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Tutors in Maddington include a primary school education assistant with years of classroom and special needs support, a Kumon-trained private tutor and Perth Modern School graduate with a 98.10 ATAR, an award-winning future maths teacher, an experienced piano tutor for children, National Youth Science Forum participant and subject dux, and multiple current or aspiring teachers with proven mentoring expertise.

Samran
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Samran

Psychology Tutor Maddington, WA
I strong believe that listening to your students and parents carefully is crucial in managing their expectations, while building a strong rapport not only with the students but with their parents which is paramount to tutoring services. Seeking feedback from the Clients about the effectiveness of tutoring and demonstrating support and…
Manar
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Manar

Psychology Tutor Langford, WA
A tutor needs to teach a student, obviously. But more importantly, a tutor needs to empower a student. To make them break through barriers they wouldn’t have thought were possible, to achieve their potential, plus a little more. Tutors should also be more personalised, not so just a second teacher. Tutors should recognise why this specific…
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Emilie
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Emilie

Psychology Tutor Gosnells, WA
Being kind and helpful to their needs. Listening to them and their parents. Being knowledgeable enough to help them or willing to learn to help them. Be a reliable source of help and help them as much as possible. I am very helpful in identifying their problems and drawbacks, I am effective in changing behaviours to give them an advantage or edge.…
Dalila
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Dalila

Psychology Tutor Wattle Grove, WA
One of my biggest strengths as a tutor is my ability to break down complex topics into simple, relatable explanations. I also genuinely care about my students’ progress, and I make an effort to understand their learning styles, struggles, and goals. I know that everyone learns differently, so I adapt my approach to fit their needs. Most…
Nikita
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Nikita

Psychology Tutor Wilson, WA
In my opinion, the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to break a concept down to its simplest form. In my school days, I often found this to be the easiest way to learn. If your basic foundation of any concept is strong, it gets much easier to build on that and learn more complex information pertaining to it. Moreover, being…
Divya
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Divya

Psychology Tutor Willetton, WA
I think the most important things a tutor can do are to make the student feel understood, build their confidence, and explain concepts in a way that truly makes sense to them. As someone who is still a student myself, I know how overwhelming things can get, so I try to create a comfortable space where they are not afraid to ask questions or make…
Rishee
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Rishee

Psychology Tutor Waterford, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is to celebrate even the smallest of wins. No matter how slow or hard progress is, it is still progress! Of course it is important to push students, but it is equally important to build their self confidence. One of my strengths is my patience. Thanks to my past experience as a Teacher's…
arya
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arya

Psychology Tutor Canning Vale, WA
be understandable trying to breakdown the matters to a simpler form for them understand…
Hetvi
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Hetvi

Psychology Tutor Willetton, WA
I think that the most important thing a tutor can do is build the student's confidence in themselves and their own abilities so that the student is able to realise that with a little guidance and support they can achieve anything they want. I think my biggest strength as a tutor is that I have the patience required to explain a new challenging…

Local Reviews

We are over the moon with what John is teaching Alisha. She was in her Maths class yesterday and the teacher asked the class a question that no one new the answer to except Alisha. The teacher was so impressed.
Margaret, Thornlie

Inside MaddingtonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Jasmine practised working with fractions and used Mathspace to reinforce her understanding of operations with decimals and percentages.

In Year 10, Claudia reviewed matrices and networks, then moved on to exam-style questions involving series and sequences to strengthen problem-solving before her test.

For Year 11, Maha focused on arithmetic and geometric sequences using practice problems, while also tackling compound interest calculations linked to real-world finance scenarios.

Recent Challenges

No significant process-related obstacles or learning habits were observed across the range of lessons from Years 3 to 12.

All required materials were brought along, and there were no instances of missing homework, organizational issues, or revision style concerns noted—even in senior subjects where these can sometimes emerge.

As one tutor put it, "everything required was brought along" for a first lesson, setting a positive tone.

In both primary and high school sessions, students engaged with their tasks as expected and showed readiness to participate fully in the lesson without any soft skill barriers recorded.

Recent Achievements

A Maddington tutoring session with a Year 11 student saw her independently bring practice test questions she'd struggled with, then work through each one until she understood not just the answers but also where she'd gone wrong—something she used to avoid.

Meanwhile, a Year 9 student who previously rushed through algebra exercises is now pausing to check her reasoning and has noticeably reduced careless errors.

In Year 5 maths, one student who often hesitated to ask for clarification started voicing specific questions when stuck and finished an entire worksheet using strategies discussed together.

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 Thornlie Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Maddington Primary School.