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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Williamstown's tutors include a seasoned K–12 English and humanities teacher, an international primary educator with a master's, multiple VCE/IB subject award-winners—including an ATAR 97.9 Dux and Maths Olympiad top scorer—specialist science and maths mentors, experienced peer coaches, youth activity leaders, and passionate creative instructors for music, dance, sport, chess, swimming and more.

Jocelyn
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Jocelyn

Psychology Tutor Melbourne, VIC
My goal is to support students in building both knowledge and independent learning skills, so they can become more confident and motivated in their studies. I’m approachable, patient, and good at breaking down complex ideas into simpler steps, which I think makes students feel comfortable asking…
Jing  Wen
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Jing Wen

Psychology Tutor North Melbourne, VIC
Being patient and attend to student’s question, be honest when I don’t know about certain things and look it up from a trusted resource instead of giving a vague or incorrect guidance Give positive encouragement, teach according to the children’s competency level, recap and ensure they have the knowledge and well understanding on current…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Casey
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Casey

Psychology Tutor Carlton, VIC
The most important thing I can do as a tutor is to empower students to become independent learners. This means teaching them not just the subject matter, but also critical thinking and study skills, and fostering a supportive environment for their growth As a tutor, I excel in creating a supportive learning environment and adapting to students'…
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123

Psychology Tutor Carlton, VIC
Listening to the student, being proactive and anticipating areas they may struggle with. Being easily accessible, such as tutoring students at their home or online. Patience, every student learns at their own pace. Explaining, my ability to clearly articulate each step needed to solve a problem. Relateability, I've also been in that student's…
Hazel
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Hazel

Psychology Tutor Parkville, VIC
Everybody learns differently, and trying to apply the same approach to everyone is going to leave students struggling and frustrated. I adapt my teaching style to the way a student learns, and don't enforce a certain way of thinking - instead, I equip them with the tools to approach any problem in a way that works for them. I have two years'…
Nienke
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Nienke

Psychology Tutor Parkville, VIC
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student is support them academically, as well as personally. I believe that it is vital to approach each student holistically, catering for each individual in accordance with their personal needs. Secondly, I believe it is important that students are supported according to their own goals,…
Geordie
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Geordie

Psychology Tutor Ascot Vale, VIC
1) Give them the means to teach themselves, rather than have to rely on tutelage 2) Inspire them to continue learning with their own pace and style 3) Inspire them to ask questions about things they don't understand. 1) Making learning interesting, so that the student looks forward to tutoring 2) Stepping a student through a complicated…
Ayla
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Ayla

Psychology Tutor Parkville, VIC
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to listen to them. To ask and listen to what the student needs in order to understand difficult concepts goes a long way in ensuring students receive the most out of their sessions. I frequently ask my students if they prefer various ways of me teaching (worksheets, games, verbal…
Leanne
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Leanne

Psychology Tutor
A tutor needs to provide support and consideration of a student's abilities, and empower the student to achieve beyond what they think they can achieve. In particular, for younger students, I believe that tutors can and will help to lay the foundational stones that will provide the driving force to empower students to their best. Even if a…

Local Reviews

We are very happy with Emma as Beth’s tutor.
Charnie, Williamstown

Inside WilliamstownTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Emily focused on adding and subtracting fractions and worked through worded questions involving long division to strengthen calculation skills.

Year 8 student Liam practiced expanding brackets in algebra and solved problems involving linear relations, including plotting points on Cartesian planes.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Olivia tackled quadratic equations and explored index laws, using example problems to reinforce her understanding of powers and roots.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Maths, a student relied heavily on calculators for matrix and network problems; as one tutor observed, "it would be worth revising how to calculate matrix problems by hand."

In Year 8, written work was often disorganized—answers weren't lined up when working with decimals, making it hard to track mistakes.

During a Year 5 session, a student repeatedly erased and rewrote answers rather than showing working steps, which made it tough to check reasoning or catch errors.

For a Year 9 learner, skipping notation and not simplifying fractions meant correct answers took longer to verify during revision.

Recent Achievements

A Williamstown tutor recently noticed Eddison, a high school student, becoming much more independent in his problem-solving—he now shows all his working out when expanding brackets and grouping like terms, which is a big change from when he'd rush to answers without explaining steps.

Chelsea, also in high school, has started using factor trees to break numbers into prime factors on her own and can clearly explain the difference between index and expanded form—a real leap from needing prompts last term.

In Year 5 maths, Genevieve finally clicked with the concept of area by reasoning through why side lengths are multiplied; she then solved several worded problems involving area without hesitation.

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