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Tutors in Lesmurdie include a national swimming champion and double Dux with two education support certificates, an ATAR 99.55 Mazenod College academic scholarship recipient and experienced peer mentor, a Vice Chancellor's List engineering student (top 1% at Curtin), a veteran maths tutor for all levels, and several university-trained STEM specialists.

Nimrat
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Nimrat

English Tutor Helena Valley, WA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide clear explanations, offer personalised support, cultivate a positive and encouraging learning environment, adapt teaching methods to individual needs, and instil confidence and a love for learning. My strengths as a tutor include simplifying complex concepts, fostering a…
Rania
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Rania

English Tutor East Cannington, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is buliding his or her confidence and giving them correct feedbacks. In this way they could understand their mistakes and correct accordingly. Also, supporting the student and help them to become an asset to their family as well as the society. Well I think, one of my strengths lies in my…
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Makaylah
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Makaylah

English Tutor Maddington, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is impact a student's education by sharing knowledge and inspiring learning. This also involves creating a positive learning environment for the student. The strengths I hold as a tutor that I believe are important include being an effective communicator, being patient and empathetic, and…
Fahad Rahman
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Fahad Rahman

English Tutor Maddington, WA
Providing the students with the appropriate time and space to ask questions and make mistakes so that they can improve to a much higher level. The ability to convey my knowledge to the students in a clear manner is one of my strongest strengths. Making the students believe that they have the ability to achieve greater extents in particular aspects…

Local Reviews

Van has absolutely helped and encouraged Asha in the upmost professional manner. Asha went into NAPLAN confident and I thank you for sending Van to us.
Marit

Inside LesmurdieTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Mia worked on percentage word problems and practiced converting between decimals, fractions, and percentages for real-life scenarios.

In Year 9, Daniel focused on solving and graphing linear equations as well as exploring how to shift quadratic graphs up, down, or sideways using graph sketches.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Sophie tackled trigonometry applications with the Sine Rule in word problems and reviewed algebraic fractions involving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9, messy written work during algebra and equation tasks led to confusion when transferring answers between lines—"he mistook a 36 for 30 after rewriting the 6 to look more like a 0," one tutor observed.

In Year 11 trigonometry, over-reliance on calculators meant basic division (e.g., dividing by 2 or 5) was avoided, making mental arithmetic weaker and slowing problem-solving in class.

For Year 7 probability, homework was sometimes incomplete; this left gaps in understanding multiplication of brackets.

After setbacks in test settings, hesitation increased and confidence dropped—often waiting for reassurance before attempting harder questions.

Recent Achievements

In one high school session, Remy—who previously felt anxious about linear equations—chose to tackle them first and, despite early frustration, began asking thoughtful questions about their purpose as she worked through the problems.

Meanwhile, Niru made a notable shift by independently testing out his own strategy for solving a maths problem instead of relying solely on the tutor's guidance—a big step towards self-driven learning.

With a younger student, strategies for converting between fractions, decimals, and percentages finally clicked after several lessons; he started recognising when simplifying would earn extra marks and applied it without prompting.

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 Kalamunda Public Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Brigid's College.