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Tutors in Lytton include a UQ Academic Excellence Scholar with five years' K–10 tutoring experience, a 99.1 ATAR Physics Honours student with three years of tutoring, school leaders and peer mentors awarded for maths, science, and debating, national medal-winning athletes and coaches, and several current or aspiring teachers skilled at guiding children from preschool to Year 12.

Mitchell
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Mitchell

Physics Tutor Thorneside, QLD
Be able to communicate on a level they understand and patience when students have a difficult time Can simplify things down well. Very smart and experienced with teaching my family members their own coursework as well as helping teach friends through their…
Liam
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Liam

Physics Tutor Hamilton, QLD
The most important thing to teach as a tutor is self-autonomy, so the student isn't dependent on you to help solve each equation but can instead use frameworks. These frameworks are the thought process that can be applied to any question and after enough time patterns will form so more problems can be solved. I think my strength as a tutor is my…
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Lewis
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Lewis

Physics Tutor Balmoral, QLD
Relate and adapt teaching methods to how the student learns, as a one-size-fits-all approach of large classroom learning doesn’t always allow students to thrive and realise their full potentials. Ability to frame and contextualise situations differently so that it provides a more intuitive way of…
Eloise
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Eloise

Physics Tutor Ascot, QLD
I feel as if patience and asking questions to ensure they understand the information and knowledge they are learning. I am a very friendly, professional yet personable tutor. I am passionate about STEM and like to encourage it for other…
Riley
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Riley

Physics Tutor Nundah, QLD
The most important thing that someone can do as a tutor is to pass on as much knowledge as they can to the person and assist in understanding said knowledge to the best of their ability. -Patient -Good problem solver -Can get along with others well -Willing to do what I can to help…
Biplove
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Biplove

Physics Tutor Nundah, QLD
Guide them for the better future Good listener, communicator, Passion, empathy and good…
Jeremy
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Jeremy

Physics Tutor Clayfield, QLD
Allow the student to learn how to do the question but with prompts not showing the student everything. Communication, relationship…
Taige
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Taige

Physics Tutor Birkdale, QLD
The most important thing for a tutor to do is inspire self-believe and uncover topics that may become a passion for children. From this, tutors should foster a willingness to develop the child's skills and even potentially find a career path or tertiary education option within a specific area. My willingness to listen and respond calmly even in…
Brian
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Brian

Physics Tutor Carindale, QLD
The single most important thing a tutor can do is give their attention, and actively support them. This includes readily answering their questions and providing them relevant materials. My strengths as a tutor would be critical thinking and dedication. Critical thinking allows me to identify issues that need to be fixed, so that I can come up with…
Thomas
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Thomas

Physics Tutor Carindale, QLD
A tutor must guide the students learning. It is not about just sitting there and doing the work for them, but helping them to think through it, point them in the right direction, so that they may solve problems and complete questions easily in the future. I believe that as a tutor I will be able to convey concepts and content to students in a way…
Xiaoya
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Xiaoya

Physics Tutor Chandler, QLD
Developing their knowledge in a manner of painless Long term of good learning habits patient enough specialized in…
Mitch
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Mitch

Physics Tutor Clayfield, QLD
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student is provide the student with a clear and simple understanding of topics they are unfamiliar with. I believe they must be comfortable as well with their tutor for personally I think having a comfortable student-tutor relationship allows the student to become more confident in asking…

Local Reviews

Brydie connects beautifully with Amber and her grades and confidence improved which was awesome.
Nicole

Inside LyttonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Liam focused on all four operations with integers and began exploring basic algebra concepts, including using substitution to simplify expressions.

For Year 8, Olivia worked through expanding brackets in algebra and practiced solving both one-step and two-step equations.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Emily tackled percentage problems—converting between fractions, decimals, and percentages—and solved real-world questions involving percentage increase and decrease.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student was observed relying heavily on calculators for simple arithmetic, with notes stating, "simple arithmetic could be performed mentally rather than with the aid of a calculator." This slowed progress in class tasks and reduced confidence when calculators were not allowed.

In Year 10 algebra revision, another student repeatedly avoided checking their calculations after finishing problems; as noted, "needs to slow down with calculations etc and check answers," which meant sign errors went unnoticed until review.

Meanwhile, a senior student preparing for exams practiced only familiar question types instead of attempting unfamiliar or mixed problems—limiting exposure to potential exam scenarios and leading to confusion when faced with new formats.

Recent Achievements

A Lytton tutoring session saw a Year 10 student, who previously hesitated to tackle multi-step equations, now solving for x independently using several algebraic rules in a single problem—something they'd shied away from before.

A Year 12 student demonstrated new independence by applying differentiation techniques unprompted and then immediately transferring those methods to unfamiliar exam questions.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who used to rely on the tutor for every answer has started checking their own work for mistakes and even corrects errors independently after spotting them, finishing all ten assigned problems with no help needed.

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 Wynnum Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Iona College.