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Private science tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Bakery Hill include a VCE subject dux with multiple academic awards, an ANU science graduate with seven years' tutoring experience, a primary teacher trained in both India and Australia, a Ballarat school learning support specialist, peer mentors and camp leaders for K–12 students, plus Olympiad achievers and ATAR 97+ graduates passionate about teaching.

Muskan
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Muskan

Science Tutor Bakery Hill, VIC
The tutor must understand the learning and understanding power of the children and how they can digest in the single session of tutoring. The tutor should be a good friend for a student. My strengths are that i am patience and I know how to handle a child and make them understand in the easy way. I have quality of good time management so my…
Carrie
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Carrie

Science Tutor Ballarat East, VIC
The most important thing to keep in mind when tutoring in my opinion is to help them gain confidence & enjoyment in the subject. If a student believes they are bad at a subject, they often won't try as hard because they view it as pointless. Confirmation bias can also lead to only noticing when they make mistakes, meaning they won't recognise the…
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Oluwaremi
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Oluwaremi

Science Tutor Black Hill, VIC
I believe it’s important for tutors to create a supportive environments for students. This will allow them to feel comfortable and open to learning. Learning is almost impossible in an environment where students do no feel safe. I also think it’s important for tutors to give students the opportunity to share their learning to encourage active…
Yuri
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Yuri

Science Tutor Mount Helen, VIC
Having the patience and being a good listener. Having the two is what I believe where you can start building a better relationship with the student. By listening carefully to the student and also being patient with them (since people learns at different speed and different methods). From there, I can understand students in their area of weakness…
Jayd
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Jayd

Science Tutor Mount Helen, VIC
A tutor should help a student feel confident in their abilities, and ensure the student understands. A tutor should also help students find intrinsic motivation, help them find a reason to study that comes from their own goals and aspirations, rather than having study feel like a chore. I focus on fundamental understanding, and try to find gaps in…
Isaac
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Isaac

Science Tutor Ballarat East, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is provide the with the strategies, tools, and perhaps most importantly: confidence they need to succeed and thrive in their studies. I believe my strengths include my ability to effectively communicate and teach important concepts and skills to my students. In particular I pride myself on my…
Zayda
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Zayda

Science Tutor Ballarat East, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do a student is listen to them and their needs as well as create an environment whether that's in person or online that is safe, supportive and positive for them to learn and thrive. I have a very personable, open and kind approach when interacting with staff, parents and most importantly students so I feel…

Local Reviews

Very good and very patient tutor. Highly recommended!
Erwin

Inside Bakery HillTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Greta worked on negative numbers and algebraic expansion, as well as revising fraction and decimal operations using number lines; she also practiced translating simple sentences in French using new food vocabulary.

Year 9 student Layla focused on solving linear simultaneous equations by substitution and completed trigonometry exercises including SOH CAH TOA, sine rule, and cosine rule.

For Year 10, Ben reviewed quadratic equations through word problems and graphing, then practiced finding the roots and focal points of parabolas using different methods.

Recent Challenges

In Year 4 maths, one student often skipped double-checking answers, leading to avoidable errors in fraction work—"she tends not to double-check answers, which leads to basic mistakes." This chipped away at her confidence.

In Year 9 algebra, a tendency emerged to jump straight into rearranging equations without pausing to clarify what the question required, sometimes multiplying instead of dividing when isolating variables.

A senior student in Year 11 methods struggled with rationalising surds due to messy working and missing steps; as a tutor noted, "there are a lot of steps," but they weren't all shown.

In VCE Specialist Maths, confusion between formulae and intuition persisted because formulas were applied by memory rather than understanding the underlying logic. The result: extra time spent untangling mistakes instead of progressing confidently into new concepts.

Recent Achievements

One Bakery Hill tutor noticed a Year 9 student who previously avoided asking for help now openly requests clarification when stuck on powers or negative numbers, which has led to her solving long multiplication problems independently using the lattice method.

In Year 11 maths, another student made a breakthrough with exponent laws—after initially mixing up rules, he now applies them accurately in both standard and non-standard equations.

Meanwhile, a younger student in primary sessions began grouping dots correctly to find fractions after struggling with array-based questions; she finished by identifying 2/3 of 12 without visual prompts for the first time.

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 Ballarat Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Mount Rowan Secondary College-LinkUp - Ballarat Learning Exchange Campus.