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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Wacol's tutors include two career school teachers with nearly 20 years' combined classroom and advisory experience, a cum laude K–2 specialist, peer mentors in high-level maths and sciences, an ATAR 94 achiever, a university science award recipient, and dedicated private tutors with proven results for primary through senior students.

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 Forest Lake, 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…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Local Reviews

So happy with the service and help that we have received. The tutor is amazing and gives our daughter so much assistance and encouragement. EzyMath Tutoring has made all the difference
Karen

Inside WacolTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Ella worked on mastering column multiplication with larger numbers and strengthened her division skills by dividing by 2, 5, and 10.

In Year 10, Genevieve revised factorising quadratic equations and practised applying the null factor law through targeted test preparation.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Liam focused on simple and compound interest problems, learning to use both formulas accurately to solve for different unknowns in real-world contexts.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Biology, missed and late homework affected Ella's ability to keep up with new content; "organization must be improved on—homework not completed and falling behind on tutoring content."

During senior Maths sessions, over-reliance on calculators meant small details like converting interest rates or units were sometimes skipped, leading to errors in compound interest questions.

For a Year 5 student, messy working made it difficult to track mistakes in long division—one note read: "the tidiness of his work—his pace of working can be sped up, faster thinking." In these moments, lost confidence followed as mistakes built up unseen.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Wacol noticed that a Year 11 student, who previously needed support to factorise quadratic equations, now works through complex problems using the quadratic formula and tackles B and C level revision questions with much less prompting.

In another session, a high schooler showed real initiative by starting to write out working steps more neatly and explaining their thinking—a shift from just rushing answers before.

Meanwhile, a younger student who used to hesitate on higher multiplication tables can now split large numbers into smaller chunks for mental calculations and even spots her own errors while multiplying larger numbers independently.

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 Carole Park State School.