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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Canberra's tutors include a university-level maths lecturer and private tutor with an ATAR of 99.15, an award-winning mathematical sciences scholar and school dux (ATAR 99.25), experienced K–12 English, maths and science tutors, accomplished coding instructors, multiple postgraduate degree holders, and Olympiad medalists—all bringing proven teaching expertise and standout academic excellence to every lesson.

Punyashree
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Punyashree

Psychology Tutor Canberra, ACT
The best thing that a tutor can do for a student is empathise. Putting myself in their shoes and trying to understand what they go through and understanding their perspective of the world does half the magic! I am an efficient communicator. I can put concepts across in a way that the other person can understand. I have acquired certifications in…
Shanae
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Shanae

Psychology Tutor Canberra, ACT
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is create a safe, supportive environment where students feel comfortable, respected, and free from judgment. Learning thrives when students are not afraid to make mistakes or ask questions. My role is to meet each student where they are academically, to listen carefully to their needs, and to…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Mandisa
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Mandisa

Psychology Tutor Acton, ACT
I believe that a tutor shouldn't be perceived as a strictly authoritative figure - keeping the student engaged and building a strong relationship is a vital component in the effectiveness of the tutoring. Students - myself included - gain much more knowledge when lessons are more flexible. It usually takes me a few sessions to understand a…
Thyagi
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Thyagi

Psychology Tutor Cook, ACT
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is to improve a student's confidence with the subject they are tutoring. Once a student has the confidence that they can in fact figure it out they will be far more willing to put in the hard work to improve in the subject. A tutor must encourage their students to ask as many questions as they'd like…
Linda
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Linda

Psychology Tutor Bruce, ACT
Improving a student's results is obviously the goal for tutoring, but improving a student's confidence in themselves and their abilities is just as important. Watching a student start to believe in themselves and take the reins is a marker of success. I work well with kids and teens, as I am enthusiastic and make an effort to get to know them and…
Ngan Anh
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Ngan Anh

Psychology Tutor Lawson, ACT
It's the tutor's responsibility to connect with the student and put in the extra mile to support their needs. Every student is at a different stage in learning, and it's about recognising that each person needs a different approach. This can only be achieved if the tutor understands the student, and develop a sense of trust and reliability.…

Local Reviews

We were happy with Ishita.
Therese

Inside CanberraTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Vinusha worked through subtraction with decimals and calculating percentage discounts in price scenarios.

In Year 10, James focused on analysing domains of complex functions and revising his weekly homework problems.

For a Year 11 student, lessons addressed both differentiation techniques and anti-differentiation, including targeted exercises to strengthen calculus foundations.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 algebra lessons, a student relied on quick cosmetic corrections—"she over-erased errors instead of addressing the underlying algebra step," as one tutor observed—which meant sign issues lingered beneath tidy working.

A Year 11 student, when tackling polynomials from graphs, struggled to organize his approach; missed connections in written work led to confusion mid-problem.

Meanwhile, a Year 6 student's messy number writing ("needs more practice with writing 5 and 7") caused him to lose track in multi-step arithmetic.

Without consistent independent practice between sessions, several students arrived unable to ask targeted questions or recall key steps.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Canberra noticed that Landon now distinguishes between algebraic and non-algebraic forms independently, a skill he previously struggled with. He even tackled graphing linear functions without prompts, marking a clear shift toward self-reliance.

In another session, Vinusha solved quadratic equations confidently using the quadratic formula. She explained her steps aloud, demonstrating a new level of understanding and communication.

Meanwhile, Felix completed a full long division problem on his own, specifically 294 divided by 7, and checked his answer without any help—showing significant growth in independence.

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 Dickson Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Ainslie School.