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Flynn's tutors feature a former secondary school maths and science teacher with over 10 years' experience, an ATAR 95 double-maths dux now studying education, a seasoned K–12 tutor and mentor with classroom teaching roles, a state chess competitor, and high-achieving university students recognised for Olympiad participation and academic excellence.

Sankalpa
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Sankalpa

Business Studies Tutor Belconnen, ACT
In my view, teacher is the most important person for a student after their parents. School level students spend more time with their teachers than with their parents. So, a tutor can be an inspirational model for an student. When I was in my school, I used to copy a lot of things of my favorite teacher like the way of speaking, hands movement…
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Jingru

Business Studies Tutor Belconnen, ACT
Being patient to student would give a safe and supported environment for them to at least not reject study. As a tutor, this is the basic needs, then tutor should guide them find what their strengths are, what area that they need improvement, as well as their critical thinking. It would be my patience, i think it is very important as a tutor to be…
1st Lesson Trial

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Yiyang
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Yiyang

Business Studies Tutor Bruce, ACT
Firstly, I believe the philosophy of "Teaching to fish rather than giving a fish. " It suggests that the tutor has a responsibility to inspire her students to take further exploration in the subject and cultivate good learning habits. Secondly, I think encouragement is essential in tutoring. Being as a tutor, I would let my student know that they…
David
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David

Business Studies Tutor Lyneham, ACT
Well, I think the most important thing is interaction. When there is more interaction, student's learning become enjoyable. Also, Using examples related to the real world. What is actually happening. Lastly is patience. Being patience on the student and go with the student's pace and not the tutor's. I try to relate all my teaching to…
Muhammad
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Muhammad

Business Studies Tutor Franklin, ACT
I believe tutoring doesn't only mean transferring knowledge to your students but providing them with a goal and vision to excel in life. Also, I believe tutors should keep themselves updated with new concepts to keep their students updated. I think my greatest strength is patience and communication. I have taught students till grade 8 before. In…
Jemima
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Jemima

Business Studies Tutor O'connor, ACT
The most important things for a tutor to do for a student is ensure their confidence stems from understanding not just knowing the answer to a question but instead the theory behind it. A tutor should ensure a student understands the theory behind a concept and how they got their rather than the finishing product. Through this, a tutor gives a…
John
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John

Business Studies Tutor Bonner, ACT
In my opinion, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide personalized guidance and support, foster a positive learning environment, and encourage critical thinking and independent learning. Tutors should strive to understand their students' unique learning styles, strengths, and weaknesses, and adapt their approach…

Local Reviews

We are really happy with Charlie. He is lovely.
Sandra

Inside FlynnTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Amit worked on editing his Digital Technologies assignment and began improving key areas identified in feedback.

For Year 9, Caledon explored how to translate, dilate, and reflect quadratic functions as well as started work on interpreting circle graphs using examples set by his teacher.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Anise focused on applying the chain rule to differentiate complex compound functions and practiced advanced algebraic manipulation during an extension question.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8, Caledon repeatedly arrived at lessons without having completed assigned homework, especially in algebra and trigonometry. As noted, "Caledon had forgot to do last week's homework again," which limited time for deeper problem-solving.

In Year 11 calculus, Anise sometimes avoided reviewing her working or checking answers on assignments—missing opportunities to catch small errors and consolidate learning.

Meanwhile, Jensen (Year 6) often wrote only final answers for geometry problems; "I find myself doing a lot of the equations for him," observed one tutor. This meant gaps in understanding went unnoticed until more complex tasks arose.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Flynn noticed that Jensen, a high school student, has started bringing specific questions to sessions and now asks for clarification when he's stuck—something he was hesitant to do at first.

Anise made a real leap with logarithms; she could not only spot which log law to use in tricky, variable-heavy problems but also handled abstract questions without prompting.

In Year 3–4 maths, Jarrah consistently used the unitary method correctly and substituted numbers into fractions independently, having previously mixed up the conversion steps.

Last week, Jensen prepared his own test cheat sheet 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 Kippax Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Mount Rogers Primary School.