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Kelvin Grove's tutors include seasoned high school educators with advanced degrees, PhD candidates in maths and engineering, a science camp founder, multiple academic award-winners including international scholars and school captains, experienced peer mentors and learning facilitators, published researchers, creative writers, and passionate STEM leaders with years of tutoring and classroom experience.

Danilo
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Danilo

Info Processing Tutor Chelmer, QLD
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help the student gain confidence in areas they might not have previously. I believe a tutor can help students understand that they are capable of learning whatever they put their minds to. I am a very patient tutor and have a holistic approach to teaching. I try and find the…
Carl
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Carl

Info Processing Tutor Sherwood, QLD
I believe that it is a tutor's responsibility to be accountable for a student's academic performance. As such, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are: - maintaining a flexible teaching approach to tailor a student's study to their capabilities, learning style and circumstances - encouraging and inspiring engagement with the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

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Paiwand
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Paiwand

Info Processing Tutor Carina Heights, QLD
The most important things include : - Instilliing a healthy attitude - Being supportive - Being on task - Achieving Goals Together optimising these factors leave little room for failure. My strengths would be Maths and English as I am motivated and fond of those subjects. I also like teaching visually and interactively. Furthermore, my…

Local Reviews

We love Anna. Wish we had her last term. Ivy is learning some fantastic tools to help her with her maths.
Alex, Enoggera

Inside Kelvin GroveTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Angus focused on probability concepts, including two-way tables and Venn diagrams, with practice questions to build confidence ahead of his assessment.

In Year 9, Lina worked through trigonometry topics such as sine and cosine rules using example problems, and also tackled compound interest calculations involving both direct and reverse scenarios.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Jessica covered advanced Specialist Mathematics skills by practising integration techniques—like u-substitution, integration by parts, and partial fractions—through step-by-step walkthroughs of homework and revision problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 12 student arrived at a recent lesson without having completed her assigned Optimisation homework, saying she was too busy; as the tutor noted, "she is yet to do last week's homework…as well as other exercise questions." This pattern left gaps in understanding, especially when unfamiliar integration techniques appeared on exams.

In Year 10, another student struggled to start problem-solving tasks independently—without a hint, progress stalled and practice outside lessons remained limited.

For Year 7 algebra revision, one learner frequently confused positive and negative signs: "minor mistakes kept creeping in," slowing feedback and review.

Missed practice or incomplete preparation often meant time was spent re-covering basics instead of advancing new skills.

Recent Achievements

One Kelvin Grove tutor noticed a big shift with a Year 11 student who, after weeks of hesitating to start integration problems, now jumps straight in independently and selects the right method on her own.

A Year 10 student has begun openly asking questions about mock test errors—something she avoided previously—so she can clarify tricky points before her upcoming exam.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who used to rush through worded maths questions now takes time to extract key details before solving, showing real care and accuracy by reading each question twice before answering.

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 Grange Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Kelvin Grove State College.