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Vermont's tutors include a Premier's VCE Award recipient in Biology, an Honours psychology graduate with primary and high school mentoring experience, a Commerce student awarded the Melbourne Global Scholarship, an ATAR 96.95 achiever, seasoned English and maths specialists, and youth leaders skilled at guiding students from early primary through VCE success.

Devika
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Devika

Info Processing Tutor Burwood, VIC
I think the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to listen to them. Listen to their problems and understand where they have gone wrong and correct it. Some of my greatest strengths is that I am very energetic and patient. I think with my energy helps keep students to be motivated and engaged throughout their learning process. And…
Analisa
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Analisa

Info Processing Tutor Burwood, VIC
A tutor is someone a student can rely on for one-on-one attention. In school, you have a lot of kids in the same class competing for the teacher's attention. A tutor is there for a student whenever they need them and its a lot easier for students to clear their doubts with tutors. A tutor plays an important role in helping students gain a more…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

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Joshua
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Joshua

Info Processing Tutor Burwood, VIC
Every student has a different learning style; I can say this from experience as i was always until recently been labelled as not terribly gifted logically. This was until i found a tutor that was patient enough to guide me in my pursuit of knowledge, from a perspective that i understood. I believe that this is the most important action a tutor…
Daniel Ross
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Daniel Ross

Info Processing Tutor Mount Waverley, VIC
I think the most important things that a tutor can do is to instil in students the drive to learn more about a subject, fix any misconceptions they may have, and to make them feel comfortable enough to ask any questions they have. I think my strengths come from finding gaps in a student’s knowledge and using appropriate measures to rectify them.…
Monish
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Monish

Info Processing Tutor Scoresby, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do for a student include fostering true understanding of the material, rather than just memorisation, by breaking down complex concepts into digestible parts. As a tutor, I excel at breaking down complex concepts into simple, relatable terms, making it easier for students to grasp difficult topics. I am…
KwaiLing
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KwaiLing

Info Processing Tutor Notting Hill, VIC
Other than just teaching the book knowledge, tutor can educate the students( not just make them literate) which normally we don't get from books. Care and support, understanding( not too strict nor too lenient)which the students need in their academic life, making them realise that some one is always there anytime they need. 1) I know multiple…
Nicole
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Nicole

Info Processing Tutor Ashburton, VIC
I consider the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is making the learning/teaching process fun and engaging for them, whilst reaching and achieving their academic goals. My strengths are explaining a range of topics to students, that is digestible and easy for them to understand. Also I have a lot of patience when teaching students…

Local Reviews

We have been working with Emily since last year and so we are very happy with her.
Sharn, Forest Hill

Inside VermontTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Dominic worked on multiplying two-digit numbers by one-digit numbers and practised times tables, then was introduced to range, mode, median, and mean using real examples.

In Year 10, Jessica tackled logarithms by learning to add and subtract logs as well as solving equivalent equations involving logs.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Olivia focused on quadratic equations—solving inequalities with quadratics and discussing the number of solutions in simultaneous equations.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, one student repeatedly avoided showing full working when solving equations—"he skipped outlining steps in algebra, which hid sign errors," a tutor noted. This made it hard to spot where mistakes crept in and led to confusion during review.

In Year 11 English, an essay writer struggled to include all required components; planning was minimal and arguments weren't fully developed within the set time.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student forgot about her homework entirely and did not revisit previous material, leaving gaps unaddressed before new topics began. Confidence dipped after setbacks, making participation quieter each week.

Recent Achievements

One Vermont tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student who previously hesitated to admit confusion; now, she's started voicing her struggles during sessions and even "talks aloud" through complex number problems—recently multiplying complex numbers without needing prompts.

A Year 8 student, after often making errors on negative numbers, began solving them independently by the end of a lesson, showing real initiative.

Meanwhile, a younger student who used to guess quietly is now raising questions when stuck and confidently reading new instructions out loud before attempting tasks.

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