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Private science tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Macgregor include a current classroom teacher and ICT coordinator with postgraduate education credentials, a primary school academic head with international teaching experience, a nine-year veteran K–12 educator, experienced maths and science teachers from overseas, high-ATAR achievers (up to 97.8), STEM competition mentors, creative writing award recipients, and accomplished university scholars across diverse fields.

Anandani
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Anandani

Science Tutor Bruce, ACT
* making them enjoy the process of studying. * making studies easier and fun for them. * helping them find their passion * keep them on schedule without feeling pressured about studies. * I really like learning so I'm always up to learn more and more, especially when it comes to making studying fun for my students. * I've always enjoyed…
Bihan
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Bihan

Science Tutor Lawson, ACT
Guide them, show them the way they should go for. Teach less but teach the way students can understand. Ability to understand the students better and teaching based on…
1st Lesson Trial

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Cooper
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Cooper

Science Tutor Giralang, ACT
I believe that patience is definitely a major aspect of tutoring. There is nothing worse than being expected to understand something and being unable to go back and revisit it, simply because the tutor is impatient or not understanding/empathetic enough. Another important aspect I would say would have to be teaching slowly where needed and not…
Sakib
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Sakib

Science Tutor Lawson, ACT
1. Create a safe and supportive learning environment. 2. Listen closely to the student’s needs and tailor the tutoring sessions accordingly. 3. Encourage the student to ask questions and foster critical thinking. 4. Identify areas where the student needs help and provide guidance. 5. Provide resources and materials to help the student…
Iris
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Iris

Science Tutor Lawson, ACT
Ensure that the student feels safe, supported and comfortable to become the best version of themselves from guidance. Ability to quickly build rapport, and being patient with the student. I am always cheerful and try to challenge students in the best way…
Om
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Om

Science Tutor Crace, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do is to actually understand the needs of the student and how their thinking process works and then teach the subject accordingly rather than forcing same traditional methods on them. The subjects I teach (Maths and Physics) are often considered dry and difficult because of their complexity, I have methods to…
Priyanka
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Priyanka

Science Tutor Casey, ACT
Impotant things a tuto can do is making good changes in children life providing academic guidance and explaing the concepts. My paitence and understanding of students is the strenght i…
Krisn
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Krisn

Science Tutor Casey, ACT
Firstly, the tutor must minimize the students' weaknesses and teach to their strengths. Secondly, the tutor can incorporate connections to the student's interest. He/she can truly personalize the learning. My passion to educate people is itself a strength for me and my teaching profession. Good communication skills, jovial nature, empathy, being…
Harsimran
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Harsimran

Science Tutor Casey, ACT
Most important thing is understanding students problems. I am honest, understanding and patient…
Jinan
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Jinan

Science Tutor Nicholls, ACT
I really believe that the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is be patient towards them and make them feel comfortable to keep asking for help again and again. I once had a tutor for Specialist Methods in Year 11. He would teach very fast and not make sure that I had fully understood the topic. He'd also get very impatient, to the…
Tumi
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Tumi

Science Tutor O'connor, ACT
Provide a different explanation for their questions and provide additional time to grasp and develop concepts and skills. I have a strong grasp of the concepts required for the subjects and I am able to develop a good rapport with…

Local Reviews

We were extremely happy with Samuel Bloom.
Annette

Inside MacgregorTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Caledon worked on factorising quadratics using the PSN method and also practiced solving linear equations by identifying gradients and intercepts.

In Year 10, Anise focused on applying the chain rule to differentiate compound functions and tackled an extension question involving complex algebraic manipulation.

For Year 11, James received support with exponential functions and logarithms, including real-life applications and problem-solving using worksheet questions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student missed assigned homework for two consecutive weeks, leading to less practice with key algebra skills; as a tutor noted, "hopefully he will be able to put into practice some of the methods for organization we discussed."

In Year 11 calculus, one student hesitated to ask clarifying questions when stuck on chain rule extensions—this meant confusion lingered and slowed progress.

Meanwhile, a Year 6 learner sometimes avoided writing out steps in fraction problems, making it hard to pinpoint where errors crept in. When work isn't shown clearly, small mistakes persist and confidence takes a hit during trickier topics.

Recent Achievements

One Macgregor tutor noticed a Year 11 student, Callan, who used to hesitate with index laws, now applying them confidently to new exponential problems without prompting.

In another high school session, Anise shifted from struggling with algebraic manipulation to independently choosing which log law to use—even tackling variable-based questions that were challenging before.

Meanwhile, a younger student impressed their tutor by starting to ask clarifying questions instead of staying quiet when confused; last term, this student would simply guess rather than seek help.

Last week, Callan finished his entire set of definite integrals on his own 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 Kippax Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Macgregor Primary School.