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Belair's tutors include a Cambridge-educated PhD and university lecturer, an ATAR 98.9 Dux with extensive youth leadership, a medical student with multiple academic prizes, IB and SACE high achievers in maths and sciences, seasoned K–12 mentors and coaches, national award recipients, camp leaders, and accomplished musicians passionate about helping students thrive.

Harrison
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Harrison

Economics Tutor Fullarton, SA
- To always be supportive of the students when they are facing problems in their learning. - Being able to explain concepts clearly as well as making concepts easier to understand for the student. - Being able to understand and relate to the student's problem. Being able to put myself in the students shoes and understanding the problems that the…
Alistair
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Alistair

Economics Tutor Cumberland Park, SA
Just be student focussed. Make them think for themselves. It took me a long time in my personal education journey to learn this, but once I learnt it, I make sure my students don't make the mistake of learning passively. They need to get involved, think for themselves, and this way they'll not only retain what they learn, but grow more broadly…
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Sahana
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Sahana

Economics Tutor Fullarton, SA
I believe a tutor should possess excellent organisational, communication skills and good subject knowledge and Curriculum knowledge. It is important to understand the difficulty students go through in learning a particular subject. As a tutor we need to be patient. Above all, its the impact on children; we could be the reason a student develops a…
Omer
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Omer

Economics Tutor Glen Osmond, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are clarify difficult concepts, build confidence, and encourage independent thinking. A tutor should not just provide answers but help students develop a deeper understanding of the subject by guiding them through problems and encouraging critical thinking. Equally important is creating a…
Olivia
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Olivia

Economics Tutor Upper Sturt, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is be able to teach them skills that they can use in their studies after they are finished with a tutor. Obviously it is a tutors job to teach them the task at hand, but I believe a great tutor is able to teach the student skills that will allow them to do better in school without the…
Veanna
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Veanna

Economics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
- communication, trust and team work. communication is not only important for the teaching aspect of tutoring but i would like my student to be confident enough in me such that they can voice out their doubts and concerns to me. trust is important in making sure that they are able to confide in me and team work because if they cooperate with me…
Chethmi
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Chethmi

Economics Tutor Clarence Gardens, SA
In my opinion the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help them improve academically by being patient and encouraging and supporting their goals. Each student is different and hence has different hopes for their academic results, the tutors job is to help the student improve so that they can be proud of their work. Due to my…
Grace
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Grace

Economics Tutor Fullarton, SA
I think the ability to listen to the needs of each student to tailor your methods to them is vital in maximising their success. In the same vein, I think it is important to provide students with learning strategies that they can approach problems with in the future, to help build their toolbox, rather than approaching each new assignment or…
Syed
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Syed

Economics Tutor Fullarton, SA
I think it is important for a tutor to not only further the knowledge and skills of a student but also help the student develop confidence in their abilities and make the relevant subject enjoyable. As someone who has worked individually throughout high school, I have developed efficient and valuable learning techniques that can only come with…
Maria
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Maria

Economics Tutor Millswood, SA
The important thing is to develop the student's ability to independently study. It is like that proverb 'Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.' There are going to be times where the student will find themselves in a position with an urgent question regarding their assignment which is…
Anant
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Anant

Economics Tutor Eastwood, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their students is to foster a supportive and encouraging learning environment. This involves not only teaching the material but also building the student’s confidence in their own abilities. A tutor should inspire curiosity and provide the tools for students to become independent learners, so they feel…
Taison
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Taison

Economics Tutor Glenside, SA
The most important thing is to answer their questions and teach them well, not just know copy the answers down but actually understand what's going and teach them my own experience As a Chinese background student, I think my math is good and I'm a people person as I have customer service for more than two years and I really want to make more…
Manar Saleh
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Manar Saleh

Economics Tutor Park Holme, SA
A tutor can make a student’s academic life less stressful and more successful by explaining lessons in a way that suits their age and level, with patience. A tutor should also make sure the student understands the concepts, not just memorizes them, and answer all the questions the student might be too shy to ask in class. Patience and creative…
Ayanee
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Ayanee

Economics Tutor South Plympton, SA
I think being able to answer all their inquires and helping them grow in the subject is a very important part of being a tutor. I also think being patient is an essential trait to have as at times you may need to think of different ways to explain concepts for students to be able to grasp it I think I’m very good at explaining things to students…
Aryan
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Aryan

