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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

Tutors in West End include a PhD researcher and Dean's List scholar with extensive child mentoring, an engineering lecturer with distinction, a university-level maths specialist with a decade of tutoring experience, ATAR 95+ and international honours graduates, seasoned language and arts educators, and multiple K–12 tutors experienced in supporting diverse learning needs.

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Someone who is able to build strong relationships with the student. This helps to truly personalize their learning and teach to the student's strength. I believe my greatest strengths are being empathetic and the ability to engage with a…
Aishwarya
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The most important thing to being a tutor is the passion towards teaching and the motivation to get the best results from his/her students. It is also crucial for a tutor to be friendly and approachable to every student. A tutor should be available to help the student cope with any difficulties, even if this requires an extra personal approach to…
1st Lesson Trial

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Siddharth
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The most important you can do for a student is to know their abilities and work their capabilities to make them better at the subject they're trying to get better at. It is also important to understand every student is different and not all of them can grapple a concept quickly. But as a tutor, I must make sure I am accounting for each students…
Saloni
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The tutor can find a common wavelength and understand the student's way of grasping. Every student has a different way of learning and perceive stuff. i find out different ways to solve one question. I am a logical person, and would only start teaching if I am sure about the answer. My patience level is high, I used to teach my younger sister and…
George
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The points enumerated below are some of the essential things i believe a tutor can do for a student. A tutor can: 1. Help students develop their higher order learning skills. 2. Ensure learners have a sense of progress within every lesson. 3. Convey subject knowledge of concepts, skills and language systems effectively and in ways…
Mugdha
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I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to motivate him/her. Students look at tutors or mentors as their future or they get inspired by them very easily. Hence being that influential person is what I aim to do as a tutor. As a child, I admired my teachers and I got inspiration from them to do something which made me work…
Irene
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Identifying the problems and challenges that the student is currently facing that is preventing them from answering questions or understanding an important foundation to meet question criteria. From there, structuring my explanations and how lessons should go, would be significant to a student's understanding. Additionally, I believe it would be…
Liam
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I touched on some of these points in my previous answers, but as a tutor I believe the ultimate goal should be to provide one's students with an academic toolbox in the form of an understanding of the fundamental principles of any given topic. By covering first principles, and providing students with problem-solving abilities, he or she can then…
Armaan
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One of the most important things a tutor can do is instill confidence in their students so they can tackle problems they were previously unfimiliar with on their own, as well as perform in high stress environments, such as tests. The best way to do this in my opinion is to go through practice problems with the students untill they fully…
Sadid
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The most important a tutor can do for a student is to identify the student's unique learning style so I would be able to present information in a way that has the greatest effect, and make an impactful difference to the student's learning. My strengths as a tutor include simplifying difficult topics by breaking down the topics to the core…
Lee
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Believe in the student - no matter their background and grades. Every child and young adult deserves a good chance at life. Education can be the key. Discipline and ability to balance academic rigor with occasional light…
Hannah
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I think one of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is give the student confidence that they can complete problems on their own and be successful in their studies. I remember how disheartening it was when I couldn't understand or effectively answer problems in school. Especially at a younger age, academic success is a value that…
Celeste
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The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to show them patience and kindness. Learning new things takes time, and it's important to show your students that you are willing to spend that time with them and work with them to achieve their goals no matter how long it takes. I am patient, kind, honest, and extremely reliable. I also…
Nour
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I believe that the greatest affect that a good tutor can do for a student is to infatuate the student into the subject, meaning to truly engage and interest the student in the topic. Once this happens the student will grow a love for the subject, leading them to career paths regarding this subject. This will more importantly grow a work ethic for…
Marco
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Being able to understand the student difficulties and be always available to explain the content over and over again without losing patience. I also think that the tutor should show enthusiasm and determination to transmit a positive energy to the student. I always try to bring my enthusiasm and determination to students. I like to go deeper and…
Hang Minh
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I firmly believe that my tutoring can make a significant impact on a student's academic performance. Even though school can be challenging, I am confident that I can help students achieve greater clarity, relief, and conviction in their work. As a recent high school graduate, I have access to the most up-to-date resources and knowledge that can…
Bonnie
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Important for a tutor to be patient and supportive, as well as to take the time and get to know a student, as there’s no one size fits all in teaching Interpersonal skills & building rapport with my students and their parents Being flexible in my teaching style and able to accommodate individual…
Jane
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The most important thing is to build confidence in the student by encouraging my student to focus on subjects he or she Is good at. This can promote a positive mindset in students. When students have confidence, they can do well in everything. As a tutor, I always teach with patience. I can deal with students by thinking differently to let them…
Cody
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The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel comfortable. Students can’t learn properly unless the feel comfortable and relatively stress free. Many times they get discouraged when they can’t solve a problem and it is up to the tutor to keep their spirits high. My strength would likely be the ability to solve many…
Carla
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I think the most important part is tailoring the way one teaches to the way that is optimal for the student to learn. That may be very clear early on or one may have to experiment for a while but I think individualization is critical. With that also comes, adapting one’s personality a bit to the students requirements, do they need more…
Kipling
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In my experience, there are two really important things a tutor can provide for a student. A tutor's primary responsibility to their student is to strengthen their knowledge of a subject, diving deeper into topics they may have already studied or simply reinforcing concepts they are struggling with. While this is the predominant purpose of a…
Aine
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A tutor should initially grasp the ability of the student to better understand how to support them. A tutor should also revise a study schedule with their student and support them in getting to know what study techniques are best suited. I think it is also important to build up the students confidence as that will ensure they make good progress.…
Wai Lim Elvin
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The most important thing is to probably instead of spoonfeeding the information to the student, communicate the importance of practice, discipline and routine. Moreover, to guide them along with their curiosity instead of just giving them questions to do. I think my adaptability would be useful for fields that I might not be as experienced at. My…

Local Reviews

My grandchild is very much enjoying her maths tuition and is improving weekly.
Rosemary Jennings grandmother, South Brisbane

Inside West EndTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 Olivia reviewed average and instantaneous rates of change, then practised deriving polynomials using both first principles and the power rule, with graph sketches to visualise f(x) and its derivative.

Year 11 Isabella focused on solving minimum and maximum problems in real-life contexts, finishing the calculus unit by tackling chain, product, and quotient rules for differentiation.

For Year 9 Ethan, lessons targeted completing the square for quadratics and interpreting domain and range using function notation alongside sketching piece-wise graphs.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student's algebra notes were described as "neatly ordered," yet minor errors persisted when dividing coefficients or combining like terms, showing that tidy layout alone didn't prevent slips in process.

In a Year 11 Methods lesson, one learner hesitated to attempt complex unfamiliar exam questions without guidance, despite having the skills—needs a bit more initiative when handling complex unfamiliar questions for exam preparation.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student struggled with negative integers when working independently, leading to mistakes interpreting graphs in NAPLAN tasks.

For another senior student, reliance on memorised methods meant rearranged equations became stumbling blocks rather than opportunities to apply core principles.

Recent Achievements

One West End tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to hesitate with derivatives now confidently applying both the power rule and first principles, even linking them directly to her PSMT project.

Another high schooler, previously unsure about tangent equations, recently determined parallel and perpendicular tangents entirely on her own—no hints needed.

In a recent session with a Year 4 student, the tutor saw him independently explain why we "show not tell" in stories and suggest his own ways to build suspense after initially needing lots of prompting.

Most impressively, Olivia finished all her maximum/minimum stationary point questions without any guidance this week.

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 West End Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like West End State School.