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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Gwelup's tutors include a postgraduate-qualified teacher with nearly a decade of K–12 classroom and mentoring experience, an ATAR 99.80 scorer awarded distinctions in national maths competitions, Kumon instructors working with Years 3–12, accomplished university medallists, primary teachers, and high-achieving peer mentors celebrated for academic excellence and leadership across diverse fields.

Matthew
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Matthew

Psychology Tutor Doubleview, WA
The important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel more confident about their abilities and knowledge. The more they can back them-self, the more they can be composed in a test environment, the better they perform in test conditions, the better their marks. Like a positive feedback loop, this will also increase confidence;better…
Karen
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Karen

Psychology Tutor Woodlands, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is motivate them and help them realise that they can succeed and help them to really understand the subject and be able to use this understanding to achieve good grades. I think my strengths are being patient and understanding and the ability to tailor explanations to specific students and work…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Anum
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Anum

Psychology Tutor Nollamara, WA
First of all respect for diversity and sincerity are the key factor to enter in any workforce. Secondly time managment, delivery method, discussion between students and parents, questionnaires to understand their views and observation, proper strategies and course plans are the other important things that every tutor should understand. Thirdly,…
Mikayla
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Mikayla

Psychology Tutor Tuart Hill, WA
Tutors can support their students through building meaningful connections with them, helping students understand how they learn best and how to further their understanding in learning areas. Assisting them in improving their grades by first understanding the student will improve their confidence and self-worth, which I believe to be essential for…
Shannon
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Shannon

Psychology Tutor Dianella, WA
I believe that it is important for a tutor to provide constructive but fair feedback to their students, while also providing practical advice and support to them, so they can improve in areas where they were originally struggling. I believe that I am a patient and understanding person, who is quite personable and can talk to people easily. I have…

Local Reviews

This company is very professional, and easy to deal with. They have several tutors available, so when our normal tutor couldn't make the time change which we needed to make, they happily found us another tutor with a minimum of fuss. We are very happy with EzyMath and would happily endorse them to others.
David Rapley, Gwelup

Inside GwelupTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Ben focused on translating, rotating, and reflecting shapes in the 2D plane, along with collecting variables and solving linear equations using tables.

Year 10 Bronte reviewed operations with surds—such as multiplying and rationalising denominators—and practiced factorising both monic and non-monic trinomials to prepare for upcoming assessments.

Meanwhile, Year 11 Cohen worked through test preparation involving logarithms and exponentials, specifically solving related equations algebraically and reviewing graph properties like intercepts and asymptotes.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 Maths, one student didn't complete all assigned homework (20 out of 24 questions) and brought no new notes after a week, which meant starting the next term behind.

A Year 11 student missed several maths classes, leaving most of a practice test unattempted; "she only wrote a page of class notes since last lesson," as noted by the tutor.

Another senior student's report draft was finished at the last minute but lacked content, delaying deeper writing work.

For several students in Years 8–12, inconsistent written working—such as omitting steps or plus-minus signs in algebra—led to repeated errors and lost time correcting them during lessons.

Recent Achievements

One Gwelup tutor noticed that Ben, a Year 8 student, has begun using "talking aloud" and backchecking strategies to catch his own errors—something he'd previously avoided, preferring to rush through problems.

In a recent high school session, Bronte made a breakthrough by talking through her method for dividing fractions out loud; this shift helped her spot and fix mistakes independently for the first time.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 student who struggled with reading clocks last month can now draw clock faces and accurately read the time after working through several examples together.

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