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Forrestfield's tutors include a former Deputy Chief Program Officer and long-time school teacher with a Master of Education, an Olympiad prize-winner and high-ATAR graduates, seasoned K–12 maths and science tutors, peer mentors, and Curtin postgraduates in engineering, pharmacy, and IT—many with national academic awards or years of experience supporting student learning.

Dalila
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Dalila

Psychology Tutor Wattle Grove, WA
One of my biggest strengths as a tutor is my ability to break down complex topics into simple, relatable explanations. I also genuinely care about my students’ progress, and I make an effort to understand their learning styles, struggles, and goals. I know that everyone learns differently, so I adapt my approach to fit their needs. Most…
Samran
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Samran

Psychology Tutor Cloverdale, WA
I strong believe that listening to your students and parents carefully is crucial in managing their expectations, while building a strong rapport not only with the students but with their parents which is paramount to tutoring services. Seeking feedback from the Clients about the effectiveness of tutoring and demonstrating support and…
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Amal
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Amal

Psychology Tutor Cloverdale, WA
Personalize learning and teach the student specific to their learning style. Its best to ensure they learn the info required in the way the student is capable of learning, rather than enforcing them to follow a default method. Definitely communication and experience with younger people, if they struggle to understand a topic I could explain in…
Manar
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Manar

Psychology Tutor Langford, WA
A tutor needs to teach a student, obviously. But more importantly, a tutor needs to empower a student. To make them break through barriers they wouldn’t have thought were possible, to achieve their potential, plus a little more. Tutors should also be more personalised, not so just a second teacher. Tutors should recognise why this specific…
Nikita
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Nikita

Psychology Tutor Wilson, WA
In my opinion, the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to break a concept down to its simplest form. In my school days, I often found this to be the easiest way to learn. If your basic foundation of any concept is strong, it gets much easier to build on that and learn more complex information pertaining to it. Moreover, being…
Alisha
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Alisha

Psychology Tutor Maddington, WA
Being able to listen to the students problems and issues they are facing. Being able to adapt to different learning styles for different students in order to maximise their learning journey. Being able to build a relationship which is surrounded with respect and patience. I think my strengths as a tutor are, patience, good listening skills,…

Local Reviews

Jackie was so very helpful our daughter really liked her because she was very approachable, took baby steps and was very patient. I liked how she was very prepared for each tutorial.
Stephannie

Inside ForrestfieldTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Jack practised converting fractions to percentages and multiplying fractions, using real-life examples for context.

In Year 9, Sarah worked on simplifying surds and indices, as well as solving equations involving functions.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Alex focused on bivariate data—plotting data points, adding a trend line, and estimating values from the line of best fit to interpret relationships between variables.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11, a student working on normal distribution and compound interest sometimes left assignments incomplete or requires clarification from teacher in regards to the assignment before progressing.

During Year 9 algebra, messy written work—especially when factoring expressions—led to errors that took extra time to untangle.

In Year 6, homework on fraction addition was only partially completed, with some skipped questions making it hard to review progress together.

A Year 3 learner hesitated to attempt new multiplication tables unless confident of perfection first; this slowed practice and limited exposure to trickier facts.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Forrestfield noticed one Year 11 student, who previously mixed up the rules for surds and indices, now solves equations involving both without prompting and has started factoring basic algebraic expressions independently.

In a recent high school session, another student who used to skip graphing questions can now plot x and y values correctly and confidently identifies key points on the graph during practice.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student who once hesitated with reading aloud is now volunteering to read passages out loud in each session and answers follow-up questions using details from the text.

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 Forrestfield Public Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Forrestfield Primary School.