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Tutors in Coopers Plains include a PhD university medallist and published academic, a K–12 maths specialist with 5+ years' classroom experience, an award-winning Olympiad participant, a former university lecturer and technical instructor for kids, ATAR 93+ achievers, peer mentors, science ambassadors, experienced primary teachers and multilingual coaches recognised for academic excellence and youth leadership.

Tako
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Tako

Info Processing Tutor Underwood, QLD
Give them confidence in making them believe and achieve the goal the wish to attain Very patient, good interpersonal and communication skills. Ability to interact and make student feel…
Pratik
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Pratik

Info Processing Tutor Dutton Park, QLD
A tutor can basically develop students interest in the field which he/she is not interested in,and make learning happy to go for the students. I think my ability to get involved into the students and understanding their strengths and…
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Dhanan
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Dhanan

Info Processing Tutor St Lucia, QLD
A good tutor will be able to make a connection with their student, and can understand their individual needs as a learner. I think that if a tutor isn't able to do this, then any knowledge they possess can't be effectively taught. I think a good tutor should also have a strong grasp over whatever they teach, and being able to teach is the biggest…
Manasa
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Manasa

Info Processing Tutor Seventeen Mile Rocks, QLD
I think there are 3 very important things that a tutor can do for a student; - Be transparent about how to succeed - Wholeheartedly believe in the student and - Invest in them both emotionally and academically I think my strengths as a tutor are that I am able to immediately connect with the student and I make an effort to understand their…
Ashar
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Ashar

Info Processing Tutor Forest Lake, QLD
Interact with them and make them comfortable and reduce there stress level. Able to communicate…
Muhammad
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Muhammad

Info Processing Tutor St Lucia, QLD
To me, two critical aspects stand out. Firstly, it is crucial to grasp the concepts being taught and discern their relevance to the contemporary industry. Students must understand how the skills they acquire can be applied in the current world scenario. Secondly, recognizing that students are the future, it is essential to lay a solid…
Pavini
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Pavini

Info Processing Tutor St Lucia, QLD
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is understand how they learn and help them in a way that will help them understand. I also think it is important to help the student, to some extent, enjoy their work so they are motivated to improve and continue learning. I believe my greatest strength is understanding different…
Ali
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Ali

Info Processing Tutor Highgate Hill, QLD
For me, the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to build strong learning foundations and to motivate student to develop a good learning habits. Depending on the student, tutor is responsible to acknowledge student’s weakness and develop a systemic learning program that allows student to absorb understanding rather than…
Paiwand
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Paiwand

Info Processing Tutor Carina Heights, QLD
The most important things include : - Instilliing a healthy attitude - Being supportive - Being on task - Achieving Goals Together optimising these factors leave little room for failure. My strengths would be Maths and English as I am motivated and fond of those subjects. I also like teaching visually and interactively. Furthermore, my…
Pranavan
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Pranavan

Info Processing Tutor St Lucia, QLD
In my view, the most important aspect of being a tutor is to provide personalised guidance and support to each student. Every student has their own set of strengths, weaknesses, and learning styles. A tutor should identify these individual characteristics and adapt their teaching methods to meet the specific needs of each student. Additionally,…

Local Reviews

My daughter has gained more confidence in her maths since we have had Shiqi & has understood concepts in maths where she was struggling before. Shiqi explains things in a more simpler way and has patience,
Elicia Hoang, Acacia Ridge

Inside Coopers PlainsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Layla practised drawing and interpreting pie charts, then applied her understanding to solve data analysis questions from a recent maths assignment.

For Year 9, Alex focused on algebra—solving equations and graphing linear relationships—while also reviewing probability basics with real-world examples.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Emily worked through trigonometric functions and used the cosine rule to tackle challenging geometry problems involving non-right-angled triangles.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student was reluctant to review incorrect quiz answers, missing chances to understand where reasoning faltered—"he does not attempt to understand why he got wrong for the quizzes."

In Year 11 maths, skipping proper checks after integrating and differentiating led to sign errors when brackets and powers were involved.

One Year 5 learner's messy notebook layout made it hard to follow her working on decimals and pie graphs, slowing revision.

Meanwhile, a senior student struggled with organizing materials for homework; tasks were sometimes incomplete or late, which left gaps in learning that showed up during assessments.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Coopers Plains noticed one Year 7 student who used to avoid division questions is now working through them with far less hesitation, even finishing a full worksheet independently for the first time.

Meanwhile, a Year 10 student who previously struggled to choose problem-solving strategies now picks her own method before asking for feedback, showing new initiative during maths sessions.

In senior physics, a student managed to complete several challenging Young's double-slit experiment past paper questions mostly on his own—last term he would only attempt these if guided step-by-step. This shift toward independence marks a clear breakthrough in confidence and ability.

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 Coopers Plains Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Coopers Plains State School.