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Austinmer's tutors include a university teaching academic with over seven years' experience and 25+ published research papers, an award-winning primary/secondary school teacher with eight years' classroom and tutoring expertise, peer mentors and high school duxes, experienced K–12 coaches, Gold Duke of Edinburgh recipients, creative writers, STEM Olympiad participants, and specialist swim and sports instructors.

Natasha
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Natasha

Chemistry Tutor Woonona, NSW
I think a chemistry tutor should provide a fun, engaging and different approach to studying. A tutor should ask questions in a way a teacher hasn't got the time to do. They should always ask what the student wants and implement strategies as to how to attain these goals. But, perhaps at the forefront of responsibility, a tutor should always make…
Anders
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Anders

Chemistry Tutor Bulli, NSW
The most important thing for a chemistry tutor to be able to do is to help the student develop their own abilities, and give them study habits and practices in class that will help the student to deepen their understanding of the underlying principles being taught. A tutor must also be able to communicate with the student and explain problems in a…
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Aveen
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Aveen

Chemistry Tutor Corrimal, NSW
First of all I should make them like the subject and enjoy studying it then be their motivational friend more than just a tutor. Also tutor should make the student change their idea about someone is forcing them to study and start thinking that they doing that for their future and motivate them to start thing from the beginning what they want to…
Chun-Jung
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Chun-Jung

Chemistry Tutor East Corrimal, NSW
I think the most important things that a tutor and do for a student is to convey the idea that learning should be fun, regardless of whether the process of solving a problem is easy or complex. Being able to enjoy the process of problem solving can go beyond the classroom. Making it enjoyable for the students is critical for any successful tutor.…
Riley
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Riley

Chemistry Tutor Fairy Meadow, NSW
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to be patient and slowly help the student understand. If they are not quite getting the content, a tutor should also be able to teach it with a different approach, and eventually find a method that is intuitive for the student. As a tutor, some of my strengths are patience,…

Local Reviews

Byron and my son had a great rapport from day one. I can't believe how much value my child is getting from this tutoring - it far exceeds my expectations. Can't recommend Byron highly enough.
Gerald

Inside AustinmerTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Remi worked on multiplication and division through his homework, as well as quick-fire practice with fractions and time questions.

For Year 8, Olivia tackled linear equations using algebraic methods and revised rates and ratios with real-life worded problems.

In Year 10, Ben focused on solving quadratic equations both by completing the square and applying the quadratic formula, then explored how these relate to sketching parabolas on graphs.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 algebra, one student often assumed pronumerals kept the same order as previous questions, leading to confusion in working out—"attention to detail, especially to the pronumerals," as a tutor noted.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student facing hyperbolas and exponentials sometimes avoided showing all working, making it hard to spot calculation errors early.

For a primary learner with focus challenges, skipping numbers while counting down for subtraction led to incorrect answers until a short break helped him reset.

In Year 8 English, reliance on spellcheck replaced real spelling practice, reducing skill retention when writing without digital aids.

Recent Achievements

One Austinmer tutor noted a high school student who, after struggling with simultaneous equations, now confidently chooses between methods on her own and solves similar problems without prompting.

Another older student recently showed a big shift—after previously missing errors in quadratic factorisation, he's now actively spotting where he went wrong and can redo those questions correctly.

In Year 3, Remi had avoided finger-counting out of embarrassment, but this term he's begun using it openly for tougher addition and subtraction problems and even tackled perimeter questions for irregular shapes with less hesitation than before.

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 Thirroul Branch Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Austinmer Public School.