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Tutors in Medina include a university medical school lecturer and published scientist, a Head of Department and Assistant Professor with over a decade's mathematics teaching experience, an award-winning high school dux in maths and science, passionate primary educators, seasoned child care specialists, peer mentors, camp leaders, and multiple tutors with perfect or near-perfect results in their fields.

Jan Jemi Gerwayne
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Jan Jemi Gerwayne

Info Processing Tutor Parmelia, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to always keep the subject as interesting as he can. The way I keep things interesting is to get to know more about the student's interests and try to relate the subject to his interests. By doing this, the student will be able to see the value of the subject. Patience and experience. From…
Manjyot
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Manjyot

Info Processing Tutor Cooloongup, WA
Fundamentally, a tutor must be able to pass on their knowledge to students such that they can progress academically. This should be accompanied by helping and testing the students where necessary. I prefer to break down complex concepts into smaller ideas, which can then be used as a foundation for understanding and applying the actual…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

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Ravi
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Ravi

Info Processing Tutor Hammond Park, WA
First and foremost, a tutor has to gel up with the student, make him/her comfortable. Once that is done, the teaching method adopted must be interesting, with must include examples from daily life so that the student can relate to it easily. Moreover, a diagrammatic approach must be used while teaching, since, children tend to remember pictures…
Shaikh Sayed
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Shaikh Sayed

Info Processing Tutor Kwinana, WA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide clear explanations, offer personalized support, build confidence, foster critical thinking, create a supportive environment, and instill a love for learning. These elements contribute to effective learning, academic success, and overall growth. As a tutor, my strengths lie in…
Sharjeel
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Sharjeel

Info Processing Tutor Parmelia, WA
Providing individualised attention, creating a welcoming study space, and giving students the tools they need to become self-directed learners are among the most valuable services a tutor can provide a student. My strengths as a tutor are rooted in my dedication to self-improvement and my motivation to seek out novel approaches within my…
Qiaochen
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Qiaochen

Info Processing Tutor Parmelia, WA
I believe the most important thing i can do is the teach my students how to ask the right questions, this helps practice independent thinking with life long learning benefits. I can tackle problems from different angles to find one clearest for each student to…
Ritika
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Ritika

Info Processing Tutor Wellard, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do is help students believe in themselves. When students feel confident, they learn faster and are more willing to try. Every student learns differently, so the there is one more important thing, to understand each student’s needs and adjust teaching methods to fit them I’m good at breaking down complex…
Bryce
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Bryce

Info Processing Tutor Hillman, WA
Give the student the ability to understand the problem instead of just the capacity to solve it. Being able to communicate a difficult idea clearly and…
ZANDRA MAE
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ZANDRA MAE

Info Processing Tutor Hammond Park, WA
To be a tutor, one should know what type of learning method and mode of delivery of learning to students. But most of it, a tutor should consider what the student needs. My strengths are more on the attitude I think, I am patient, love to learn, I listened, loves to facilitate, and willing to extend help to…

Local Reviews

Manjyot is very patient and is helping our daughter to work through what she is struggling with.
Adrian

Inside MedinaTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Chloe worked through congruent triangle proofs and explored how to find scale factors for similar shapes.

In Year 10, Max focused on trigonometry and simultaneous equations, as well as tackling questions involving elevation and depression angles using diagrams.

Meanwhile, Year 5 student Sam practised telling the time to the nearest half hour and built confidence with two-digit addition and subtraction without carrying over.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Maths, a student's lesson materials were scattered across multiple folders and websites, making it hard to see the big picture; as one tutor put it, "she doesn't have a clear overview of what she needs to learn." This disorganization led to extra time spent searching for tasks rather than mastering concepts.

Meanwhile, in Year 9 Geometry, another student avoided taking dated notes by hand, making drawing diagrams much harder and losing track of key steps.

In Year 4 Maths, skipping written calculations meant sign errors crept into subtraction practice that went unnoticed until review.

Recent Achievements

One Medina tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to rely heavily on prompts now independently designing function translations and applying the recursive rule to new problems.

In a recent session, another high schooler revisited their last exam and, instead of skipping tricky questions, systematically worked through errors from previous attempts—something they'd avoided before.

Meanwhile, in primary years, one student who often guessed answers is now pausing to lay out calculations step by step, which has led to far fewer mistakes; last week he completed an entire worksheet with every answer shown clearly in his workings.

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 Kwinana Public Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Medina Primary School.