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Heathwood's tutors include a Summa Cum Laude graduate and Physics Bowl top-4 regionalist, multiple 99+ ATAR achievers, an experienced high school science department head and Olympiad coach, seasoned private and group maths tutors, classroom teacher aides, and award-winning communicators with proven experience guiding K–12 students to excel in STEM, English, and beyond.

Asraful
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Asraful

Tutor Richlands, QLD
We help them to think openly, ask questions, improve communication. They can improve their skill of expressing their own problems. We can make them ambitious of their future. Have closed knowledge up to graduate level Mathematics and pedagogy, have experience on ethnomathematics and multicultural society, passionate to make Math easy, friendly and…
Stephan
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Stephan

Tutor Runcorn, QLD
Help a student gain a greater understanding of the subject that you are tutoring. Helping students with…
1st Lesson Trial

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James
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James

Tutor Brookwater, QLD
The single most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to be patient. Everyone learns things at different rates and some things may come more easily than others. If the tutor becomes frustrated it only ends up discouraging and demoralising the student which further affects their study and confidence. Hence, it is vital for a tutor to be…
Thejaswee
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Thejaswee

Tutor Bellbird Park, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to provide them with a reason as to why its important they need to study, other than just getting good grades. I believe if the students can find why they need to learn all the stuff and they see the bigger picture, then it will provide the students with enough internal motivation, which…
Katie
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Katie

Tutor Forest Lake, QLD
To me, one of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to be open and encouraging. Everyone (not only kids) gets embarrassed and scared to ask questions when they don't know what to do -- its our job to make sure they feel safe enough to ask so that they can fully grasp everything in their minds. If one of my students kept…
Alex
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Alex

Tutor Calamvale, QLD
I believe communication is key to learning, and also understanding that different students require different ways of explaining things. Also, i believe that teaching in a fun environment helps with concentration and the students ability to remember new content. I believe my strengths are my knowledge, and my ability to teach in a way where…
Kevin
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Kevin

Tutor Stretton, QLD
A tutor must be always be there for a student. To be able to have an open discussion about any problem the student may have whenever. To prevent the student does not push aside the problem because the tutor was not there. I have the ability to analyse the student and pick up on what their main issues, if any, are so that I can swiftly aid them in…
James
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James

Tutor Regents Park, QLD
I think understanding each student is an important part to tutoring, and being able to motivate each student into learning for themselves should be the ultimate goal for any teacher. I've had some teachers that did that for me and I have them remembered always. I think students would like me. I'm easygoing and try to make the content appealing,…
Matthew
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Matthew

Tutor Archerfield, QLD
Instilling confidence in their ability to learn. I have experience as an academic tutor both for university level subjects as well as high school level subjects. I am patient and I have a willingness to learn any material required, to help my student's…
Ramandeep
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Ramandeep

Tutor Bellbird Park, QLD
Understand their mind , the problems they are facing and try to sort them in the simplest way possible :) The other important thing is to have a friendly bond with student, so that they can ask questions without hesitation. Understanding a student's need as each student is different , so I opt for different tutoring techniques suitable for a…

Local Reviews

Hamish is great and Jackson feels confident after receiving his help.
Natalie, Heathwood

Inside HeathwoodTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Aryan worked on single- and double-digit addition and subtraction, as well as punctuation basics like full stops and question marks.

For Year 10, Zoe focused on algebraic methods for solving equations and practised factorising perfect squares and the difference of two squares using step-by-step examples.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Lucas tackled exponential and logarithmic functions, then extended to taking derivatives of these along with trigonometric functions in preparation for upcoming topics.

Recent Challenges

In Year 12 Physics, a student struggled with formatting and pacing their scientific report—"needs more evidence"—which led to rushed conclusions and weaker claims.

A Year 11 Maths student showed over-reliance on calculators, often rounding answers prematurely instead of using exact forms when creating functions.

During Year 8 homework on graphing questions, one learner left work incomplete; as the tutor observed, "was unable to complete homework regarding graphing questions."

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student hesitated to attempt challenging addition problems independently and required prompting to check her answers aloud. This sometimes meant correct methods weren't practiced until guided step-by-step.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Heathwood noticed a Year 11 student who used to rely heavily on step-by-step guidance now tackling optimization questions solo—she picks out relevant information from complex problems and confidently applies the right techniques.

In a recent session with a Year 9 student, there was a shift: instead of guessing through index law questions, he paused to backtrack and find mistakes when prompted, showing real engagement with the process.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student surprised her tutor by adapting easily to the number-line strategy for addition and even tried harder problems independently before reading the time on an analogue clock 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 Inala Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Pallara State School.