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Tutors in Bonnyrigg include a school dux and captain with multiple leadership awards, seasoned private maths and English tutors, a current learning support officer at Bossley Park High, ATAR 94+ and HSC high achievers, university scholars in education, law, science and optometry, peer mentors, youth leaders, and competition winners across STEM and the arts.

Dinesh
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Dinesh

Info Processing Tutor Warwick Farm, NSW
I believe in these times students lack I confidence and motivation of what learning really is about. They are continuously forced to learn new concepts quickly and they This works to a certain extent but I would pass on my knowledge as a friendly tutor giving the students clear explanations and the reason to learn. At the same time, I will…
Bikram
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Bikram

Info Processing Tutor Liverpool, NSW
There are few things such as: Motivate and encourage them to get the results. must create trust and respect. Teacher must listen to the students. Be friendly and inspire them. I Have a passion and calm nature. I understand the students and behavior. I have that energy to provide help to students. I can adapt my self as per the…
1st Lesson Trial

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Sushil
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Sushil

Info Processing Tutor Carramar, NSW
I think the most important skills a tutor can do for student is to be patience and communicate. Understand student about their difficulties. Since I am dealing with students and their weaknesses, I must be patient regardless of the circumstances. Also, the only way to do my job as a tutor is to convey difficult information to students through…
Rodolph
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Rodolph

Info Processing Tutor Georges Hall, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to teach him the problem solving skills, and motivate him to apply his skills on any problem he faces. After gaining experience with several types of personalities, I am now a tutor that understands how the student thinks. I motivate the student to figure out the solutions himself in a fun…
Muhammad Saadmann R
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Muhammad Saadmann R

Info Processing Tutor Glenfield, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can give to a student, I would say is give hope and ease the path they are taking. I have been teaching and mentoring for more than 7 years, and it is nice to see where my students have reached. It is a really nice feeling, when you know your students are doing well in terms of education as well as the mental…
Ha Cong Duy
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Ha Cong Duy

Info Processing Tutor Liverpool, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is to invoke a students' desire to learn and teach them how to learn by themselves. I strongly believe that a person's curiosity and learning skills will be valuable throughout their life. I think my biggest strength is my ability to invoke curiosity and inspire students to learn. I also tend to…
Daniel
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Daniel

Info Processing Tutor Lurnea, NSW
Being able to give them the independence of trying a question and then spending a reasonable amount of time trying to solve it rather than only explaining for the full tutoring session. My strength would be pinpointing what the student doesn't understand and using analogies or using patterns from concepts they already understand to portray the…
Jaoha
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Jaoha

Info Processing Tutor Edmondson Park, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to motivate a student when they feel demotivated by making them feel confident in their skills and knowledge. It's important for the tutor to provide full support and guidance in an individualised manner to tailor to their specific needs. It's also important for the tutor to communicate…

Local Reviews

Ushy is very comfortable with Quyen and she enjoyed her lesson.
Georgina, Mount Pritchard

Inside BonnyriggTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Emily focused on graphing equations and explored algebraic concepts from her schoolwork, including simplifying and solving linear equations.

In Year 9, Sam worked through factorising quadratic equations and practised graphing parabolas—identifying x- and y-intercepts as well as turning points using plotted examples.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Daniel revised non-right-angle trigonometry, tackling area of triangles with the sine rule and cosine rule, alongside exam preparation questions covering these advanced topics.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 algebra, one student avoided writing out steps for rearranging equations, saying "I can do this in my head," which led to sign errors and confusion when checking work.

In senior maths (Years 11–12), a reluctance to attempt unfamiliar composite or box plot questions was noted—hesitation meant valuable practice with new formats was missed.

For a Year 4 student, not drawing models or recording calculations during area word problems made it harder to spot mistakes, as noted by the tutor: "He needs to organise his ideas on paper."

In each case, important learning moments slipped past unnoticed.

Recent Achievements

One Bonnyrigg tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to guess when stuck now stops to ask for help, especially with unfamiliar probability questions—she's showing real initiative compared to earlier sessions.

Another high schooler recently began double-checking his algebra steps after losing marks to sign errors; he caught and fixed two mistakes during the lesson without prompting.

In a primary session, a Year 5 student who'd mixed up obtuse and reflex angles before is now reliably identifying both types by thinking about "amount of turn," even teaching back the rule at the end of her session.

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 Green Valley Branch Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Bonnyrigg Public School.