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Waterfall Gully's tutors include a Master-qualified school teacher with specialist experience in Years 7–12 maths and science, seasoned UMAT and K–12 maths mentors, Glenunga's Dux and debating coach, IB Maths competition finalists, accomplished peer leaders in music and languages, plus high-achieving graduates skilled at inspiring students across English, STEM, and the arts.

Tina Chenxi
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Tina Chenxi

Psychology 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…
Daniel
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Daniel

Psychology Tutor Toorak Gardens, SA
- Facilitate open discussion about the stresses, intricacies, and difficulties of schooling (especially in Year 12) - Explain the same concept as a student's classroom teacher but in a way that is digestible to the student (offering a personal approach) - Be able to provide detailed feedback and/or comprehensive drafts for assignments and…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Umama
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Umama

Psychology Tutor Dulwich, SA
I think that being able to build a rapport with the student is one of the fundamental skills to be a good tutor. This lays the foundation for the student being comfortable in asking questions to the tutor, as well as the tutor finding a teaching style that is most suited to the student. I am confident in my ability to explain subject matter to the…
Mostafa Didar
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Mostafa Didar

Psychology Tutor Norwood, SA
Besides helping them understand and learn a topic, the tutor should also help the student master the topic through mastery learning. Mastery learning is a way of designing units of work so that each set of tasks focuses on a particular learning objective and students must master a task to move onto the next one. The tutor should also help the…
Lily
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Lily

Psychology Tutor Teringie, SA
The most important thing would be to teach a student that studying shouldn't be a chore, and that giving it their all matters more than receiving a perfect grade. I understand that each student is different, and that not every approach will work for an individual, so it is essential that their tutor knows how to adapt to their needs while still…
Kurt
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Kurt

Psychology Tutor Belair, SA
A tutor MUST make the student comfortable with their learning by building a friendship with them, so that they always want to return to EZY Math Tutoring. A tutor must also put aside everything else in their life to assist the student: even if I have a bad day I cannot let that lessen my performance while teaching the student. Finally, a tutor…
Maitreyee
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Maitreyee

Psychology Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to listen to them and notice. Students pay more attention and are willing to learn when they feel that their opinions are heard and acknowledged. I am an extremely patient person. I can work with each student as an individual and let them grow and work at their own pace. I am also an…
Michelle
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Michelle

Psychology Tutor Adelaide, SA
Setting goals and personalizing each lesson for the student. Knowing what the students what to achieve from each session and making plans to ensure they get the most out of it each time. I excel in English literature but am flexible with any subjects within social sciences. In teaching itself I'm patient and like to work with the students until…
Chanceline
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Chanceline

Psychology Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important things I can do for a student, is to put myself in their shoes when teaching. Often some students take longer to understand, comprehend or apply the knowledge taught. It' so important to go at their pace, whilst challenging them as well, because there's nothing we can't achieve if we set our minds to it. It' important to simply…
Bethany
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Bethany

Psychology Tutor Blackwood, SA
Showing patience and determination to see a student grow into themselves. Having a growth mindset, meeting students where they are at, embracing their funds of knowledge (experiences, languages, cultures, preferred learning styles), and empowering them. Exceptional interpersonal skills which is important when building a professional working…
Lily
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Lily

Psychology Tutor Hyde Park, SA
Have patience and understanding of the needs of a student. Be able to answer a students questions in a way that makes them not think their questions are stupid, and encourage them to continue asking questions to build their confidence. I have good communication skills and patience which is important for explaining concepts. I am kind and…
Kavya
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Kavya

Psychology Tutor Clarence Gardens, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is make sure they don't generalize their teaching across all students. Every student has their own strengths/ weaknesses and their own ways of learning and it is important for a tutor to recognize and build upon that so they reach their potential. I am incredibly patient and my passion for what I teach is…
Therese
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Therese

Psychology Tutor Paradise, SA
I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to ultimately inspire them in a love of learning and hopefully pass onto them capsules of knowledge which are priceless. My strengths as a tutor are to challenge the pupils to think abstractly about language and harness the true power it possesses. I love hearing the pupil's own…

Local Reviews

Excellent, ongoing communication & a great first experience with our son's Year 12 tutor. We look forward to the rest of this journey.
Heather Goode, Mount Osmond

Inside Waterfall GullyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 12 student Divyanshu worked on differentiating rational and irrational functions from first principles in Mathematical Methods, as well as tackling stoichiometry calculations and unit conversions like %w/v and ppm in Chemistry.

In Year 11, Lucy focused on revising index laws and practicing operations with fractions—adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing—while also converting between improper and mixed fractions.

Year 9 student Zac explored algebraic expressions by simplifying terms and substituting variables, then reviewed angles within polygons by calculating unknown interior and exterior values using diagrams for support.

Recent Challenges

A Year 12 Chemistry student, after being shown how to draw esters and carbohydrates, repeatedly skipped structural details—such as correct hydrogen or oxygen placement—which meant the oxygen atoms were often attached to the wrong carbon, as one tutor observed. This habit led to confusion in multi-step synthesis questions.

In Year 11 Maths, incomplete working was common: when tackling differentiation with eËŁ or ln(x), steps were missed, resulting in sign errors and lost marks under time pressure.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student's untidy working made it hard to trace calculation errors when converting mixed fractions, causing repeated confusion during corrections.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Waterfall Gully recently noticed some real shifts across different year levels.

In Year 11 Chemistry, Divyanshu moved from needing frequent prompts to independently balancing tricky neutralisation reactions and even using the chain, product, and quotient rules confidently in calculus—something he'd previously hesitated with.

Meanwhile, Zac in Year 9 English went from struggling to get words on the page to writing a full-length essay within a week, showing both initiative and structure.

On the primary side, Lucy started volunteering strategies for adding fractions herself after usually waiting for guidance, and last session she factorised simple equations without prompting.

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 Burnside Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Seymour College.