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Tutors in Pallara include an award-winning science department head and Olympiad coordinator with a Master's in Physics, ATAR 99+ graduates and school duxes now studying medicine and biomedical science, seasoned maths specialists with postgraduate degrees, university lecturers, K–12 English teachers, peer mentors, and tutors recognized for national academic excellence and passion for student success.

Ding
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Ding

Psychology Tutor Sunnybank Hills, QLD
Being a tutor is not only about delivering contents and information, it is more about supporting and developing students interest in a certain field. Most importantly, i think confidence is the key for students in a learning process, as a tutor, I’d positively encourage them even if they make mistakes in their work. I am friendly, caring, and…
Hoi Yan
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Hoi Yan

Psychology Tutor Runcorn, QLD
I believe tutoring helps students develop a genuine love for learning. There are 2 characteristics a tutor needs to achieve this. Firstly, the tutor should have an open and friendly personality. Learning is inherently effortful, and having someone friendly to guide the process makes it more enjoyable and productive. Additionally, tutors need to…
1st Lesson Trial

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Shianne
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Shianne

Psychology Tutor Robertson, QLD
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is provide an opportunity for the student to thrive. To establish belief in them, as typically students seek out tutoring as they believe they are not 'good' at a subject. Being the one person there that cheers them on is a powerful thing. Providing alternate methods for students to learn is…
Kayla
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Kayla

Psychology Tutor Mount Ommaney, QLD
If you are a tutor, your job is to empower other people. Even if you are picking up blind spots, asking a student to paraphrase something, or advising more research in a particular area, there are ways to convey this information that are encouraging and helpful, (rather than condescending). We all have blind spots, too. I have found it…
Javeria
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Javeria

Psychology Tutor Doolandella, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to not spoon feed information, its the art of teaching the child to a degree where it helps them but doesnt answer the entire thing. Spoon feeding a student will only help temporarily and is very harmful. I believe my strengths are that i dont like to teach every child the same way. Each…
Zaakiyah
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Zaakiyah

Psychology Tutor Parkinson, QLD
Firstly to help them understand something that they may be scared or ashamed of not knowing. Also, to help teach special small techniques to quicken solutions. I'm super open and friendly and have a lot of patience, so I can sit and understand what the problem is before rushing and forcing the student to hop…

Local Reviews

Everything is going well and Nayte likes Thilacsan. He has given Nayte some problems to work out during the week which he is doing.
Paul, Forest Lake

Inside PallaraTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Alexis worked on reading and drawing analog time to the nearest five minutes, as well as grouping numbers for addition and subtraction using "rainbow numbers."

In Year 9, Dylan tackled solving linear equations and practiced plotting points on Cartesian planes to reinforce understanding of coordinate geometry.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Anjali focused on compound and simple interest calculations alongside revision of simultaneous equations and strategies for identifying parallel relationships in linear graphs.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 maths, one student skipped key lines of working out in algebra, which led to mistakes and lost marks; as noted, "skipping lines of working out causing mistakes and incorrect answers."

Meanwhile, a senior student preparing for external exams struggled with consistent calculator use—this uncertainty made exam responses less efficient and often incomplete.

In Year 11 Chemistry, stress over recall meant extended questions (like intermolecular forces) became overwhelming rather than manageable.

For a Year 4 learner, confusion about analog clock reading persisted after tiring worksheets, leading to frustration during time tasks.

Recent Achievements

One Pallara tutor noticed a big shift in Rohan (Year 10), who used to need frequent reminders but now checks and edits his own work, shows all steps clearly, and independently applies algebra skills—he even started using more maths language without prompting.

In Year 11 Chemistry, Gianna led her session by asking focused questions about her assignment and unpacked each question according to marks allocation, something she'd hesitated with before.

Meanwhile, Mikaela (Year 3) tackled her assigned homework on her own for the first time this week, solving multiplication facts by counting in threes instead of relying on her times table chart.

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 Inala Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Pallara State School.