Economics Tutor Sturt, SA
Encouragement and motivation are two of the biggest qualities that make or break a tutor; a tutor should be able to provide positive reinforcement to their students and support them all the way. Another important note is that a tutor should be versatile and adaptable, for not every child is the same, and it falls upon the tutor to make sure that…
Pegah
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Pegah

Economics Tutor Tusmore, SA
Personally, building a students confidence within a subject is the most important aspect of tutoring. This means providing personalised support and encouraging critical thinking to allow for subject understandng to occur. As more understanding is built, students confidence grows as well. I have strong subject knowledge for both mathematics and…
Tahsin
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Tahsin

Economics Tutor Plympton, SA
Being patient is the single most important thing a tutor can do his/her students. In my experience, I reaped the biggest rewards of being patient with the most struggling students of a cohort in terms of learning outcomes. In relative terms, return on patience with students outstrips that on all other aspects of tutor effort in my personal…
Kanishk
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Kanishk

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
Inspire them to be good humans. The tutors not only teach a particular subject but also leaves a dense shadow on youngsters' personality. Answering their doubts and making sure that the student is not going off track. I believe patience is one of the most important factors for any tutor. Understanding the queries and answering them require a lot…
Mason
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Mason

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to inspire their curiosity and desire for learning because it is their desire that will ultimately drive them to succeed. I think my strength as a tutor is my personality. I'm very kind, patient, and funny. I always find a way to make learning more…
Rongxi
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Rongxi

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
-Provide useful and effective learning strategies that suits the characteristics of the student. -Reinforce the concept using inquiry based learning exercises to improve student’s understanding. -Guide the students to see the correlation between the theory and the real-world, thus improve their motivation in learning. My experience of being an…
Nick
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Nick

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
I believe is the ability of self thinking. As a tutor, our job is to lead to students to the correct way of thinking and figuring out the questions. We can provide them the relevant sources to help them think. I believe it is the patience that make me a good tutor. Even if the student cannot get the point directly, I would repeat again and again…
Kehkashan
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Kehkashan

Economics Tutor Leabrook, SA
I believe a tutor can give them a right direction and help them to become a life long learner. A Tutor can change the life and thinking of her students by inculcating the love of knowledge in her students. I am very good at meeting individual needs of my students as I believe every students is unique and has a capability which enable her/him to be…
Jessica
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Jessica

Economics Tutor Leabrook, SA
Find their weaknesses and guide them to improve in those areas such that the student can become more well rounded and continually achieve higher. I can empathise with students and motivate them to perform to their fullest…

Local Reviews

I'd like to highly recommend Dwight to any other families. His kind and patient demeanor translate into a great tutor. He's been very helpful. My daughter just got her results from her Algebra test which Dwight had to catch her up on as that's one of the topics she missed. She got 93%. Great result and proof of Dwights great tutoring.
Tonia

Inside BelairTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Jamie worked on solving linear and exponential equations, using step-by-step calculator support to tackle both growth and decay scenarios.

In Year 10, Sarah practised applying the sine and cosine rules to trigonometry problems involving non-right-angled triangles, as well as working through bearing questions with diagrams.

Meanwhile, Year 6 student Oliver focused on multiplying decimals and tackling measurement tasks such as calculating surface area and volume for common 3D shapes.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, one student repeatedly arrived without essential materials like a graph book and textbook, which led to lost learning time and avoidance of discussing progress. As one tutor noted, "He packed up as soon as he finished the last question," signaling reluctance to review or extend learning.

In Year 10, technical issues and missing equipment—such as an uncharged calculator—slowed down online lessons and left the student less prepared for digital tasks requiring graphs.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner's clumsy written work made their problem-solving process difficult for both parent and teacher to follow.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Belair recently noticed a Year 10 student who started the term hesitant with trigonometry now confidently finding angles and sides using SOH CAH TOA, even catching the tutor's slip-ups—a big shift from earlier sessions where she needed step-by-step guidance.

Another high schooler, usually quite chatty, surprised her tutor by staying focused and harnessing pre-test nerves to push through a full session of independent study, turning stress into motivation instead of overwhelm.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student who once kept quiet is now asking thoughtful questions during lessons and even borrowed a textbook from school on her own initiative.

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 Blackwood Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St John's Grammar School - Secondary Campus.