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Private software-design-development tutors that come to you in person or online

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Fraser's tutors include a former school maths and science teacher with decades of experience, a classroom assistant who's taught Year 9 engineering, an ICT educator with nine years' school teaching in Bhutan, several high-ATAR university scholars (up to 97.8), accomplished competition participants, and caring mentors with proven skills supporting young learners academically and personally.

Sankalpa
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Sankalpa

Software Dev 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…
Aryan
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Aryan

Software Dev Tutor Belconnen, ACT
As a tutor, I believe the most important things I can do for a student are: Identify their individual learning needs and tailor my teaching approach to meet those needs. Create a safe and comfortable learning environment where the student feels comfortable asking questions and making mistakes. Encourage and motivate the student to reach…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Software Dev

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Wanshu
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Wanshu

Software Dev Tutor Belconnen, ACT
One of the most important things that a tutor can do for students is help them find what they are learning is full of fun. Interest is the best teacher. When students like a subject, they are more willing to put in more time to practice and learn about it. As a tutor, there is only a very limited hours that I can accompany my student. Therefore,…
Abhishek
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Abhishek

Software Dev Tutor Lawson, ACT
A tutor can built strong basic foundation of studies. I can explain this in simpler…
Tien
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Tien

Software Dev Tutor Lawson, ACT
I think the most important thing about tutoring is not about sharing knowledge, but about sharing my passion for the subjects with the students because when I was a high school student, I was lost and did not know what to do or why I was studying those subjects, then my private mentor inspired me with his passion for the subjects (maths and…
Daniel
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Daniel

Software Dev Tutor Kaleen, ACT
The most important thing I can do for a student is fill in the gaps that the teacher can't. Teachers aren't able to modify the way they teach for every individual student, as a tutor I can do that. I am good at helping people understand concepts that are difficult to understand. I love learning and like to share my enthusiasm with other people.…
Arjun
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Arjun

Software Dev Tutor Macquarie, ACT
Empathise: A tutor should provide encouragement, build confidence, and create a safe space where students feel comfortable asking questions and making mistakes. I try to think of many ways to explain a concept to a student. You never know which approach might work for a student. So, adaptability would be one strength. I think another one is…
Ragini
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Ragini

Software Dev Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
A tutor should have the ability to share information in a way that others will learn, grasp the concepts, understand the input. A tutor should be able to know strengths and weakness of a student. A extra paper work is required by tutor for better performance of a student. A regular assessment of student to enhance his performance. A tutor should…
Anzhe
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Anzhe

Software Dev Tutor Harrison, ACT
To build a student's confidence and guide them in a fun, engaging way that helps them connect with the subject. My high-achieving academic background and recent experience as a student enable me to empathise with kids and communicate in a way that resonates with…
John
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John

Software Dev 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

Dineth was fantastic. Really prepared.
Peta

Inside FraserTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Caledon worked on understanding the volume and surface area formulas for cubes, prisms, and spheres using diagrams to visualize three-dimensional shapes.

In Year 10, Anise focused on applying the chain rule to differentiate compound functions and practiced advanced algebraic manipulation within complex differentiation problems.

For Year 11, James spent his session revising exponential functions and logarithms, with extra attention given to solving real-world application questions involving exponentials.

Recent Challenges

A Year 7 student forgot to complete set homework for two consecutive weeks, which meant lesson time was spent reviewing unfinished tasks instead of building new skills.

In Year 11, one student's messy mathematical grammar—like misusing the equals sign—made their algebra solutions hard to follow; as a tutor observed, "being able to show how you got the answer is often just as important."

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student avoided showing working out and preferred mental calculations, but this led to errors being missed in multi-step problems.

In each case, progress stalled when habits around organization or clear written work slipped.

Recent Achievements

A Fraser tutor noticed Anise, a senior student, making a leap in calculus—she not only applied the chain rule confidently but also tackled abstract logarithm questions with minimal guidance after initially hesitating with variable-based problems.

Caledon, working through high school algebra and trigonometry, showed new independence by recalling last semester's algebra to solve unfamiliar trig equations without prompting and completing multi-step rearrangement problems solo after previously needing step-by-step help.

In primary sessions, Jarrah moved from mixing up conversion steps to consistently substituting the right numbers when converting units, finishing his worksheet without needing 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 Kippax Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Fraser Primary School.