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Private software-design-development tutors that come to you in person or online

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Castlecrag's tutors feature a Head of Department with two education degrees and over a decade teaching K–12, an HSC dux in mathematics, an experienced high school maths and physics tutor, accomplished Olympiad participants, peer mentors in English and science, plus passionate coaches, music scholars, and creative writers—all united by proven academic excellence and hands-on experience guiding young learners.

Harshinii
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Harshinii

Software Dev Tutor Ultimo, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them believe in their own ability to learn. When a student gains confidence, they become more willing to try, make mistakes, and keep going — and that’s when real progress happens. A tutor’s job isn’t just to explain concepts, but to create a safe space where the student…
Ajinkya
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Ajinkya

Software Dev Tutor Haymarket, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student include building their confidence and helping them feel capable of tackling challenges. A good tutor prioritizes understanding over memorization, encouraging deep comprehension of concepts. Adapting to each student’s unique learning style ensures effective and personalized support. Finally,…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Software Dev

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

gayathri
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gayathri

Software Dev Tutor Macquarie Park, NSW
In order to establish a good relationship, the tutor must be an energetic person, someone with a lot of enthusiasm with respect to human interactions. This interest will certainly have a positive impact on a child discouraged by the school and his or her bad grades. Through his or her good mood and motivation, the tutor will be a model for…
Nestor
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Nestor

Software Dev Tutor Forest Lodge, NSW
Understand his situation. Usually, they don't have a clear understanding of the basics and it is extremely important to know what level do they have and practice what might be the hardest. I believe that one of the most important things is making the student see that the subject is easy. Explain everything in a simple understandable way and…
Quang Khai
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Quang Khai

Software Dev Tutor Chippendale, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is help a student believe in themselves. Good tutoring isn’t just about explaining the material — it’s about building confidence, curiosity, and independence. A tutor should listen carefully, adapt to each student’s needs, and celebrate their progress along the way. When students feel…
Andre
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Andre

Software Dev Tutor Annandale, NSW
Teach obviously! but i think if the tutor can make the lessons as fun as possible so that the student looks forward to them as something enjoyable rather than as purely work, the best results will occur. I am an excellent communicator and can teach via example quite effectively in almost any subject. I am easily able to match my communication…
Sparsh
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Sparsh

Software Dev Tutor Chippendale, NSW
A tutor can make a student love the subject he/she hates. The most important thing for a tutor is to understand the student, his/her interests, aptitude, and what he/she is inclined towards. If you have a basic idea of the student mindset you can develop techniques to make them understand the subject in a way they don't find it hard. Gamification…
Monica
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Monica

Software Dev Tutor Sydney, NSW
The most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is to inspire the students to develop a curiosity for learning and to explore the subject more. My strengths are that I am a very good listener and I am easily able to be empathetic towards kids. I am friendly and approachable. Also, I have good knowledge of my subject matter, so that I…
Anthony
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Anthony

Software Dev Tutor Woollahra, NSW
First is to teach the student not only what to do but why they do it. This results in greater retention and a sense of meaning toward what they are studying which has a great motivating effect. Second, is to base learning off practice questions. I believe experience is the best and fastest way to learn - thus i will focus on producing good…

Local Reviews

Peter is doing s great job. I think we are making some good progress!
Kate, Castlecrag

Inside CastlecragTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Luca worked on factorisation of algebraic expressions, practising with step-by-step problems, and was introduced to solving inequalities, including representing solutions on the number line.

Year 6 student Felix focused on converting between improper and mixed fractions as well as building confidence with subject-verb agreement in grammar tasks.

For Year 3 student Mika, recent lessons included reading comprehension strategies using his homework book and recognising verb endings and sentence types through targeted practice.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 English, one student struggled to link poetic techniques with deeper meanings, often repeating points in paragraph conclusions. As the tutor noted, "he merely rewrote the question into a vague answer without incorporating explanations."

In Year 8 Maths, another student rushed through composite area problems—losing track of which faces belonged where and mislabelling sides when prisms became complex. This led to repeated confusion during multi-step calculations and less confidence under exam pressure.

Meanwhile, in Year 6, incomplete homework became a pattern; despite scaled-down tasks, it remained unfinished, making it difficult to build consistent habits between sessions.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Castlecrag noticed that one high school student, Nick, who previously struggled with box-plot analysis, now independently explains interquartile ranges and can draw pareto charts while connecting cumulative percentages to real data sets.

Another older student, Nikolai, used to rush through measurement questions but now paces himself deliberately and successfully tackles complex surface area problems involving pyramids and cones—he even wrote a well-structured thesis paragraph for a history essay after initial uncertainty.

Meanwhile, in a younger session, Mika shifted from hesitating with skip counting to confidently generating his own number patterns and creating original story ideas during reading tasks.

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 Castlecrag Community Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Glenaeon Rudolf Steiner School, Castlecrag.