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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Crafers West's tutors include a Master of Teaching-qualified science and maths specialist with high school classroom experience, a 97.75 ATAR multi-award winner and piano teacher, an IB dux with 99.95 ATAR and university medal, experienced youth coaches, junior athletics instructors, language award recipients, and accomplished musicians and Olympiad competitors—all passionate about helping young learners excel.

Char Yee
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Char Yee

Tutor Stonyfell, SA
Listening to the student Breaking down information to ensure understanding occurs Helping student believe in him/her self Patience Persistence Communication Understanding that all students are different and use different methods to…
Farzan
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Farzan

Tutor Hazelwood Park, SA
understanding that not all students understand concepts the same way and the first time that can sense when students do not understand and willingly tries another approach of presenting the material. Passionate, empathetic, good listener, explaining material in multiple ways, reliable, evaluating students with asking several questions, and Giving…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Alex
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Alex

Tutor Coromandel Valley, SA
It is important that each session is structured, engaging and strategically planned to support student achievement and on-going improvement. Successful tutors are easily approachable, passionate and knowledgeable. It is of vital importance to have the ability to clearly communicate and illustrate subject concepts and patiently re-explain in…
Sarder Muhammed
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Sarder Muhammed

Tutor Glenside, SA
A good tutor can positively affect students' life! Students are like clay, a good tutor can mold them into something meaningful and valuable. Students loves me because i have a good tuning with…
Shobha
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Shobha

Tutor Glenside, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is ensure that the student has gained the ability to consolidate the information taught. The student must be able to reproduce the content learned in their own words at their own time. Specifically for English, many students have wonderful, original ideas in their minds, however, they…
Anniepreet
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Anniepreet

Tutor Panorama, SA
The most important thing I can do as a tutor is to support a student so they can reach their full academic potential. My role as a tutor is to give students individualized attention, and assist them in their weak areas whilst also helping them polish their strengths. As well as assisting students with understanding concepts it is also important to…
Vishwa
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Vishwa

Tutor Panorama, SA
1. A tutor can shape how a student thinks about a particular topic/subject. If while teaching something the tutor himself/herself is not interested then the student will be less likely to pay 100% attention 2. A tutor can empower the student to learn better and at their own pace. Just letting the student know that it is okay if you take more time…
Avidan
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Avidan

Tutor Panorama, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student, in my opinion, are establishing a positive rapport, identifying individual needs, providing personalized instruction, fostering independent learning, and offering continuous assessment and feedback. Building trust creates a safe environment for active engagement. Understanding the student's…
Chiv Houng
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Chiv Houng

Tutor Parkside, SA
I believe support and encouragement are the most important elements that me as a tutor can help my students. Some students do not like to be pushed, and they need time for themselves as well, so supporting and encouraging them will direct them towards success. Some other students may experience difficulties in study (do not get a good result), so…
Barry
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Barry

Tutor Malvern, SA
Be patient, sometime students are having a hard time to understand some new confusing concepts in math or physics. It is important to explain the concept to students in a different way. During such a time, finding a new way to explain things in an easier way such students can learn is very important or students might give up on this point. In the…
Jason
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Jason

Tutor Wattle Park, SA
Listening to the students is the most important things a tutor can do. Not everyone can study at the same pace or method. While I have my method of teaching, it helps the student to be more comfortable to study in a way that they are familiar or works for them. I can be as soft or hard as required to teach my students. Listening to them and…
Tumal
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Tumal

Tutor Wattle Park, SA
As a tutor, my most important goal is to help my student understand the material and develop their problem-solving skills. To achieve this, I create a welcoming and supportive environment where my student feels comfortable asking questions and seeking help when needed. I use a variety of teaching methods to reach all types of learners, such as…
Challista
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Challista

Tutor Erindale, SA
As tutor, we must make the student happy, comfortable, and have good communication with students. For example, when I have an opportunity to teach the students in primary 2. I want to teach them how to solve the math and explain the homework or material from school. After that, students must do the questions that i give or do the homework from…
Jason
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Jason

Tutor Erindale, SA
One of the most important things I have realised over helping my friends in year 12 would be to walk through the question and not actually doing the question for the student. Sure you could do the question for them and they could get full marks for an assignment or whatever, but they would not understand the fundamentals lying behind the question…
Jessica
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Jessica

