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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Bolivar include a former school Dux with an ATAR of 98.9 and Biology merit, a maths Olympiad winner and STEM competition champion, a veteran teacher with 25+ years' experience leading students to state exam top spots, experienced K–12 maths/science tutors, academic scholarship recipients, and multiple postgraduate-qualified subject specialists.

Hanny
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Hanny

Psychology Tutor Burton, SA
In my opinion, as a tutor, it is very important to cherish the students as they progressed, acknowledging their work and encourage them to try to do with their full potential. Besides, it is important to have an understanding of their best way of learning, and encourage them to question in their learning. Furthermore, awareness of their wellbeing…
Isla
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Isla

Psychology Tutor Direk, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can offer a child is patience. Impatience does not create a suitable learning environment. Qualities like these can prevent a child from wanting to learn, they may negatively associate with the subject, putting them further behind. Every child can succeed, given enough time. I have strengths as coach that…
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Ryan
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Ryan

Psychology Tutor Salisbury North, SA
The most important thing is for a tutor to help a student understand the concepts, rather than giving them answers, to help them towards understanding the work independently. I consider myself to be patient with my students as they learn at their own speeds, while providing them with the path to find the answer…
Michelle
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Michelle

Psychology Tutor Enfield, SA
Just being able to provide a good quality of help and support for a student, in an encouraging and motivating manner, is what I would consider to be the most important thing a tutor could do for their student. Furthermore, creating that resilience and space of being able to ask for help without feeling shame or guilt along the way. I believe that…
Adam
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Adam

Psychology Tutor Gillman, SA
As someone who studied Psychology for years, I can say that I did so because I had an excellent teacher for the subject in high school. My English teacher was also very nurturing despite my poor performance and that was an important experience for me. That encapsulates what I think is one of the most important things a tutor can do for a student:…

Local Reviews

James was wonderful. We are grateful for the fast response time and James's effectiveness as a tutor!
Matilda, Parafield Gardens

Inside BolivarTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Tom focused on calculating area for both simple and composite shapes, as well as reviewing key area formulas.

Year 9 student Archie worked through simplifying ratios and revisited BIDMAS and fractions after receiving his test results.

Meanwhile, Isobel in Year 10 tackled converting fractions to percentages alongside practising addition and subtraction with fractions, using real-world examples where possible.

Recent Challenges

In Year 3 maths, a student often left place value work incomplete and struggled to justify number patterns—"she can answer but doesn't understand why," noted a tutor. This made follow-up questions on sequences difficult.

By Year 7, another student hesitated to talk through problem-solving steps in composite shapes, preferring to guess rather than explain reasoning, which led to confusion when units or operations were missed.

In senior years (Year 11), heavy reliance on calculators replaced working out multiplication by hand, especially during exam-style questions; as one tutor observed, "she wasn't confident with arithmetic and defaulted straight to the calculator."

Recent Achievements

A Bolivar tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student who used to rush through maths problems and overlook mistakes; now, she's gotten into the habit of backchecking her work and caught every error herself last session.

Another high school student recently began talking through his approach out loud—he'd usually stay quiet and guess before, but now he explains his thinking and spots where he might go wrong.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who once struggled with reading analogue clocks can now both read times accurately and confidently draw clock hands when asked.

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 Burton Community Hub Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like The Pines School.