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Wembley Downs' tutors include a qualified primary school teacher with UK classroom experience, ATAR 98+ and 97+ graduates, an academic scholarship recipient, Kumon and Fun Track learning mentors, a university psychology tutor with first-class honours, seasoned peer mentors and youth coaches, and award-winning specialists in mathematics, science, music, English literature and sport.

Matthew
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Matthew

Psychology Tutor Wembley Downs, WA
The important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel more confident about their abilities and knowledge. The more they can back them-self, the more they can be composed in a test environment, the better they perform in test conditions, the better their marks. Like a positive feedback loop, this will also increase confidence;better…
Karen
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Karen

Psychology Tutor Woodlands, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is motivate them and help them realise that they can succeed and help them to really understand the subject and be able to use this understanding to achieve good grades. I think my strengths are being patient and understanding and the ability to tailor explanations to specific students and work…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Tessa
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Tessa

Psychology Tutor Nedlands, WA
Being patient with a student has to be the most important. Learning isn’t the same for everyone and some areas of learning are harder for some people. Remaining patient and staying kind while a child is learning is extremely important. I am a patient person, who can think creatively and how to teach subjects in different ways to suit different…
Mikayla
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Mikayla

Psychology Tutor Tuart Hill, WA
Tutors can support their students through building meaningful connections with them, helping students understand how they learn best and how to further their understanding in learning areas. Assisting them in improving their grades by first understanding the student will improve their confidence and self-worth, which I believe to be essential for…
Anum
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Anum

Psychology Tutor Nollamara, WA
First of all respect for diversity and sincerity are the key factor to enter in any workforce. Secondly time managment, delivery method, discussion between students and parents, questionnaires to understand their views and observation, proper strategies and course plans are the other important things that every tutor should understand. Thirdly,…
Anthony
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Anthony

Psychology Tutor Northbridge, WA
I believe that instilling self-belief and critical thinking is the most important things a tutor can do for their student. Reflecting on my year 12 as got a score that I felt wasn't enough for medicine (96.00 ATAR), I have learnt to become someone who is collaborative and believes in a growth mindset after my a failure. in Year 12. I believe…
Katherine
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Katherine

Psychology Tutor Perth, WA
Listen and teach. I think it is so important for students to be listened to and helped accordingly. They must be given the space to work through problems they are facing themselves so that they can believe in their own abilities and increase their own self-efficacy. It is vital that the student can not only regurgitate an answer or process but…
Shannon
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Shannon

Psychology Tutor Nedlands, WA
I believe that it is important for a tutor to provide constructive but fair feedback to their students, while also providing practical advice and support to them, so they can improve in areas where they were originally struggling. I believe that I am a patient and understanding person, who is quite personable and can talk to people easily. I have…
Alexie
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Alexie

Psychology Tutor Perth, WA
Believe in the student's ability to learn and improve. Everyone has the capacity to succeed, enjoy learning, and become more confident in their own ability to improve! I am very patient - I believe it is important to make sure concepts are understood before moving on. I am confident in breaking scientific concepts down into simpler terms…

Local Reviews

Great service, took the drama out of finding a tutor. really impressed.
Alexandra M., Wembley Downs

Inside Wembley DownsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Jacob focused on prime factorization and calculating highest common factors and lowest common multiples through a series of number and word problems.

Year 8 student Maya worked on expanding algebraic brackets with both addition and subtraction, as well as rearranging equations to isolate variables.

Meanwhile, Year 5 student Olivia practiced converting between mixed, proper, and improper fractions and decimals, using visual aids to reinforce her understanding.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 maths, one student's tendency to avoid writing out working led to confusion with negatives—"he tried solving in his head and missed adding the minus sign."

Another Year 11 learner grew frustrated when extended problems required sustained effort, preferring breaks rather than persisting with written steps.

In English (Year 7), messy story planning made it hard to condense narratives within exam time limits; as a tutor observed, "the plot of a video game was recounted instead of an original story."

In multiple grades, skipping assigned reading meant students struggled to analyze texts or discuss beyond surface details.

Recent Achievements

One Wembley Downs tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student who used to get stuck on algebra—this week, after just a few reminders, he managed to expand brackets and rearrange equations on his own.

Another high schooler, usually hesitant with creative writing, surprised their tutor by finishing an entire story draft for the first time, building narrative flow much more confidently than before.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student who previously guessed at tricky words has started asking for help when reading aloud instead of skipping them—she now works through unfamiliar vocabulary step by step.

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 Scarborough Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Wembley Downs Primary School.