Tutor Colonel Light Gardens, SA
I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide encouragement and support, and to teach skills for problem solving, learning, and managing workloads. Subject-specific knowledge and skills are of course extremely important, but developing the confidence to try (and learn from mistakes) and the transferable skills…
Amber
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Amber

Tutor Panorama, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is reassure them that it is perfectly normal to not understand a topic straight away. Tutors must make sure that students are not ashamed of needing help, and do not feel 'stupid' or 'dumb' for not understanding. I am a very patient person who is good at listening. When I am in a tutoring role…
Rebecca
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Rebecca

Tutor Wattle Park, SA
I believe the most important aspect is encouraging learning and allowing students to explore creative aspects of learning freely. I believe that the way you are taught and the encouragement you receive along the way has a significant impact on a student's performance. Hence, I believe that teaching a student to be confident in themselves and their…
Chloe
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Chloe

Tutor Dulwich, SA
Improving their overall problem-solving and critical thinking skill, guiding them to be a successful and individual learner while establishing a positive learning environment and relationship between tutor and students. The most important part is to let them achieve their short-term goals and then long-term goals. - My distinction GPA (>80%) at…
Duc Tuan Kiet
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Duc Tuan Kiet

Tutor Parkside, SA
Know your stuff. Always. As simple as it might sound, really bringing your students a reliable foundation of knowledge on the subject is always crucial. It doesn't mean that you ALWAYS have to know your stuff though, we are human, and human can sometimes afford not to know it all. This is when I would go on, do my research, and make sure the next…
Rajinda
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Rajinda

Tutor Heathpool, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is to both guide and assist the student in achieving the best possible results they can get. Focusing on what the students are struggling with, preparing them for upcoming assessments and giving constructive feedback on their current work. I have had many tutors over my high school years, and…
Nitika
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Nitika

Tutor Colonel Light Gardens, SA
He can be as patient as possible and try to teach him in several small steps and not preferring opting for those bigger ones which utlimately helps him to enjoy the subject which must be the uptimate goal of any tutor. I believe i own awesome communication skills and have the potential of understanding the loopholes in learning any concept. I try…
Wilfred
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Wilfred

Tutor Parkside, SA
Other than imparting the lessons in school, I think being able to empathize with the students is key in effective teaching. As a matter of strategy, what I will do is to meet them where they are academically, then prepare a plan and implement it to be able to meet our goal(s). I have the ability to relate with young kids well. Raising three…
Amitava
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Amitava

Tutor Heathpool, SA
To gain confidence in them and make them more methodical and improve their exam strategy and psychological approach. I can feel the wavelength of every student quickly and befit my style of teaching…

Local Reviews

David is professional and explains things in detail. Keeps our son focused on tasks.
Kaz

Inside Crafers WestTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Raffy practised factorising and expanding algebraic expressions, and compared frequency tables and percentages while finishing his final assignment.

In Year 9, Lily focused on solving trigonometry problems using sine, cosine, and tangent rules to find unknown angles or sides, along with applying Pythagoras' theorem in various contexts.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Marcus revised exponential equations involving both growth and decay scenarios and received help using a graphics calculator for these problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student regularly forgot to bring essential materials, such as their graph book and textbook, leading to lost lesson time—one tutor noted, "forgot textbook, so time was lost."

In a senior class, another student finished tasks quickly but packed up immediately instead of reviewing or extending their work.

During a Year 10 algebra session, working steps were not shown clearly; the tutor remarked that this hid sign errors.

A Year 12 learner hesitated to ask questions even when confused, relying on the tutor for answers rather than engaging directly with feedback and independent problem-solving.

Recent Achievements

A Crafers West tutor recently noticed a Year 10 student who had struggled with careless mistakes in algebra now double-checking her work during sessions, catching errors before moving on.

Another high schooler, previously hesitant to speak up, has started asking the tutor to clarify tricky test questions—showing she's more comfortable seeking help rather than guessing.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who used to shy away from worded maths problems is now reading questions out loud and underlining key information without prompting. Last week, she completed an entire set of mixed problems independently for the first time.

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 Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Upper Sturt Primary School.