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Private chinese tutors that come to you in person or online

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Piccadilly's tutors include a university-trained teacher with science and maths expertise, PhD holders and published academics, an Elevate Education team leader with 100+ seminars delivered, ATAR 99.55 and 98.8 achievers with multiple subject merits, experienced K–12 mentors in English, debating, music and robotics, plus specialist maths and science award recipients.

Skye
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Skye

Chinese Tutor Glen Osmond, SA
The most important goal for a tutor is to spark students' interest in the subject. Tutoring is not only about assisting with a student's grade. I do believe, though, that every student should find out what they are enthusiastic about. Due to my dual language proficiency in English and Chinese as an international student, I have experience…
XINYUE
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XINYUE

Chinese Tutor Urrbrae, SA
As a tutor, the most important thing is to "preach". Tutors who don't know how to "preach" often only focus on academic matters, which can easily lead to intensified conflicts between teachers and students. The premise of "preaching" is to establish a harmonious teacher-student relationship. I think there are three key points, that is, to be more…
1st Lesson Trial

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Tina Chenxi
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Tina Chenxi

Chinese Tutor Myrtle Bank, SA
1. The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them become more confident with themselves about their ability to achieve the grade they want in the subject they want. As a wise person once said, "if you believe, you're already half way there." As a tutor I want to be able to help my students believe in themselves so they realise…
Chongkai
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Chongkai

Chinese Tutor Glenunga, SA
To ensure that the students do comprehend everything that has been taught I am sensitive to observe the studying behavior thus I could create an unique study method for the…
Taison
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Taison

Chinese Tutor Glenside, SA
The most important thing is to answer their questions and teach them well, not just know copy the answers down but actually understand what's going and teach them my own experience As a Chinese background student, I think my math is good and I'm a people person as I have customer service for more than two years and I really want to make more…
Brian
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Brian

Chinese Tutor Rostrevor, SA
Important things a tutor can do for a student can be as subtle as providing the basic habits of Learning and self progression for the student. Many younger students struggle with this and tutoring can only go so far for them. Enforcing self-learning and the confidence to learn sometimes can be more beneficial than the topics covered. Personal…

Local Reviews

So far, we are very happy with Ashleigh.
Katherine

Inside PiccadillyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Daniel worked on adding and subtracting mixed number fractions with different denominators and practised creative writing by focusing on commas and exclamation points.

In Year 10, Alyssia revised titration calculations in chemistry, including using the n = m/M and C Ă— V equations, and balanced chemical equations for her upcoming exam.

For Year 11, Zoe tackled sketching graphs using both x- and y-intercepts as well as the gradient-intercept method to strengthen her understanding of linear functions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student often rushed through algebra problems, showing working that was hard to follow and skipped steps, which made it difficult to catch sign errors and led to repeated mistakes.

In a Year 5 English session, messy handwriting—with capital letters scattered mid-sentence—made some responses confusing even when ideas were clear.

One Year 11 student relied heavily on formula sheets for chemistry calculations instead of recalling processes independently; as noted, "she preferred checking old answers before trying new ones."

After missing key reasoning in geometry tests, a Year 8 learner left several explanations incomplete, which meant losing marks despite knowing the content.

Recent Achievements

One Piccadilly tutor recently noticed a big shift with a Year 11 student who had struggled with titration calculations—by the end of their session, she could complete complex questions independently, having previously needed step-by-step guidance.

A Year 8 student showed new initiative in maths: after once relying heavily on prompts, he now pinpoints his own uncertainties and actively asks targeted questions until he understands, guiding the lesson himself.

In Year 5, a student who used to need reminders for each fraction problem managed several problems in a row independently before asking for help only when truly stuck.

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