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Tutors in O'Connor include a former primary school principal with nine years' teaching experience, university lecturers and PhD researchers, an International Baccalaureate 99.75 ATAR scorer, national academic award-winners, seasoned youth mentors and coaches, accomplished Olympiad and competition finalists, and high-achieving graduates from leading universities across maths, science, computing, and the humanities.

Nam Khanh
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Nam Khanh

Info Processing Tutor Hawker, ACT
In my opinion, the most importing things that a tutor can do is to make the students feel engaged and welcomed. In particular, learning should be a joyful experience for students instead of a burden. This means the student not only perform the tasks which the tutor instruct them to, but to be more open and curious to ask any questions outside the…
Khushpreet
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Khushpreet

Info Processing Tutor Harrison, ACT
As a tutor, I believe the most important things I can do for a student are to foster a positive learning environment, provide personalized support, and instill confidence. By creating a safe space where students feel comfortable asking questions and expressing their thoughts, I can encourage their active participation and engagement. Offering…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

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Yashodha
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Yashodha

Info Processing Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
Help them understand concepts rather than just memorising steps, build their confidence so they believe they can tackle problems on their own, and create a positive learning environment where they feel comfortable asking questions and making mistakes. I’m patient and good at explaining concepts in different ways until they make sense. I’m also…
Mohammed
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Mohammed

Info Processing Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
Being a tutor is a profession of great responsibility, and they are entrusted with their students' future. I consider upholding that trust and guiding the students to what is correct is the number one essential thing for a tutor. Tutors must understand their limitations, and work on how they can function past those hurdles, and enable their…
Utkarshpta
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Utkarshpta

Info Processing Tutor Flynn, ACT
Make the student interested in the subject otherwise doesn't matter how much student try, if he/she doesn't like the subject it would be very hard for him/her to perform well. I can explain a concept with real world example. Every student is different and a suitable approach must be taken according to the student to help him/her. I am good at…

Local Reviews

Liam seemed very knowledgeable and was able to answer all my questions, thus so far all is going well.
Juan, O'Connor

Inside O'ConnorTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Evie practised times tables she found challenging and completed class worksheets on fractions, perimeters, and multiplication.

Year 8 student Lara focused on converting between percentages, decimals, and fractions, as well as tackling algebraic equations from her recent assignments.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Owen worked through textbook problems involving probability and index laws (including surds), ensuring a strong grasp of both foundational skills and more advanced topics.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11, one student missed key marks on a maths exam due to "test/exam sitting skills," such as not allocating enough time per question. As a tutor noted, "he solved problems he'd already gotten wrong in the test, but timing cost him."

In Year 8 algebra, skipping written steps led to confusion with negatives and sign errors—this was especially clear when simplifying or rearranging equations.

Meanwhile, a Year 6 learner doubted her answers even when correct; hesitation meant she rarely shared her thinking aloud.

During a challenging worded problem in Year 4, pausing out of overwhelm caused her to lose track of strategy mid-solution.

Recent Achievements

One O'Connor tutor noticed a big shift with Lara in Year 10, who used to freeze on multi-step worded percentage problems but now works through them methodically and even scored 13 out of 14 on her exam.

Owen, just starting Year 11, previously struggled to link experimental results to mathematical analysis in physics; after some focused sessions, he's confidently deriving the data needed for his lab report without extra prompting.

Meanwhile, Mackenzie in Year 7 made a noticeable leap with index laws—despite never learning them before, she picked up each rule quickly and started solving questions independently by the end of the lesson.

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