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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Wright's tutors include an ANU Health Science entrant with a perfect 99.95 rank and maths awards, an experienced K–12 tutor and current education student, a peer mentor with years of engineering study, a youth coach for 100+ kids, multiple STEM high-achievers, and university students with Olympiad experience and specialist mathematics credentials.

Greg
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Greg

PDHPE Tutor Coombs, ACT
As a reliable and motivational tutor, I lead by example demonstrating initiative to commence and finish projects. I set clear expectations and monitor performance against agreed plans with key performance indicators. As trust, confidence and good performance is further demonstrated, I encourage initiative and reward students with more autonomy. I…
Emily
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Emily

PDHPE Tutor Acton, ACT
I think the most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is listen. Listen to their problem, why they may not understand a concept, and then help to solve the problem together. I think that having fun, is also very important. One of my main goals aside from helping a student understand the content, is to help the student enjoy the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in PDHPE

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Kaitlyn
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Kaitlyn

PDHPE Tutor Denman Prospect, ACT
Be understanding as not the same method is gonna work for all students so me being flexible and encouraging to support them in finding the best way which works for them is the most imperative thing to get them were they wanna be I feel my caring patient qualities would help especially with younger kids to establish a relationship in order to be…
Nicholas
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Nicholas

PDHPE Tutor Acton, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to actively listen regarding what the student needs help with. This will ensure the student will get the most of his/her session. Being able to actively listening to student feedback will be vital to becoming a successful tutor. Being able to adapt to each individuals learning style as no…
Talia
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Talia

PDHPE Tutor Page, ACT
I believe that a good tutor will be patient and do their best to explain concepts in a way that the individual student will understand and also do their best to answer any questions. I also think a really important thing a tutor can do for a student is emphasise the importance of persisting and learning from failure. I also believe it is important…
Chloe
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Chloe

PDHPE Tutor Acton, ACT
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is listen to them. This is the only way to know what they don't understand and where they need help. Positive feedback is also essential in tutoring. If the student feels like they aren't making any progress and that they will never understand the problem, then they may give up all…
Shayan
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Shayan

PDHPE Tutor Belconnen, ACT
Patience and an emphatic approach to teaching are essential for a tutor. Students may lack confidence, be overwhelmed with material, and be stressed. Therefore, it's important to be considerate and patient. This approach can also help understand students' misconceptions and errors by being patient, and listening to students can reveal what areas…

Local Reviews

We recently started tuition with Edison, and I couldn't be happier with how things are going. Edison has been making a big difference, not just in terms of Math skills, but in my son's motivation and confidence. They've built a great rapport and Edison has been showing his solid background in the subject, but more importantly, he is demonstrating a natural ability to make learning feel approachable and enjoyable. If you're looking for someone who not only knows Maths but also knows how to connect with a student, Edison is an absolute gem. We're very happy we found him!
Fab Fantini

Inside WrightTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 Sam focused on revising long division and practising the addition and subtraction of fractions, also touching on converting decimals to percentages using number line activities.

Year 10 Vamsi worked through probability concepts such as sample space and independence, then applied skills in interpreting exam results and tackling binomial distribution problems with guided exercises.

For Year 11 Alan, lessons concentrated on mastering calculus topics including the chain rule, product rule, quotient rule for derivatives, and applying these to find stationary points using past exam-style questions.

Recent Challenges

When facing lengthy calculus problems, a Year 11 student often skipped steps and panicked over multiple formulas—"he jumped ahead or missed symbols in derivatives," a tutor observed.

In exams, another senior student left questions blank and struggled to manage time effectively, losing marks not for lack of knowledge but from incomplete answers.

A Year 7 learner sometimes misread instructions in algebra or didn't fully answer long division questions.

For one Year 4 writer, spelling errors persisted despite good ideas; the challenge lay in not checking work thoroughly before moving on. This led to frustration when reviewing results.

Recent Achievements

A Wright tutor noticed one high school student who used to skip over tough calculus questions is now listing all relevant formulas and breaking down each step before answering—he even spotted his own mistakes from a recent exam, which he hadn't done previously.

Another Year 10 student, after struggling with polyatomic ions in chemistry, now quickly identifies their charges and completes equation balancing tasks at a faster pace than before.

Meanwhile, in primary years, Sam has moved from confusion about long division to scoring 97% on multiplication quizzes and independently working through BODMAS calculations 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 Woden Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Charles Weston School.