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Casey's tutors include a seasoned primary teacher with 13 years' classroom experience, a secondary science educator with postgraduate teaching credentials, multiple early childhood and special needs specialists, accomplished English and STEM mentors, experienced camp leaders and sports coaches, an Olympiad-awarded science graduate, and university students excelling in maths, biomedicine, and IT.

Muhammad
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Muhammad

Business Studies Tutor Franklin, ACT
I believe tutoring doesn't only mean transferring knowledge to your students but providing them with a goal and vision to excel in life. Also, I believe tutors should keep themselves updated with new concepts to keep their students updated. I think my greatest strength is patience and communication. I have taught students till grade 8 before. In…
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Sankalpa

Business Studies Tutor Bruce, ACT
In my view, teacher is the most important person for a student after their parents. School level students spend more time with their teachers than with their parents. So, a tutor can be an inspirational model for an student. When I was in my school, I used to copy a lot of things of my favorite teacher like the way of speaking, hands movement…
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Jingru
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Jingru

Business Studies Tutor Belconnen, ACT
Being patient to student would give a safe and supported environment for them to at least not reject study. As a tutor, this is the basic needs, then tutor should guide them find what their strengths are, what area that they need improvement, as well as their critical thinking. It would be my patience, i think it is very important as a tutor to be…
Yiyang
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Yiyang

Business Studies Tutor Bruce, ACT
Firstly, I believe the philosophy of "Teaching to fish rather than giving a fish. " It suggests that the tutor has a responsibility to inspire her students to take further exploration in the subject and cultivate good learning habits. Secondly, I think encouragement is essential in tutoring. Being as a tutor, I would let my student know that they…
David
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David

Business Studies Tutor Downer, ACT
Well, I think the most important thing is interaction. When there is more interaction, student's learning become enjoyable. Also, Using examples related to the real world. What is actually happening. Lastly is patience. Being patience on the student and go with the student's pace and not the tutor's. I try to relate all my teaching to…
Jemima
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Jemima

Business Studies Tutor O'connor, ACT
The most important things for a tutor to do for a student is ensure their confidence stems from understanding not just knowing the answer to a question but instead the theory behind it. A tutor should ensure a student understands the theory behind a concept and how they got their rather than the finishing product. Through this, a tutor gives a…
John
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John

Business Studies Tutor Bonner, ACT
In my opinion, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide personalized guidance and support, foster a positive learning environment, and encourage critical thinking and independent learning. Tutors should strive to understand their students' unique learning styles, strengths, and weaknesses, and adapt their approach…

Local Reviews

We are very happy with Dwight, he is punctual, clear and very patient with our daughter.
Marilyn

Inside CaseyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Chloe worked on recognising and naming fractions like 1/2, 1/3, and 1/8, as well as comparing their sizes.

In Year 9, Jacob focused on revising key statistics skills including calculating mean, median, mode, and creating box plots, before beginning an introduction to quadratic expressions.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Liam practiced expanding algebraic expressions using the distributive law and combined like terms for simplifying quadratics with real textbook examples.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student relied heavily on calculators for basic multiplication, as one tutor noted: "The more he can guestimate the answer, the more likely he can eliminate extreme errors." This over-reliance slowed progress in algebra test prep.

In Year 3, a student hesitated to attempt larger addition problems, often saying it was "too hard" before trying—repetition was needed to build confidence and reduce avoidance.

For a senior secondary learner, incomplete practice with Venn diagrams meant missed opportunities to consolidate probability concepts; requested follow-up tasks were not always submitted between lessons, making review less effective.

Recent Achievements

One Casey tutor noticed a Year 10 student who previously hesitated to speak up now regularly asks for clarification during algebra lessons, showing her working step-by-step rather than skipping ahead and guessing.

In another session, a Year 8 student who often rushed through subtraction and made careless errors started slowing down and double-checking answers independently—something he resisted before.

A younger primary student who struggled to plot times on an analog clock managed by the end of her lesson to match given times with clock faces without prompting, finishing by drawing three different times herself.

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 Gungahlin Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St John Paul II College.