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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Marleston's tutors include a 16-year veteran secondary maths and science teacher with a B.Ed, multiple PhDs and Masters graduates in physics, an ATAR 99.95 achiever with academic prizes, experienced K–12 maths/science specialists, university medallists, Kumon and learning club mentors, and accomplished STEM students recognised for top-tier academic excellence and peer support.

Taison
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Taison

Tutor Glenside, SA
The most important thing is to answer their questions and teach them well, not just know copy the answers down but actually understand what's going and teach them my own experience As a Chinese background student, I think my math is good and I'm a people person as I have customer service for more than two years and I really want to make more…
Lisa
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Lisa

Tutor Prospect, SA
I believe the most important characteristic a tutor can have that would be best for a student is trust. If a student is able to trust my abilities and my teaching, I think this allows many benefits to the development and improvement of their learning. This includes them being able to open up to me more about questions or even other…
1st Lesson Trial

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Nicole
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Nicole

Tutor Heathpool, SA
I consider a tutor to be successful when they are able to not only make a difference to their students' grades but also in their lives. I have had many tutors during high school for different subjects and found that only those who were passionate, genuinely interested in my life outside of just my studies and were willing to go the extra mile were…
Sam
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Sam

Tutor Brighton, SA
Trung
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Trung

Tutor Woodville Gardens, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can give a student is confidence. However, this is not just a feel self-assurance in their learning but a confidence and self-security to be wrong. The imperative of tutoring is not to build knowledge but to create an environment for learning, this means allowing students the freedom to express their…
Mailikai
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Mailikai

Tutor Pennington, SA
I believe that the most important things a tutor can do for a student is teach them well and ensure they understand everything about the topic being taught. With patience and practice anything is possible , as a turor my goal would be to explain everything clearly to my students with a hope that their grades will improve. My strenght is always my…

Local Reviews

My daughter says Maths is now easier with Chirags tutoring. He has helped a great deal in her confidence, understanding and preparation for SACS.
Jean Hill

Inside MarlestonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Zara focused on comparing fractions using visual aids like pie diagrams and also practised solving Roman numerals.

Year 9 student Archie prepared for an upcoming test by tackling algebraic multiplication and worded questions from both his booklet and extra resources.

Meanwhile, Lachlan in Year 10 completed Pythagorean theorem exercises before beginning trigonometry with the sine rule, applying these skills to right-angled triangles as well as related problems from his electrician workbook.

Recent Challenges

Messy written work and disorganized materials slowed progress for a Year 7 student; as one tutor noted, "sheets and books were quite messy/disorganized—fixing this may help her keep track of instructions and tasks."

In Year 10 Maths, not reading assignment instructions closely led to confusion with scaling diagrams, causing errors in the final drawing.

A senior student in Year 11 struggled to extract key information from worded problems, leading to repeated misunderstandings of what questions required.

In each case, missed or unclear process steps meant time was spent clarifying instructions rather than advancing on new concepts.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Marleston recently noticed some real breakthroughs across different students.

In Year 10, Tia has started catching her own mistakes during trigonometry practice—she now pauses to check her work and corrects errors independently, which she hadn't done before.

During a session with Archie (Year 8), he not only tackled basic algebra confidently but also transferred those skills to new types of problems without hesitation, showing far more initiative than in earlier lessons.

Meanwhile, younger student Natalia created her first worded maths problem on her own, having previously needed step-by-step prompts for similar tasks.

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 Hilton Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Richmond Primary School.