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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Churchill's tutors include a Queensland-registered secondary teacher with over a decade of classroom and maths expertise, an ATAR 99.45 graduate studying advanced science at UQ, a Principal's Award-winning engineering student and private tutor, O-Level subject award recipients, early childhood specialists, peer mentors, and youth workshop leaders experienced in working with diverse K–12 learners.

Phuc (Owen)
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Phuc (Owen)

Tutor Woodend, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do isn't just to lead them to the right answers but help them build confidence and self-motivation. As a tutor, I aim to help students develop independence. For me, a successful teacher is someone who can guide students to no longer needing one. I am quick to identify the strengths and weaknesses of students…
Terena
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Terena

Tutor Tivoli, QLD
I believe that tutoring for a student should be a safe zone space where they can make mistakes. Tutoring does not have the same pressue for a student that school can, as such it is important for a tutor to be patient and adaptive when a student is struggling with a concept. A tutor should welcome mistakes as an opportunity to grow. I also believe…
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Local Reviews

The company is electric and teacher Welton is amazing.
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Inside ChurchillTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Savannah focused on multiplication facts and telling time to the quarter hour, using hands-on activities for practice.

For Year 8, Ethan worked through relative probability versus theoretical probability and constructed probability trees for a class assignment.

In Year 10, Luke prepared for an upcoming exam by graphing linear equations and solving problems involving finding the equation of a line given points or a graph.

Recent Challenges

Several students showed process-related obstacles impacting their progress.

A Year 10 student's probability tree diagrams became hard to follow due to a messy layout, which compromised his communication of ideas and made checking answers tricky.

In Year 8 algebra, skipping written steps meant sign errors went unnoticed—one tutor observed, "he tends to forget the equal signs sometimes."

For a senior student, forgetting to bring assignment materials from school left sections incomplete during sessions.

Meanwhile, a primary student tackling multiplication facts often avoided writing out working due to frustration with mistakes; this slowed improvement and led to repeated errors on similar problems.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Churchill noticed a big shift with a Year 10 student who used to stay quiet but now regularly asks clarifying questions during algebra sessions and prepares her own questions for review.

A Year 8 boy, who previously rushed through homework, has started self-correcting his work—he caught two calculation errors himself last session before submitting the assignment draft.

Meanwhile, one of the younger students, in Year 3, read an entire book out loud without any prompting or assistance for the first time and remembered key details to answer follow-up questions on her 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 Ipswich Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Churchill State School.