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Charlemont's tutors include a university peer mentor and subject dux, experienced K–12 maths and English tutors, an assistant professor with five years' classroom teaching, a VCE 93.05 ATAR achiever and multi-year Australian Maths Competition participant, engineers with distinction averages, and school leaders skilled in coaching, mentoring, and youth engagement.

Sagargiri
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Sagargiri

Online Tutor Armstrong Creek, VIC
The best thing a tutor can do is to remove the fear within the students of asking even the simplest questions. Also to make them feel connected with the tutor and make the study enjoyable and comfortable. I make a good rapport with the student very quickly. My method explanations are easy to understand. I focus more on basic concepts. I never get…
Himesh Prabasha
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Himesh Prabasha

Online Tutor Highton, VIC
Build up confidence to believe that the respective student can succeed. Confidence is the most important thing that a student should have. Without having confidence student will not commit to do studies. I think i can understand students very well. Whether they understand or not can be observed by their actions. So when I understand that they have…
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Mick
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Mick

Online Tutor Waurn Ponds, VIC
The single most important aspect for a tutor is to be able to keep the student's attention; losing their focus implicates the loss of any further progress in the topic at hand and their faith in how much you can help them as a mentor. Maintaining their concentration throughout the duration of the session, while tiring at times, pays off. I believe…
Toby
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Toby

Online Tutor Whittington, VIC
Be there for them all the time. If they're at home and I'm not there being able to send me a message for help is the best thing a tutor can do for a student I'm often relatable to most people and therefore they get the most out of…
Maddison
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Maddison

Online Tutor Leopold, VIC
Ensuring the student feels motivated and isn't afraid to make mistakes. I feel that a tutor offers the tools and self-belief to enable a student to succeed on their own. I believe my strengths are patience, enthusiasm and passion. I also have strong communication skills and can be creative if need…

Local Reviews

Lovely calm manner and approach. So far so good.
Joanne

Inside CharlemontTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Sam focused on mastering index laws and their applications, then extended this to logarithms, including converting between indices and logs.

Year 10 student Grace tackled the unit circle—linking sine, cosine, and tangent with both degree/radian conversions and more complex adaptation questions in preparation for an upcoming test.

Meanwhile, Year 7 student Lily revised Pythagoras' theorem using diagrams before progressing to basic trigonometry concepts like SOH CAH TOA and their practical uses.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student hesitated to trust her solutions in algebra and trigonometry, often second-guessing even when her method was correct; as one tutor observed, "she usually knows exactly what to do, but worries about getting it right."

In Year 12 Maths Methods, another student relied heavily on slow note-taking and rarely organized notes for revision—this made open-book test preparation challenging.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student forgot key materials like calculators or books multiple times, leaving gaps in classwork and homework review.

In English for Year 7, some adaptation work remained incomplete between sessions, slowing overall progress.

Recent Achievements

One Charlemont tutor noticed Marissa now recalls exact values for sine and cosine without hesitation—a big shift from earlier sessions where she relied heavily on notes.

Zac, in Year 10, managed to complete exercises independently after being shown a new concept, rather than waiting for step-by-step guidance as before.

Meanwhile, Dean (Year 9) not only started solving problems with more confidence but also began initiating conversations about which material could be brought into exams—something he previously avoided.

Last week, Poppy compiled her own summary sheet from past lessons to prepare for an upcoming test.

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 Grovedale Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Iona College Geelong.