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Private information-processing-technology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Ellen Grove's tutors include veteran K–12 educators with cum laude honors and teaching licenses, high school maths specialists and Olympiad awardees, peer mentors with ATARs up to 97.75, a Queensland Academy graduate, university scholars in STEM fields, and leaders experienced in coaching, debating, camp facilitation and supporting diverse learners.

Oskar
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Oskar

Info Processing Tutor Parkinson, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do is inspire confidence that nothing is impossible! We're here to help and that involves listening, understanding, and figuring out how to make the subject matter tick for the student—as they say in the military, "There are no bad soldiers; only bad generals". Patience, ability to understand other…
SZECHUNG
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SZECHUNG

Info Processing Tutor Parkinson, QLD
I believe that: "If we use our heart to teach in the form of collaboration with students, they are willing to learn and put effort. If students put effort to do a task, they shall obtain their rewards. excellent teacher with good guidance and care, as commented from my previous…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Devika
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Devika

Info Processing Tutor Springfield, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is to understand them in person and encourage them to be a good human being . A teacher should understand their students very well. As a tutor I am confident enough that I would pass my knowledge to the children by clarifying all their doubts in an easy…
Samuel
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Samuel

Info Processing Tutor Pinjarra Hills, QLD
Give them the ability to believe in themselves. 1. My strong background in physics, maths and business. 2. My ability to teach people in depth about specific things. 3. My patience when…
Fitz Christian
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Fitz Christian

Info Processing Tutor Rocklea, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do is to be a good friend, be approachable, be always ready for their questions, share things or lessons that they will be easily get it, teach them the way they are convenient, and don’t judge them the way they learn. Everyone of us deserves to learn. I also want to share my knowledge to everyone who needs…
Xingyu
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Xingyu

Info Processing Tutor Calamvale, QLD
Being respectful is one of the best ways to connect with a student, and allows students room to speak up about any issues they are having. Having good management skills will ensure students are taught with well prepared content, and also be heared with appropriate after class learning material to prepare for the next lesson. Very good…

Local Reviews

Our daughter is really happy with Fay.
Peta, Forest Lake

Inside Ellen GroveTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Sofia focused on solidifying multiplication skills with the column method and tackled basic division, also practising quick mental maths.

In Year 9, Lucas worked through expanding and factorising binomials using the FOIL method and reviewed solving equations for x by rearranging algebraic expressions.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Genevieve revised factorising quadratic equations and applied the null factor law in preparation for her upcoming maths test.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student frequently guessed answers in algebra without first unpacking the question, as a tutor observed, "lots of guessing." This led to confusion and repeated errors.

In Year 10, another learner's written work was difficult to follow; untidy layout made it challenging to trace mistakes during trigonometry tasks.

For a senior student working on compound interest problems in Maths Methods, there was heavy reliance on calculators—missing "x" in calculations—and inconsistent attention to unit conversions.

A Year 5 student avoided setting out division steps clearly, so small errors went unnoticed until review. The lack of clear working delayed real progress each lesson.

Recent Achievements

One Ellen Grove tutor noted a Year 9 student who used to quietly guess now regularly talks through her thinking out loud and asks for help as soon as she's unsure, making her approach problems more actively.

A high schooler who'd often skip checking his work is now pausing to fix errors before submitting, showing he's taking ownership of his learning rather than rushing ahead.

In primary, a Year 4 student who previously needed guidance for multiplication has started working out x4 problems by herself and quickly distinguishes positive from negative numbers just by glancing at the question.

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 Inala Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Forest Lake State School.