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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Basket Range include a PhD physicist and seasoned university demonstrator, a Master of Teaching-qualified science educator, multiple tutors with ATARs above 97—including subject prizewinners and Dux—robotics competition leaders, Kumon-trained mentors, experienced primary classroom assistants, accomplished musicians and creative writers, and academic coaches with extensive experience teaching and mentoring K–12 students.

ARPITA
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ARPITA

Tutor Magill, SA
I think a tutor must understand that every individual is different and must be able to mentor the students according to their individual needs and should guide and motivate the students on a regular basis. I have an engaging teaching style and explain concepts in clear, concise and easy to understand manner. I have an expertise in designing the…
Grace
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Grace

Tutor Athelstone, SA
Tutors not only have to have a solid grasp of the subjects but also a profound understanding of their students. Students have diverse ways of learning and having different ways of explaining things I think is important for a tutor to be successful at their job. Furthermore, making it as fun as you can for the students undergoing the tutoring is…
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Shraddha
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Shraddha

Tutor Newton, SA
Supporting student’s learning and help them to reach their educational goal, also need to be active listeners for students , building good relationships, creative and flexible learning consistency and etc. Communication Problem solving Patience Leadership…
Rashid
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Rashid

Tutor Newton, SA
Tutor should maintain a friendly envoirnment during his class. he should involve the students in active class discussion. He should use different techniques for making the lesson easier for his students. As shown in my CV, I have total of 13 years teaching experience at different levels including secondry school mathematics, Higher secondry school…
Vikramjeet
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Vikramjeet

Tutor Newton, SA
Bring back their confidence in subject Clear Maths…
Anna
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Anna

Tutor Newton, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor need to do for a student is to acknowledge it is not only a job. Acknowledge that we are important influences for students. Thus, we need to keep studying to be better for students, learn how to educate, willing to use more time, communicate with experienced teachers, ask if we do not know know to deal with…
Rucan
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Rucan

Tutor Burnside, SA
Provide a structured and highly efficient way of teaching that simultaneously encourages independent problem-solving and allows the student to understand the concepts in a comprehensive way. Students should have a deep understanding about the subject which is not just a cut-and-paste from what the teacher explains. Teaching independent critical…
Challista
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Challista

Tutor Erindale, SA
As tutor, we must make the student happy, comfortable, and have good communication with students. For example, when I have an opportunity to teach the students in primary 2. I want to teach them how to solve the math and explain the homework or material from school. After that, students must do the questions that i give or do the homework from…
Jiayi
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Jiayi

Tutor Magill, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is to listen patiently and understand the student's real challenges -- whether the issue comes form gaps in knowledge, unclear concepts, or lack of exam techniques. The role of a good tutor requires to guide students through each stage of learning while showing areas that need improvement. One of…
Jonathan
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Jonathan

Tutor Burnside, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is to accommodate their learning style. Students have ranging techniques and motivations when learning content. Personally, I struggled with auditory learning as a student, and would therefore ask my teachers to give me a range of tactile learning techniques to assist in my learning. I…
Oliver Scott
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Oliver Scott

Tutor Magill, SA
Being a tutor, the most important thing I can do is to be there for them. A tutor is not only some job that we do and get paid for but must go above and beyond to make a difference in their life. I have an engineering background and solid foundations, I love all things science but most of all, mathematics and…
Phuntsho
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Phuntsho

Tutor Rostrevor, SA
1. Listen to your students. 2. Be creative and flexible with learning styles. Everyone learns differently. 3. Teach students to problem solve. 4. Foster independence. 5. Be patient at all times. 6. Give your best. Out of the many qualities I possess, I believe I am a good listener. So that I can better understand students misconceptions and…
Jason
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Jason

Tutor Erindale, SA
One of the most important things I have realised over helping my friends in year 12 would be to walk through the question and not actually doing the question for the student. Sure you could do the question for them and they could get full marks for an assignment or whatever, but they would not understand the fundamentals lying behind the question…
Farzan
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Farzan

Tutor Burnside, SA
understanding that not all students understand concepts the same way and the first time that can sense when students do not understand and willingly tries another approach of presenting the material. Passionate, empathetic, good listener, explaining material in multiple ways, reliable, evaluating students with asking several questions, and Giving…
Thomas
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Thomas

