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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Busby's tutors include seasoned K–12 maths and English specialists from NumberWorks'nWords and Kumon, university scholars with ATARs up to 93.3, school duxes, a Science Olympiad participant, peer mentors, aspiring teachers in Education degrees, and community leaders—offering expertise honed through years of private tutoring, mentoring, coaching and academic distinction.

Elif
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Elif

Tutor Prestons, NSW
Patience and a positive reward system. It is very important to give the students time to let new concepts cement in their minds. It always helps with a reward system Determination and understanding. No matter how difficult the topic is or if they don't understand it at all, I can explain it 50 times over in 50 different…
Brian
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Brian

Tutor Cabramatta, NSW
Any tutor, mentor, educator, or teacher all have something different to offer their students: but the goal is the same and it should be this: to help empower those who can't empower themselves in order to bring forth the best version of that individual into the world. It is through education, knowledge and the reciprocation of knowledge that…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Meryem
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Meryem

Tutor Fairfield East, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is listen to what they are asking, and targeting their weak areas within the prospective subject. By doing so the tutor should aim to tailor each lesson accordingly. I think my strengths as a tutor would be my perseverance, clarity when explaining concepts, the ability to identify a…
Mohammad
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Mohammad

Tutor Hoxton Park, NSW
Be able to guide them and morally support them. Without motivating a student, your teaching efforts are wasted. I am experienced in teaching myself and my peers. I am also a master at analysing my fellow tutors' teaching methods and applying those strategies to my own. I also have great communication skills through experience with working in peer…
Aram
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Aram

Tutor Warwick Farm, NSW
The most important things tutors can do for students are encouraging them, keeping their students motivated allows the students, especially younger ones to have a higher chance of success due to high motivation and encouragement which causes self belief. Other important things a tutor can do is have a personal yet professional relationship which…
Shengyang
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Shengyang

Tutor Cabramatta, NSW
Personally, I think the role of a tutor is to help student with what they need, thus we can assist them in the most effective way. For example, a tutor can figure out the weakness of a student thus the tutor can assist student to get improvement on that areas. Currently, I am doing Bachelor of Education in Usyd, After 1 year of study, I developed…
Thaison
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Thaison

Tutor Bardia, NSW
The most important role a tutor can play is showing constant and unconditional support for their student. This is something I've learned from the example of my previous tutor who answered almost every email or text message within the hour within reason. I believe showing this constant support allows the student to trust us as tutors and react more…
Joanna
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Joanna

Tutor Chipping Norton, NSW
Definitely help the student develop confidence in their subjects and themselves. Being patient with a student is also an absolute must as they are undergoing extremely stressful situations. I am a very patient individual. Having freshly graduated from high school, I am able to relate to any struggle students may be facing and help them to mentally…

Local Reviews

We have been extremely pleased with John’s progress with Aaron this year. He has been very patient and caring and we appreciate everything he has done with Aaron this year. They really were a great tutor/student combination.
Carolyn

Inside BusbyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Jay worked through multiplying and dividing indices as well as solving linear equations, focusing on step-by-step methods for each.

Year 11 student Emma tackled differentiation using the chain rule and first principles, then applied these skills to real HSC-style questions.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Daniel practiced statistical analysis by interpreting different types of graphs and calculating z-scores within the context of normal distribution problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student often chose to solve equations mentally rather than writing out steps, making it hard to spot errors and "see the steps that he's taking."

In Year 11, messy working—especially when using too much space—meant calculations for complex algebra became difficult to follow, even for the student.

A Year 12 learner struggled with long worded questions in trial exam preparation; confusion arose from not clearly identifying objectives within problems.

Another senior student hesitated to check answers or would second-guess himself after setbacks. This left him unsure if his solutions were truly correct under pressure.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Busby noticed a big shift with Aryan (Year 10): he used to get stuck when tackling unfamiliar maths problems, but recently started breaking down harder questions into smaller steps on his own—something he avoided before.

Anne (Year 12) had struggled to re-learn older algebra topics, yet this week she worked through revision problems more quickly and even solved equations without needing prompts.

Meanwhile, Daniel (Year 9) has become much more proactive; rather than glossing over mistakes from his last exam, he now looks back at his working out to spot and correct errors himself.

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 James Busby High School.