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Private physics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Latham's tutors include a seasoned primary school teacher and ICT coordinator, a former science and maths teacher with international experience, an ANU Simon Anderson Scholar with a 97.7 ATAR, an accomplished STEM mentor and F1 in Schools national finalist, a Bachelor of Education double-maths specialist, and a dedicated K–12 ICT educator with nine years' teaching experience.

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Aymon

Physics Tutor Acton, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do is to give a student the necessary tools and confidence required to pursue their own learning. Explaining concepts in new ways that are understandable for the student and giving them opportunities to exercise what they know are very important for this process. This will be even more effective if the tutor…
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Meghan

Physics Tutor Franklin, ACT
Considering the child's own goals, strengths and personality traits when teaching. Understanding the student not only aids in bettering in their performance, but also makes the whole experience more enjoyable and fulfilling! Identifying a student's strengths and weaknesses, and focusing more on topics where they need it. Since I am a visual…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Physics

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Local Reviews

Tom has been fantastic!
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Inside LathamTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Caledon worked on translating, dilating, and reflecting quadratic graphs as well as starting circle graphs, with plenty of visual sketching.

Year 10 student Anise focused on applying the chain rule to differentiate compound functions, then extended this by tackling more complex algebraic manipulation within differentiation problems.

For Year 11, James practiced finding rates using the unitary method and solved real-world conversion questions involving different units.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student repeatedly left homework incomplete, as one tutor noted, "Caledon had forgot to do last week's homework again," leading to missed opportunities for review and practice.

In a Year 7 session, messy or absent working—"I find myself doing a lot of the equations for him, and letting him figure out the answer in his head"—meant errors went undetected during algebra tasks.

For a senior student tackling calculus (Year 11), anxiety about using the chain rule led to skipped steps and confusion when re-arranging complex results.

In each case, these habits caused students to miss critical feedback moments or struggle with more advanced problems that built on earlier skills.

Recent Achievements

One Latham tutor noticed a real shift with Jensen, who used to hesitate when stuck but now comes prepared with specific questions he's written down ahead of time, showing much more initiative in tackling challenging maths concepts.

In Year 12, Anise recently started double-checking her working for differentiation problems after previously rushing and making small mistakes; she's also grown strong at applying log laws to even abstract variable-based questions.

Meanwhile, a younger student, Jarrah, consistently substitutes the correct numbers into fractions when converting rates—a big improvement from earlier confusion—and now completes all steps independently.

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 Latham Primary School.