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Private science tutors that come to you in person or online

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Sadliers Crossing's tutors include a fully registered Queensland teacher with over a decade of classroom and maths experience, a Monash Dean's Honour List chemical engineer and award-winning mathematics specialist, an ATAR 97.7 achiever with Olympiad distinction, dedicated psychology and education students, and youth mentors skilled in supporting diverse learning needs across primary and secondary levels.

Phuc (Owen)
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Phuc (Owen)

Science Tutor Woodend, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do isn't just to lead them to the right answers but help them build confidence and self-motivation. As a tutor, I aim to help students develop independence. For me, a successful teacher is someone who can guide students to no longer needing one. I am quick to identify the strengths and weaknesses of students…
Terena
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Terena

Science Tutor North Ipswich, QLD
I believe that tutoring for a student should be a safe zone space where they can make mistakes. Tutoring does not have the same pressue for a student that school can, as such it is important for a tutor to be patient and adaptive when a student is struggling with a concept. A tutor should welcome mistakes as an opportunity to grow. I also believe…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Science

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Lexie
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Lexie

Science Tutor Ipswich, QLD
Communication is effective and is able to foster a relationship with them to be able to gain, engage and enhance a students understanding in an area of struggle. Having taught a variety of students with different learning styles and needs, being able to break down the complex theory of things into simple explanations for them to understand and…
Lilly
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Lilly

Science Tutor Bundamba, QLD
I believe the most important things a tutor can do are to explain concepts clearly, adapt to each student’s learning style, and provide encouragement that builds confidence. A good tutor should be patient and supportive, helping students feel comfortable asking questions while also guiding them to think independently. Tutoring is not just about…
Jennifer
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Jennifer

Science Tutor
1) Helping students to reach their academic goals through personalised teaching, assessments and making learning fun. 2) Listen to what they have to say about school, including their achievements and struggles, and provide the necessary support. 3) Always encourage the student and comment on their genuine attempts, hard work, improvements…

Local Reviews

Isabella is amazing! My daughter has improved so much since Isabella started tutoring her - I cannot recommend enough!
Sarah, Sadliers Crossing

Inside Sadliers CrossingTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Emily worked on overtime pay and penalty rates, as well as practicing order of operations using visualisation techniques.

Year 9 student Alex reviewed simultaneous equations and compound interest, including strategies for solving multi-step problems.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Jordan focused on PSMT assessment preparation by analyzing bivariate data and applying least squares regression lines with the help of technology tools.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 mathematics, missing or incomplete note-taking has become a recurring issue—on several occasions, no notes were written in class and "I had to check that she was recording these." This makes it harder for her to review concepts like algebraic operations or trigonometry between sessions.

In Year 12, test reflection was sometimes avoided; after one assessment, she needed prompting to "take time to reflect on the test," which meant gaps went unaddressed until explicitly discussed.

In both junior and senior years, leaving notebooks behind or not completing homework slowed skill consolidation and made revision less effective before exams.

Recent Achievements

One Sadliers Crossing tutor noticed a real shift with a Year 11 student who, after previously losing almost all marks on a mock test due to confusion between mathematical operations, now actively checks her work and asks clarifying questions rather than guessing.

Another high school student recently managed to explain how exponential equations relate to real-life situations like population growth—something she'd found abstract before—which shows she's starting to connect concepts across topics.

Meanwhile, in a younger year group, a student who used to avoid tricky division problems is now attempting them independently and even volunteered to solve one aloud during the session.

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 Ipswich Libraries—or at your child's school (with permission), like Blair State School.