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Tutors in Mernda include a former school teacher with years of primary experience, an ATAR 95.10 graduate and house captain, a university medalist and peer mentor, multiple competition-recognised maths students, experienced Year 10–12 tutors, youth leaders, community volunteers, swim instructors, and academic award recipients—all passionate about guiding K–12 learners to success.

Maryam
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Maryam

Psychology Tutor Mernda, VIC
Encouraging a student as that allows them to work at full potential, and finding different ways to teach a student based on what works best for them. Patience, flexibility, creativity, being able to scaffold to the student's level, and engaging them in…
Belinda
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Belinda

Psychology Tutor Mernda, VIC
Encourage them even when they're feeling defeated. Show them their strengths while working on their weaknesses and to make the experience enjoyable. I'm dedicated and motivated. I desire to see improvement that is consistent throughout their academic journey. I'm engaged in the work and have a bubbly…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

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Nienke
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Nienke

Psychology Tutor Doreen, VIC
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student is support them academically, as well as personally. I believe that it is vital to approach each student holistically, catering for each individual in accordance with their personal needs. Secondly, I believe it is important that students are supported according to their own goals,…
Alan
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Alan

Psychology Tutor South Morang, VIC
Motivate and keep accountable. Results driven, people skills,…
Mustafa
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Mustafa

Psychology Tutor South Morang, VIC
Ultimately, a successful tutor should bolster their students' confidence and make them realize and maximize their academic potential. Moreover, a successful tutor should have the ability to make learning authentic, relevant and overall a good experience for the student. I believe I am very patient in teaching my students. In essence, listening to…
Abeer
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Abeer

Psychology Tutor Wollert, VIC
I think the one the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to be creative and flexible with learning styes. For example, if a student doesn’t understand a particular concept or problem even after the tutor has gone through it and broken it down, the tutor can go through that little extra mile of trying to explain the problem in…

Local Reviews

It was great! My daughter loved the teacher and she was so understanding. The process is simple and clear. Hope this would help my daughter to improve her math skills as she is currently struggling.
Nil, Mernda

Inside MerndaTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Aaliyah practised drawing histograms and stem-and-leaf plots to interpret statistical data, and also worked through simultaneous equations by graphing and identifying the number of solutions.

For Year 10, Noah focused on quadratic factorisation including taking out common factors and using the difference of perfect squares, then moved on to rewriting quadratics in turning point form to identify key features like axis of symmetry.

Meanwhile, Year 5 student Emily revised measurement skills such as calculating perimeter and area with worded problems, then looked ahead at measuring more complex shapes.

Recent Challenges

A Year 7 student was frequently caught out by basic arithmetic—particularly with negative numbers—because written working was skipped. As one tutor noted, "he tried to do it all in his head, which led to missed signs and confusion."

In Year 10 algebra revision, a reluctance to tackle harder textbook problems meant practice focused mostly on familiar question types; this limited exposure left the student unprepared for unfamiliar exam scenarios.

A senior (Year 11) student preparing for tests left several assigned homework tasks incomplete, resulting in last-minute cramming rather than consistent consolidation across weeks.

Recent Achievements

A Mernda tutor recently saw a Year 10 student move from needing step-by-step help with quadratic factorisation to independently breaking down and solving the more complex questions—something she'd found overwhelming before.

In another session, a Year 11 student who had previously hesitated to attempt extension problems in trigonometry started choosing challenging questions on her own, using the unit circle without prompting.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who often guessed at answers began showing her work for each fraction problem and started double-checking her results before moving on.

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