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Private chinese tutors that come to you in person or online

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Concord's tutors feature a 4-year veteran secondary Maths and Physics teacher, high-achieving graduates with ATARs up to 99.3, experienced K–12 English and maths specialists from Dux Tuition and Kumon, peer mentors, Olympiad distinction recipients, accomplished musicians, and university students in law, medicine, engineering, actuarial studies and advanced computing—many with leadership or teaching awards.

Yiheng
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Yiheng

Chinese Tutor Ultimo, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is instill confidence. Many students experience a lack of confidence when they don't perform as well as they hoped in a subject, which can discourage further studying. As a tutor, it is crucial to nurture their self-belief and provide a supportive environment. By offering positive…
Adrian
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Adrian

Chinese Tutor Chippendale, NSW
The most important things I can do for a student extend beyond imparting knowledge. I prioritize understanding each student's individual learning style, tailoring my approach to their needs. Building a positive and encouraging environment, I aim to instill confidence, foster critical thinking, and ignite a genuine passion for learning. It's not…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Chinese

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Thomas
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Thomas

Chinese Tutor Marsfield, NSW
The most important things that a tutor can build a personal and strong relationship with their students. Helping them with their learning progress not just only helping them doing their homework. Communication skills also play an important role, by communicating with their parents or guardian how to help the students in their learning process I…
Lolita
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Lolita

Chinese Tutor Marsfield, NSW
I think the most important things a tutor can do are spark the student’s interest in the subject, explain concepts clearly when something doesn’t make sense, and help remove the fear of making mistakes. When students see that learning is a process of trying, experimenting and eventually finding the answer, they become more confident and open…
Shirley
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Shirley

Chinese Tutor Epping, NSW
To help them understand the knowledge itself, instead of get high scores by constantly doing different types of questions. Truely understanding of knowledge is more efficient than practicing problem solving. I am very patient, when student cannot understand what I am saying, I will think of another way to explain it. And I am good at discovering…
Shengyang
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Shengyang

Chinese Tutor Harris Park, NSW
Personally, I think the role of a tutor is to help student with what they need, thus we can assist them in the most effective way. For example, a tutor can figure out the weakness of a student thus the tutor can assist student to get improvement on that areas. Currently, I am doing Bachelor of Education in Usyd, After 1 year of study, I developed…

Local Reviews

We have had James tutoring for us, his so knowledgeable and explains everything well. Bailey gets on so well with him. Bailey has come from a C grade to a B grade. I'm very happy.
Tanya, Concord

Inside ConcordTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Hanna focused on adding and subtracting fractions as well as strategies for multiplying and dividing both proper and improper fractions.

For Year 8, Thomas worked through expanding brackets in algebra and practiced factorising expressions using guided examples.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Olivia explored data analysis by finding mean, median, mode, and range from survey results, then interpreted interquartile range to compare different data sets.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 algebra, a student often skipped setting out their working clearly, which made it harder to spot where small errors—like missing pronumerals or confusing operation signs—crept in. As one tutor noted, "he focuses on getting to the answer as soon as possible instead of correctly," especially when expanding brackets.

In a senior year exam scenario, another student's revision revealed a pattern: only familiar problems were practiced, leaving gaps in handling more complex inequalities and exam-style reasoning.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student struggled to keep written work tidy and found it difficult to check back over answers when practicing fractions.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Concord recently saw Tyler, a high school student, make a noticeable shift from struggling with algebraic fractions to independently working through them and applying skills across topics like expanding brackets and factorising expressions.

Another secondary student started openly asking for help when stuck on practice exams instead of staying silent, leading to fewer repeated mistakes—something that hadn't happened in previous weeks.

In Year 4, Mael moved from needing constant prompting during maths sessions to now finishing addition questions without reminders and spelling new vocabulary words accurately by himself.

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 Strathfield Council Library Service—or at your child's school (with permission), like Concord Public School.