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Private science tutors that come to you in person or online

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Avalon Beach's tutors include a seasoned K–6 classroom teacher with dual education degrees, a Maths Club leader and distinction awardee from Manly Selective, peer mentors and academic leaders, cello and ski instructors experienced with young learners, an HSC ATAR 98 achiever in advanced science, and accomplished coaches in sport, music, English and STEM.

Melissa
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Melissa

Science Tutor Avalon Beach, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to be a source of inspiration and support. I believe all students are equally capable and that with a little bit of tutor motivation and support, they can grow. I would consider my biggest strength to be my patience. I understand that some kids may not be as quick as others and I don't mind…
Hannah
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Hannah

Science Tutor Mona Vale, NSW
A tutor needs to provide their student with support, tools, skills and most importantly understanding of how they can effectively approach their studies and achieve the best possible results they can. A tutor should also make their student feel comfortable, creating a sense of trust between them and allowing for more effective tutoring sessions.…
1st Lesson Trial

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Caitlin
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Caitlin

Science Tutor Mona Vale, NSW
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is give them a personalised teaching experience. Often there are other factors at play in the progress of a student's learning than just their mental ability. Being able to recognise and connect to the child will open up numerous learning pathways to allow them to reach their full…
Emma
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Emma

Science Tutor Bilgola Plateau, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to give them the confidence that they have the ability to learn. Tutors shouldn't be doing the work for the student but rather giving them the tools required to continue to grow and become active learners even after the tutoring session has ended. I am very patient, kind and empathetic and I…
Billy
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Billy

Science Tutor Clareville, NSW
Foster self-confidence in their subject areas, as the main hurdle many students face, is self-doubt in their ability, which causes them to give up on their courses. I know the content very well and have helped many of my peers overcome things they don't understand in the syllabus. So I am familiar with many of the common problems students face in…
Nathan
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Nathan

Science Tutor Mona Vale, NSW
Being reliable, organized, and passionate about seeing others succeed. Also being adaptable to people's learning styles. I’m patient, a great communicator, and good at breaking down complex concepts into more straightforward, more understandable parts. I always aim to create a supportive environment where students feel confident asking questions…
Jasmine
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Jasmine

Science Tutor Mona Vale, NSW
Tutors should be willing to listen and work well with students to achieve their personal goals. Tutors must foster or inspire a strong work ethic within students, motivating them to strive to reach their personal best. Aside from increasing a student's comprehension of particular subjects, tutors should highlight the importance of speaking up and…
Sue-Binn
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Sue-Binn

Science Tutor Warriewood, NSW
I believe that the most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is help them find a passion for learning and guide them in their studies so that the student can find a subject or a topic that they are passionate about and love. I think that the most important thing for a student is not only the grade that they achieve but also the…
Riley
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Riley

Science Tutor Elanora Heights, NSW
It's the responsibility of a tutor to meet students where they are at. Tutors should come to learn the boundaries of what their students do and do not understand and create structure and context for pushing those boundaries to ultimately envelop the knowledge they need to succeed. This can sometimes mean "back-filling" missing knowledge or…
Firdaus
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Firdaus

Science Tutor Narrabeen, NSW
One of the most important skills I believe a tutor can develop is the art of explaining material in different ways. Often, when students struggle to understand some concept, explaining the material in the same way repeatedly does not help. The key then is to try approaching the material in different ways until the student can grasp it. Past tutees…
Sandhya
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Sandhya

Science Tutor Narrabeen, NSW
The most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is to create an environment which will enable them to feel comfortable while studying and be a good listener and teach a student how to learn. I can help my students engage in the study. I can help them analyse their weakness and find ways to improve them. I am always helping them to grow…

Local Reviews

Jacob is a fine tutor :-).
Samantha, Avalon Beach

Inside Avalon BeachTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Alex focused on area and perimeter of rectangles and triangles, then applied these skills to composite shapes using step-by-step breakdowns.

In Year 8, Jamie worked through surface area and volume calculations for cylinders, pyramids, and cones, practicing with real-world examples.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Sam tackled trigonometry problems involving angles of elevation and depression, building confidence by drawing diagrams to visualise each scenario.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 algebra, one student sometimes makes small mistakes while substituting/simplifying expressions—messy layout in working made it hard to catch errors before moving on.

For a Year 10 task on bearings and financial maths, missing formulas slowed progress; the formula sheet wasn't referenced even when available.

In Year 6 geometry, imprecise diagrams (needs to be more careful and precise when drawing shapes given the dimensions) meant answers didn't match the question.

A senior student tackling logarithms relied heavily on notes for index laws rather than recalling them—this delayed problem-solving during class examples.

Recent Achievements

One Avalon Beach tutor noticed a Year 11 student finally nailed the chain rule for differentiation, after weeks of confusion with product and quotient rules—she now works through multi-step problems independently.

A Year 9 student who used to avoid tough algebraic fractions surprised her tutor by choosing to tackle an extra challenge and correctly simplified expressions without prompting.

Meanwhile, in primary sessions, one Year 4 boy—who'd relied on counting fingers for every sum—switched to using 'rainbow' number bonds for larger additions and finished his worksheet without finger-counting at all.

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 Avalon Community Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Maria Regina Catholic Primary School.