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Brendale's tutors include a primary-to-secondary school teaching assistant with robotics coaching expertise, a peer mathematics facilitator and Dean's Scholar at QUT, seasoned volunteer maths and science tutor with eight years' experience, current education undergraduates, an academic scholarship recipient and former school dux, plus educators with extensive mentoring backgrounds in both local and international contexts.

Hannah
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Hannah

Psychology Tutor Murrumba Downs, QLD
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to thoroughly understand the student's struggles and to provide their services in a way that best suits the student so they are able to reap the most benefits out of the sessions. I believe my key strengths as a tutor would be that I have a casual and welcoming manner, allowing…
Hema
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Hema

Psychology Tutor Mcdowall, QLD
Consider things from different perspectives, I think it is really important to acknowledge that not everyone learns the same, so finding different ways to explain things is essential. I am a friendly individual with a lot of…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

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Neve
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Neve

Psychology Tutor Chermside West, QLD
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide clarity and build confidence. It is crucial to break down complex ideas into manageable sections and go through these thoroughly. A tutor should also create a safe and supportive environment where students feel comfortable making mistakes and asking questions. Beyond…
Jesse
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Jesse

Psychology Tutor Chermside West, QLD
Helping the students be more confident in their own abilities so they can go on to improve in their studies My…
Aaron
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Aaron

Psychology Tutor Stafford, QLD
A important thing a tutor can do for their student is providing quality teaching and understanding of the subject being taught. Additionally, another important thing a tutor can provide is academic guidance to allow their student's goals to be achieved. -Knowledge in multiple subjects -A strong work ethic -Excellent communication…

Local Reviews

We were very impressed with Jane, hopefully Saturdays are locked in each week to continue with tutoring.
Michelle, Strathpine

Inside BrendaleTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 11 student Tom focused on integration techniques and finding the area under a curve, then applied these skills to real-world problems involving further integration.

For Year 10 Ruby, sessions included practicing ratio questions for an upcoming test and tackling more complex rates problems to build confidence with worded maths scenarios.

Meanwhile, Year 9 Alex revised expanding brackets and solving equations as well as setting up equations for various rates questions in preparation for assessment.

Recent Challenges

In Year 12 Maths, one student frequently second-guessed herself with logarithmic integration and factored polynomial errors—"she could try and approach questions with a more confident mindset," the tutor noted—which slowed progress when deciding which log laws to use.

In Year 11, mistakes in expanding and factorising polynomials persisted, as working steps weren't always shown clearly; this led to repeated sign errors.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner often gave up quickly if no immediate solution appeared in subtraction or worded problems, meaning valuable problem-solving practice was lost.

For another primary student, incomplete homework made it harder to build independence on new time concepts.

Recent Achievements

One Brendale tutor recently noticed a Year 12 student who, after weeks of hesitating with integration questions, now independently chooses the correct method for finding the area under complex polynomial curves—a big step up from needing hints every time.

In Year 10, Samantha had been unsure about which logarithmic laws to apply but now quickly recognises and explains her choices when faced with trickier problems.

Meanwhile, in primary sessions, Hugo used to wait for help before tackling harder subtraction tasks; this week he wrote out his own working and remembered to borrow the ten without reminders.

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 Strathpine Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like The BUSY School - Strathpine Campus.