their Goals. Whether it be merely passing a class or excelling wih 99%, any improvement needs to be congratulated. Be patient, if the student is not understanding your explanation, obviously a different approach is needed. Do not lecture. This the students are already receiving in…
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Abbey
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Abbey

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
I think the most important thing is to build their confidence. I know it can be challenging to be learning new concepts at school and not understand them, so I would make my students feel comfortable in coming to me with any questions no matter how small or large they are, to make themselves feel confident in their own abilities and learning…
Natalie
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Natalie

Economics Tutor Willetton, WA
In my opinion, a tutor has to be able to communicate effectively with a student. There is a clear difference between having knowledge and actually being able to teach a particular field of study. It is absolutely vital that a tutor speaks to a student in a way that is easily understood by the student but at the same time also engaging. This way of…
Sendir
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Sendir

Economics Tutor Nedlands, WA
1. To identify where the child needs help - be it in the process of solving a question, or in fact in the way they think of what the question is asking. 2. To be able to communicate point 1 above, such that the child is able to understand. 3. Holistically take into account that each child is different, sometimes it is not a matter of merely…

Local Reviews

Recommend this company. They get quality tutors who are professional and invested. The administration staff are brilliant. You get good reports and great offers. So easy to engage.
Kat Forrest, Lathlain

Inside LathlainTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Aarav worked on converting percentages to fractions and explored chance concepts, along with building confidence in algebraic expressions and basic factorisation.

In Year 9, Ava practised solving simultaneous equations using both substitution and elimination methods, and drew linear graphs to interpret parallel lines.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Ethan reviewed trigonometry by calculating unknown angles in triangles and revisited Pythagoras' theorem through guided practice questions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Chemistry, difficulty identifying unknowns meant the student relied heavily on memorizing plans rather than analyzing question prompts.

A Year 8 Maths student submitted incomplete notes for cycles, which led to confusion when matching equations with graphs; as one tutor noted, "her notes were slightly incorrect and incomplete."

During a Year 7 session on rearranging equations, not revising factorisation steps made it hard to follow the process for finding x.

In an online primary class, distractions from surroundings repeatedly pulled focus away from tasks—making pen-on-paper work inconsistent and written explanations sparse. The result: moments of discouragement when stuck or confused.

Recent Achievements

One Lathlain tutor recently noticed a big shift in a Year 11 Chemistry student who used to struggle with setting out solutions—she now confidently plans her approach for identifying unknowns and works through examples with minimal help.

A high school maths student who previously hesitated during trigonometry lessons was able to complete questions independently, even choosing the correct rule without prompting.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner who once waited for guidance has started voicing her answers aloud while working on spelling tasks, showing real initiative by self-correcting as she goes.

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 Victoria Park Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Lathlain Primary School.