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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.

Ishaan
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Ishaan

Info Processing Tutor Belconnen, ACT
I believe the best tutors are more mentors than teachers. A tutor should make sure every student is comfortable to participate in the learning experience. Students and parents expect a tutor to deliver personalised attention and guidance. A tutor should be able to deliver such service. A good tutor would make learning easier by involving the class…
Kashish
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Kashish

Info Processing Tutor Bruce, ACT
Showing the right path to your students and not judging them for their mistakes. Act patiently. Communication, Patience and…
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Camilo
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Camilo

Info Processing Tutor Page, ACT
to share knowledge by way of experiences, not only to teach for the sake of learning but to teach experiences so that the student records in his memory what he has learned in the best way possible. My strengths are patience, communication skills, and teaching skills; also I like to share experiences to keep in mind what we learnt and the vocation…
Ranjana
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Ranjana

Info Processing Tutor O'connor, ACT
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for any student is to make them believe in their own capability. Secondly, make them value education and enjoy the process. I break concepts down into small bits and give relevant examples. I focus on concept understanding first and then practice. I have always been one of the top students in school…
Nam Khanh
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Nam Khanh

Info Processing Tutor Hawker, ACT
In my opinion, the most importing things that a tutor can do is to make the students feel engaged and welcomed. In particular, learning should be a joyful experience for students instead of a burden. This means the student not only perform the tasks which the tutor instruct them to, but to be more open and curious to ask any questions outside the…

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.