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Private physics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Cherry Gardens' tutors include a university-trained secondary teacher and curriculum writer with two master's degrees, a PhD-qualified maths lecturer, accomplished peer mentors and youth coaches, a 20-year veteran high school maths educator and assistant principal, ATAR 98.85–97.9 achievers, Olympiad-level academics, creative arts award winners, and inspiring leaders in sport, music, debating, and STEM.

Hwarang
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Hwarang

Physics Tutor Craigburn Farm, SA
Communicate, and approach in different methods to efficiently help students understand, and prepare for the class with enough contents and learning plans to progress each class smoothly. As I have experienced the curriculum of high school teaching myself. I understand each individual students have different priorities or aims in their academic…
Balazs
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Balazs

Physics Tutor Happy Valley, SA
Modern curriculum is mostly based on a thought process that works for most students. But not for all, and school teachers don't usually have the capacity to take care of all the students individually. That's where a physics tutor can help. Everybody thinks about and understand scientific ideas and theories in their own, personal way. A tutor can…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Physics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Morgan
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Morgan

Physics Tutor Happy Valley, SA
I think that a physics tutor should be approachable - the student shouldn't be afraid to say that they don't understand something. After all, the tutor is there to help the student through any new concepts and ensure that they are taught in an easy to understand way. The tutor should be able to adapt to the student's most effective learning…
Luis
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Luis

Physics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
The most important this that a physics tutor can do for a student, is to keep in mind that tutoring is not the same as giving a lecture. That needs to be reflected in the adaptation of the tutoring session to the individual student. This can be done by lowering or raising the level if needed, speeding up or slowing down, and providing precise…
Mandy
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Mandy

Physics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
Personally, I think it is important to boost students' confidence in their abilities by providing positive reinforcement and constructive feedback. Additionally, promote analytical thinking and problem-solving skills rather than just memorisation of facts. And finally, offer emotional support and encouragement, helping students manage stress and…
soufia
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soufia

Physics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
The most important thing that a physics tutor can do for the students is to motivate and encourage them to do their best. I believe that results are mostly achieved through the effort of the students themselves, so as a tutor I try my best to cover all the concepts and to provide my students with support materials, but I also make sure that my…
Hamish
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Hamish

Physics Tutor Aldgate, SA
I think that some tutors get caught up in focusing solely on the work in front of them and miss out on teaching younger students about the life in front of them. Instead of doing more work, tutors should provide organisation tips and possible strategies they can put in place to improve the quality of their work. Also, forming close relationships…
Zachary
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Zachary

Physics Tutor Aberfoyle Park, SA
I think the most important things that you can give a student is confidence in their ability, willingness to ask questions and discipline to study. I am patient, observent and dedicated to my jobs. My weaknesses are that I am new to being a tutor, and a tendency towards…
Hannah
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Hannah

Physics Tutor Blackwood, SA
I believe the important thing a physics tutor can do for a student is to show patience and determination to increase the confidence and self-esteem of the child. To do this a teacher must really get to know the student, their learning styles and strengths and weaknesses, to make customisable plans, which attract students to learn and result in…
Noah
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Noah

Physics Tutor Belair, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to get them passionate/interested in what they are learning about, motivating them to learn and improve without getting bored. Another important aspect is to help them establish good study habits and a will to understand the concepts rather than just going through repetitive…
Janageeth
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Janageeth

Physics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
The best thing a tutor can do to a student is to make the subject more interesting so that the students are motivated to learn more. This in turn has a chain effect on improving the standard of the student. My strengths are the ability to identify the student's needs, flexibility, adapting to the situation and dedication. However, the ability to…
Madison
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Madison

Physics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
Understanding the students want and needs and goal planning to achieve this able to describe things in different…
Suresh
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Suresh

Physics Tutor St Marys, SA
Not all students are modelled the same way. Some are able to learn by studying the books while others require a lot of practice. Hence I believe that teaching the student how to study based on his or her strengths is the best thing a tutor can do and I will strive to achieve that at all costs. I spend a lot of time communicating with the student…

Local Reviews

Freya and Lidia get on really well, Lidia is gentle, firm and positive all at the same time which works well for Freya. Freya’s confidence is growing already and she did better in her last weekly maths test than she usually does which was a boost for her confidence.
Gina

Inside Cherry GardensTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Ruby worked on applying the sine and cosine rules to solve triangle problems, as well as reviewing techniques for simplifying surds.

In Year 10, Daniel focused on test preparation for probability concepts—such as calculating event likelihoods—and practised solving quadratic equations by finding x- and y-intercepts.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Grace refined her research project proposal, clarifying research questions and structuring her investigation plan according to curriculum requirements.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, a student repeatedly omitted units and skipped steps when working with equations—one tutor noted, "She needs to show all working out and remember to write the units," especially during decimal division tasks.

Meanwhile, in Year 10 English, paragraph structure and reflective writing required more focus; sentence connections felt abrupt, and deeper analysis of recounts was missing.

A Year 12 student's research report showed gaps in referencing evidence and connecting sections smoothly.

In each case, incomplete written process or weak structural habits made it harder to communicate reasoning or earn full marks on assessments.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Cherry Gardens noticed a Year 11 student who used to hesitate with surd simplification now tackling these problems independently after just a few sessions.

In another session, a Year 10 student who previously guessed during graphing tasks started explaining how changing an equation affects its graph, showing real understanding rather than relying on trial and error.

Meanwhile, one primary school learner who rarely shared ideas before has begun volunteering their thoughts on how to improve experiments in science class.

Last week, that same student offered suggestions for making the next experiment even better.

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 Aberfoyle Park (The Hub) Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Scott Creek Primary School.