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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

North Fremantle's tutors include a secondary maths teacher with five years' UK experience and mentoring roles, an engineering scholar and award-winning peer tutor, a WA Maths Talent Quest national winner (ATAR 92), gifted program duxes with ATARs up to 98.5, university students in science and education, seasoned youth coaches, and creative arts high-achievers.

  • 100% Good Fit Guarantee
    Love your tutor or it’s free.
    No risk.
  • Qualified Tutors
    Only the top 10% pass our screening.
  • We Come to You
    Flexible in-home or online flexible scheduling.
  • Working with Child Check
    Safety-first tutoring for peace of mind.
  • 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.

Ashan
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Promoting critical thinking skills, problem-solving abilities, and a deeper understanding of the subject matter, rather than rote memorization. Adaptability - I can adapt my responses to different learning styles and levels of understanding, providing simple explanations for beginners or more in-depth insights for advanced…
Jackie
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Help them understand the contents, provide tips and feedback on their work and do lots of guided practise! I am very organised and I always do my best to motivate and encourage my students to do their best, with a year of experience with students from different grade…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Joshua
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A tutor needs to have a good understanding of the content to help cater to the students' needs. By suggesting or providing different resources (e.g. alternative text books, handouts, video clips or study cards), the student can widen their methods of learning and access to resources. A tutor needs to be a relatable individual, who gets along…
Tshewang
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Inspire…Inspire…Inspire…. Support, Scaffold, Encourage, And provide a welcoming learning space. 1. Motivate children. 2. Facilitate 3. Guide 4. Resourceful 5. Make learners independent. 6. Child friendly (the most important of…
Alastor
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Make them interested in the learning themselves. If the student wants to gain knowledge by their own choice I think that will really set them up for success I think I can adapt to different students. I know each person thinks differently, I think I can come up with different approaches to teach each…
Josefina
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I think to be able to cater to each sutdent individually is the most important thing a tutor can do. Each student learns and processes information differently. By understanding this the tutor can adapt their teaching style to suit that of the student. I think my experience in my job and as a student now studying teaching, I have the skills to be a…
Suhrid  Mahmood
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One of the most important thing to do is to understand what the student needs. Through careful evaluation a tutor should identify the student's weakness and put more focus on that area. Another important thing is to always address their questions. Sometimes my students asked me questions which I did not know the answer to, so I looked up on the…
Yin Kei
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Creating a positive working environment between the student and the mentor by using various teaching methods Organised, creative, patient and…
Olivia
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I consider the most important thing a tutor can do for their student is make their teaching environment comfortable. I believe students learn best if they are easy and able to talk and more importantly ask questions when they are unsure. Without this transparency I believe it’s very hard to teach and fully understand our students…
Guilherme
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The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to have patience. Understanding that each student is different and that it's necessary to adapt to their pace in order to achieve results. I feel that I have always had a certain ease in teaching something to people when compared to most of them trying to convey knowledge. I believe it's…
Bhasura
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Tutors need to be patient, not every student is equally as smart, or equally as attentive. You have to find a balance. A great example I think would be is planting a seed. After you put the seed in the ground, you can put all the water in the world, but it's not gonna grow into a tree in just one day, just like a student, you will break the…
Marcus
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I think the most important tasks for a tutor is to push their students to broaden their mind, their perspectives on the subject. I would want my students to be thinking learners and not followers. A good state of mind is always important for students especially in Mathematics, where sometimes u just have to keep trying with the right methods to…
Tharmaratnam
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In my point of view, the main issue is that the student do not understand about their own problems. As a tutor, I must illustrate them what they are lagging in, and should gradually remove the knowledge or skill gap. A tutor should be a friendly person whom a student can communicate his problems. students usually copy the tutor styles to solve…
shehan bin
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Reduce his/her academic stress which mainly gets baked into them and make learning a fun thing. The ability to provide a general understanding of topics so that students do not have to apply so much burden to remember different things and make a general rule of thumb to compare special…
(Muhammad) Qasim
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-To help the student to get the crux of the topic in a conceptual way -To make students creative -Possess immense interpersonal skills -Studied more than 9 major mathematics subjects -Experience in mathematics, engineering and physics subjects -Experience in everyday science concepts -Work experience in mining and resources sector as…
Vincent
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building a student's confidence, and sharing the joy that comes with improvement. Be patient, who truly enjoys teaching, enjoys the company of his or her students, and has the ability to build a rapport with them so that they can learn. build an easy rapport with students at the beginning, making the student feel at ease, and comfortable, putting…
Grace
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I consider some of the most important things a tutor can do for a student to be are; - Raising a student's overall confidence in schoolwork and specific subjects, - Increasing the student's engagement and enjoyment toward learning, - Assisting a student to raise their grades so as to feel that they have succeeded, - Increase a positive…
Anumolakjot
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Being patient and understanding. At the beginning of my tutoring journey, I provided several private one on one tutoring sessions. I started to expect a lot from the students as some students performed better than ours. But it is later I started understanding every student is different and we should always work at their pace. Never push them and…
Ru
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I believe encouragement, repetition and clarification of syllabus points are things that a tutor can focus on, in which will greatly improve the confidence and results of the student. I have just recently graduated high school and thus share common experiences with the current students, I believe this as an advantage as I can guide and mentor my…
Walden
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Offer them support beyond the purely academic. Be there when they struggle to understand something and be kind, patient and understanding. I have great patience when it comes to someone who doesn't understand, and I can alter my explanation readily if my current way is not…
Josh Brian
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a tutor has to understand how their students think. because every student has different thinking and level of understanding for one question. by knowing that, we can easily help students understand that question well. however, we need to teach by imagining that we are the students. so, we need to be patient and efficient to reach their…
Christabel
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Encourage learning in a student Patience, creativity,…
Lap Kiu
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As a tutor , I have opportunity 1 to 1 (or 1 to a small group ) to have two way communication with the student so that i can try to understand their own need and adjust my tutoring to fit their need I think years of study in math and engineering and year 1 level physics and chemistry would be a strength. While back to high school i had studied…

Local Reviews

Elle loved Keng. Off to a great start.
Jacqui, Fremantle

Inside North FremantleTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 Abbi focused on solving quadratic equations using the quadratic formula and practiced factorising both monic and non-monic binomials.

In Year 10, Isabel worked through rationalising denominators with surd expressions and revisited simultaneous equations as part of her test revision.

Meanwhile, Year 5 Jimmy consolidated long division skills and completed unit conversions for distance using real-life word problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student repeatedly skipped showing working in algebra, leading to small but costly errors: "she tends to skip ahead and miss out steps when solving long equations."

In Year 11 Methods, a lack of regular revision meant key content faded quickly—one tutor noted that "it was evident she hadn't been revising the class content," making problem-solving slower.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 learner often lost focus during longer sessions; he missed place value cues in conversions and struggled with essay introductions, especially when tired.

In Year 8 trigonometry, fear of initial mistakes led to hesitation rather than attempting unfamiliar problems.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in North Fremantle noticed Isabel's progress in Year 10 maths: after struggling with her last test (60%), she recently scored 81% on her exam, handling even the challenging worded problems with much less help than before.

In another session, Abbi, a high school student who used to rely heavily on prompts for factorising quadratics, is now able to solve standard quadratic equations independently and completes her simultaneous equations homework confidently.

Meanwhile, Jimmy in primary school—who was previously overwhelmed by long division and rounding—now works through these tasks almost entirely unaided and finished his latest body paragraph with correct structure on his own.

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 City of Fremantle: Fremantle Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like North Fremantle Primary School.