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Private information-processing-technology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Bardon's tutors include a secondary maths and science teacher with international experience, an ATAR 98.8 graduate and multi-subject tutor, university medalists in engineering and IT, experienced K–12 mentors and coaches, peer support leaders, music scholars, published researchers, and seasoned educators—each bringing impressive academic records and a genuine passion for teaching young people.

Washim
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Washim

Info Processing Tutor New Farm, QLD
The most important thing I can do for a student is make them ask questions and help them attain a intuitive understanding of core topics. My expertise in Mathematics, Computer Programming and Physics are my greatest strengths. Moreover, I have proven experience in teaching and working with students. Organizational skills and effective…
Carl
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Carl

Info Processing Tutor Sherwood, QLD
I believe that it is a tutor's responsibility to be accountable for a student's academic performance. As such, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are: - maintaining a flexible teaching approach to tailor a student's study to their capabilities, learning style and circumstances - encouraging and inspiring engagement with the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Manasa
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Manasa

Info Processing Tutor Sinnamon Park, QLD
I think there are 3 very important things that a tutor can do for a student; - Be transparent about how to succeed - Wholeheartedly believe in the student and - Invest in them both emotionally and academically I think my strengths as a tutor are that I am able to immediately connect with the student and I make an effort to understand their…
Alexis
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Alexis

Info Processing Tutor Jindalee, QLD
The most important things I for a tutor to do is understand and listen to the student. Not listening can be one of the most frustrating things as a student, where the tutor doesn't understand what they actually need help with, and wastes time going over the wrong content in the wrong way. Being able to understand the student, and then properly…
Liam
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Liam

Info Processing Tutor Chermside, QLD
Believe in their potential and support their growth. I learn knew skills quickly and take on any challenge. I am good at explaining problems to others and I am organised. I can be quiet and shy at times which can hinder work especially with…

Local Reviews

We are very happy with the tutoring and our tutor is very good with my children. They are really enjoying it and this speaks volumes as they were both very opposed to the idea!
Sarah, The Gap

Inside BardonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Oskar worked on algebra and number patterns using his Year 5 Maths Resource book, with extra practice set for homework.

A Year 7 student used real-world Kokoda Challenge event data to calculate average speeds between checkpoints, applying rate and time calculations in a practical context.

For a Year 10 student, recent lessons included probability concepts, normal distribution curves, and an introduction to derivatives and exponential distributions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 7 algebra, skipping the habit of back-checking led to "a few minor errors which checking could easily fix," especially when fractions were involved.

A Year 11 student tackling derivatives sometimes began new questions before finishing previous ones, causing confusion and unfinished working.

In upper primary, homework in multiplication was occasionally left incomplete or not attempted with pencil and paper, despite reminders.

For a Year 8 word problem set, rushing to answer before fully understanding the question resulted in misinterpreted tasks; as one tutor observed, "he needs to work on fully understanding what a question is asking before attempting it."

Recent Achievements

One Bardon tutor noted a Year 10 student who used to quietly guess through division questions now talks aloud while working, and has started double-checking answers with pencil and paper—something he'd never done before.

In Year 8 maths, another student who often avoided larger worded problems has begun breaking them into steps using new strategies, showing clear independence in tackling multi-part questions.

A Year 4 learner, previously hesitant with subtraction, now solves bigger addition and subtraction tasks out loud, explaining her thinking as she works. Last week she completed her homework without any reminders or prompts.

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 Ashgrove Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Joseph's School.