Tutor Magill, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is support the student in overcoming their struggles in a subject, allowing students to reach their full academic potential. I hope to empower students by equipping them with the skills and knowledge required to succeed at school. I also hope to help students develop a genuine interest for…
Matthew
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Matthew

Tutor Burnside, SA
A tutor should display patience, kindness, and develop a relationship with the student; as well as personalised learning. I think it is important to develop different strategies of explaining concepts to students, this is a skill I was able to further improve whilst on placement. There is more to tennis coaching than teaching children how to…
Thanh Giang
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Thanh Giang

Tutor Athelstone, SA
I realize tutoring is not just about being a private teacher who delivers knowledge outside of school. It is also about being a mentor, a facilitator, a friend who can help learners grow and develop good habits in order to have the best performance in learning. Besides, the tutor is the one who understand the student' strengths and weaknesses in…
Jananita
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Jananita

Tutor Athelstone, SA
I believe in helping students effectively and encouraging them to enter the field of medicine, nutrition, and science. I practice being emphatic and help build confidence while teaching. I try to teach in small bites while meeting a time…
Jonathan
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Jonathan

Tutor Beaumont, SA
- Being available for the student not only during lesson times but during the week - Being empathetic that not all students learn at the same rate, every student is different and therefore require different teaching techniques - Being responsible and preparing teaching material in advance My main strengths lie in my communication skills. I…
Vladimiros
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Vladimiros

Tutor Athelstone, SA
Being able to identify the needs of the student. Encourage great work, even if it is a minor step in their learning to further develop their confidence in wanting to achieve and learn more. Patients and understands. Having two young school aged children myself being able to listen to their needs and finding ways to make learning fun, in a…
Bilal
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Bilal

Tutor Hectorville, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are providing personalized attention, building their confidence, and fostering a supportive learning environment. My strengths as a tutor include strong subject knowledge, effective communication skills, and the ability to adapt to different learning…
Ethan
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Ethan

Tutor Kensington Gardens, SA
Build interest. For younger student, most of them are still trying to find their interest in a certain field. The best thing I can do is to build interest with my humorous skill. Interest can lead students to an automatic learning mode, they will intake the related knowledge and digest them by themselves, and have the ability to do self-study,…
Joshua
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Joshua

Tutor Hectorville, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make a student enjoy the subject that they are teaching. This will give the students a bigger incentive to try and learn the subject for their self, as well as have more fun and eagerness in learning the subject. I try and cater more towards the things that my students are not as good at,…

Local Reviews

Alex is a natural teacher. He has a particular knack of being able to explain things in many different ways until the student gets it! He does this in a kind and caring way, building the students confidence.
Rebecca

Inside Basket RangeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Jack focused on fraction addition and subtraction with common denominators, then moved on to simplifying mixed number fractions using short written responses.

In Year 9, Alyssia worked through titration equations in chemistry—calculating molar ratios and manipulating the formula n = m/M and C × V—before revising galvanic cells and redox reactions for her upcoming exam.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Ethan tackled factorisation of polynomials alongside graphing linear equations, using practice problems to reinforce both skills.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors—this made it harder to spot where he went wrong and slowed progress on trickier questions.

A Year 9 student's messy handwriting and unclear layout, especially with fractions, led to confusion when checking answers later.

For a Year 11 Chemistry assignment, over-reliance on looking back at old solutions meant less independent problem-solving; the habit surfaced again during test prep for equations and conversions.

One Year 6 student lost focus during reasoning tasks, missing question cues entirely.

Missed opportunities for clear written reasoning meant strong understanding didn't always show up in assessment marks.

Recent Achievements

One Basket Range tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who, after repeatedly losing marks to "silly mistakes" in algebra and test settings, began slowing down and double-checking his work, catching errors before submitting practice questions.

A Year 9 student who used to wait passively for hints is now independently asking clarifying questions whenever she's stuck—especially with statistics topics—and even requests extra examples for practice.

Meanwhile, during a primary session, a younger learner started using commas correctly in writing exercises without reminders, having previously needed constant 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 Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Basket Range Primary School.