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Private information-processing-technology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Riverhills' tutors include a former university assistant professor with experience mentoring high school and primary students, an ATAR 99th percentile achiever and Kumon instructor, multiple graduates from top Brisbane schools including duxes and subject awardees, seasoned academic tutors and teacher aides, peer mentors in maths and science, and postgraduate educators skilled at supporting diverse learners.

Edwin
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Edwin

Info Processing Tutor Chelmer, QLD
Listen to feedback. Make sure they understand what they are being taught and determine if a new approach is needed. Sometimes the same information can be summarised and presented in a different way that is just easier for some people to understand. My own capacity for learning. Information retention and comprehensive analysis. Communication…
shashank
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shashank

Info Processing Tutor Indooroopilly, QLD
The greatest a tutor can do to help a student is, instead of explaining the method or process of every single question. the tutor needs to make sure that he gave a brief introduction on why he is studying that topic and explain the topic conceptually. My biggest strength is patience while tutoring to other people, especially the children. one has…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Alexis
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Alexis

Info Processing Tutor Mount Ommaney, QLD
The most important things I for a tutor to do is understand and listen to the student. Not listening can be one of the most frustrating things as a student, where the tutor doesn't understand what they actually need help with, and wastes time going over the wrong content in the wrong way. Being able to understand the student, and then properly…
Manasa
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Manasa

Info Processing Tutor Seventeen Mile Rocks, QLD
I think there are 3 very important things that a tutor can do for a student; - Be transparent about how to succeed - Wholeheartedly believe in the student and - Invest in them both emotionally and academically I think my strengths as a tutor are that I am able to immediately connect with the student and I make an effort to understand their…
Carl
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Carl

Info Processing Tutor Corinda, QLD
I believe that it is a tutor's responsibility to be accountable for a student's academic performance. As such, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are: - maintaining a flexible teaching approach to tailor a student's study to their capabilities, learning style and circumstances - encouraging and inspiring engagement with the…
Danilo
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Danilo

Info Processing Tutor Graceville, QLD
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help the student gain confidence in areas they might not have previously. I believe a tutor can help students understand that they are capable of learning whatever they put their minds to. I am a very patient tutor and have a holistic approach to teaching. I try and find the…
Kyran
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Kyran

Info Processing Tutor Forest Lake, QLD
As a tutor is paid to improve a student's grades and so that's the underlying aim. But what a tutor should really do is teach a student how to learn better and improve. That means reminding them to proofread, read the criteria sheet before and after researching, and set up study plans that work with them (if that's palm cards, end of the week…

Local Reviews

Since the v first session with Radu, we were all totally hooked! He is not just the BEST tutor but the most amazing person. Radu has the ability to calmly install confidence into his students and ensure that they fully understand all the concepts, not just learn them. He is kind, professional and a honest joy to have around ??
Jasmine Jones, Westlake

Inside RiverhillsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Cara focused on consolidating times tables (4, 6, 7, 8, and 9) through oral quizzes and practiced converting between decimals, percentages, and fractions.

Year 11 student Sanvi worked on binomial probability (including mean and standard deviation for discrete random variables) and tackled calculus problems involving differentiation of logarithmic functions using the chain rule.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Alex reviewed integration by substitution in the context of probability density functions and revised polynomial division alongside applications of the factor theorem.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Maths, several students hesitated to set out their reasoning clearly in integration and probability questions—one tutor noted, "he skipped stating 'by product rule' in test working," which made justifying answers harder.

In a Year 9 Chemistry session, the analysis section was left unfinished and required better organization before moving on.

For a Year 4 student, forgetting to keep a homework notebook meant tasks were often missed or incomplete.

During advanced trigonometry (Year 12), relying heavily on calculators for standard values led to gaps when tackling unfamiliar problems without technology in assessments.

Recent Achievements

One Riverhills tutor noticed a Year 11 student who, after struggling with integration by substitution, now independently applies the method to tackle unfamiliar calculus problems.

In another session, a high schooler working on chemistry assignments has started her work early for the first time and is now connecting concepts across topics without prompting—a big shift from previously leaving tasks until the last minute.

Meanwhile, Cara in Year 4 has moved from relying on notes for times tables to scoring full marks in quizzes purely from memory and now volunteers to try new problem types before being asked.

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 Mount Ommaney Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Middle Park State School.